4 September 2024

Report finds racing industry contributes $80 million a year to ACT economy but Greens still want funding pulled

| Ian Bushnell
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ground action shot of racehorse and smiling jockey

Thoroughbred racing generated a tenfold return on public funding and is responsible for 500 jobs, the IER report says. Photo: Canberra Racing Club.

The Canberra thoroughbred racing industry contributed almost $80 million a year to the ACT economy, according to an independent report released as the ACT Greens again attempted in vain on Tuesday to amend the ACT Budget in the Legislative Assembly to axe public funding for race clubs.

The report by IER – a research company specialising in event, tourism and sporting industries – was commissioned by the industry in August 2023 as a requirement of the Memorandum of Understanding between the Canberra Racing Club, the Canberra Harness Racing Club and the ACT Government that provides for about $8 million a year in funding up to 2026-27.

It found the racing industry generated $79.2 million in 2022-23 – a tenfold return on public funding – and was responsible for about 500 full-time jobs, including 333 employed directly in the industry.

The Canberra Racing Club alone employs 20 full-time and part-time staff and a further 134 casual employees across the year, many on race days.

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The racing industry spend in 2022-33 was $80.7 million – 28 per cent on training, much of which occurs at Thoroughbred Park, 12 per cent by the Canberra Racing Club and 60 per cent in gambling, including race fields licence revenues for the industry, taxes and advertising.

About 82 per cent of this was spent locally.

During the 2022-23 racing season, about 505 racehorses were trained in the ACT, with owners spending $22.6 million on the preparation of their horses for racing.

The report estimated that in 2022-23 racing customers – racegoers, sponsors, members, broadcast providers, community groups and participants – spent $16.3 million, excluding betting.

In 2022-23, the Canberra Racing Club took in $14.4 million – 38 per cent of which originated from outside the ACT, or $4.2 million. Overall, the club spent 41 per cent of its expenditure budget ($6.1 million) within the ACT economy, a number that is growing under a new strategy, the report says.

There were 25 scheduled race days held at Thoroughbred Park, with three cancelled due to bad weather, attracting a total attendance of 30,582.

More than 41,700 patrons attended various non-raceday functions and events at the venue.

Darren Pearce

Canberra Racing Club CEO Darren Pearce: “We are deeply connected to the Canberra community.” Photo: Liv Cameron.

Canberra Racing Club Chief Executive Darren Pearce said the club was a shopfront for a significant and hardworking industry that was bigger than some may realise.

“There is a significant multiplier effect from every horse stabled here at Thoroughbred Park,” he said.

“The other big multiplier is our events and hospitality business, which operates all year round.

“We are deeply connected to the Canberra community and contribute through employment, economic benefits, and the social and cultural fabric.”

Mr Pearce said the figures would be even better for 2023-24, with over 20,000 patrons welcomed across two weekends in March for the Canberra Festival of Speed and Black Opal Stakes Race Day.

“We are bigger than racing,” Mr Pearce said.

“The Festival of Speed is a wonderful example of our club’s efforts to diversify our business, add more value to the Canberra community and ultimately drive growth for the operating business.”

Canberra Racing Club is also looking to develop part of the course for housing with a master plan for 3200 multi-unit homes, including social and affordable housing, a hotel and aged-care facilities. New stables and training facilities would be established on the track infield and facilities for racegoers refreshed.

But the ACT Greens are promoting their own plans for a new suburb of 5000 homes to be built on the Thoroughbred Park site, in spite of their Labor partners in government assuring the club of its future in the ACT.

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Greens MLA Jo Clay questioned the report’s findings and compared the $80 million figure with the $2.9 billion she said the ACT’s creative industries contributed to the local economy.

Ms Clay said the horse racing industry received more public money than the Canberra Raiders, ACT Brumbies, Canberra United and all community sports programs combined.

“The 2022-23 MOU provided $6.8 million of public funds to the Canberra Racing Club. That year, the Canberra Racing Club gave out $5.96 million in prize money and $976,000 in payments to key management personnel,” she said.

“It looks an awful lot like the public is funding horseracing prize money and CEO salaries.”

“This is just not OK, and the community will be rightly disappointed that both ACT Labor and the Canberra Liberals voted to continue this waste of public funds.”

But the Greens would not stop funding immediately, proposing a phase-out to minimise disruption, she said.

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There is no justification for public funding for horse racing and gambling, let alone that the horse racing industry receives more public money than the Canberra Raiders, ACT Brumbies, Canberra United and all community sports programs. One has to be gullible to take a report paid for by the racing industry to support their interests at face value. Even so, total attendance figures of 30,582 across 25 events in FY 22-23 is a pathetic 1,223 persons per event, underlining just what a weak a draw card, and how niche community interest is in horse racing.

Those numbers are absolute baloney.

$48 million in gambling turnover, and a claim 80% of it is ‘spent locally’. How many ACT bookmakers do we have anymore….

Report finds racing industry does not need taxpayer support

This is fantastic news since the racing industry makes 80 million in revenue it definitely doesn’t need to be funded by our taxes, let’s stop propping them up and see how long it lasts.

Oh, so you also want to reduce the additional gambling taxation that is specifically levied on the industry at the same time right?

You clearly wouldn’t want government revenue and the services they provide you needing to be “propped up” by gambling taxes on horse racing.

It’s quite simple, get rid of the Greens.

differing perspective2:30 pm 04 Sep 24

I wonder was the cost of the industry considered….as in the cost to the animals – horse deaths, horse injuries. Surely consideration of factors such as consequent harm would provide for a balanced review, but since when did we care about the impact on the horses. I suppose they do willingly turn up to these events, don’t they.

Nobody is mistreating million dollar race horses, no matter what animal activist kooks would like to imagine.

Do you care as much for the horses that spend the winter nights in paddocks and not in the warmth of a stable like a race horse, how about the horses that are turned loose because the owners can’t or don’t want to care for them any more? The horses that you see racing around the county receive on average far better care in every way than the horses you see on the paddocks around Canberra yet your outrage is at the Horse Racing community? Private horse ownership is where the real abuse and neglect happens.

@Ken M
Even non-“animal activist kooks” are aware of the use of whips in horse and harness racing

So what? A riding crop isn’t doing a horse any damage. In fact, some people even use them on other people recreationally.

@Ken M
I will accept that you know more about the recreational use of riding crops than I.

However, if there is no issue with their use in racing, why was the jockey, who rode the winner of last year’s Caulfield Cup, suspended and fined by stewards, for excessive use of the whip, during the race? Similarly, why did Racing Victoria deem it necessary to remind all jockeys in the Melbourne Cup, via SMS and in person, of the penalties associated with excessive use of the whip?

Because animal activist kooks throw a tantrum over it and make up lies like “Multi million dollar race horses are being neglected and abused”, and dopes just believe it without putting any thought into it.

They are trying to minimise the ability for people with an agenda to peddle lies to the general public, who seem to largely believe whatever the TV tells them. It’s all about appearance.

@Ken M
“… dopes just believe it without putting any thought into it …”
The only one not putting any thought to it, as per SOP, is you.

The reports are factual – you just don’t want to believe them because they have not been reported on your ultra right websites.

Another example reported in racenet (https://www.racenet.com.au/news/darren-weir-to-learn-fate-on-jigger-use-at-victorian-racing-tribunal-on-friday-20240704) – one of the industry’s online publications, not one run by “animal activist kooks”:
“Disgraced trainer Darren Weir has been hit with a further two-year disqualification for animal cruelty, the use of a jigger (a banned electrical device) on three racehorses in 2018, and dishonest conduct.”
“Weir in March pleaded guilty to using an electronic shock device, commonly referred to as a jigger or cattle prod, on racehorses Red Cardinal, Yogi and Tosen Basil in 2018.”
The tribunal chair, Judge John Bowman, described Weir’s actions as “… abhorrent and deserved of condemnation.”

While this example, and others I cited above, are (hopefully) in the minority within the industry, they do show that race horses are, on occasion, being mistreated and no amount of your ludicrous “it doesn’t happen” assertions counter that factual reality.

Ah, yes, the old “Well it happened once!” defence of BS and confected outrage.

By your standards, we should ban pet ownership then, since people are frequently enough cruel to their pets that we have to have regulatory bodies like the RSPCA to police it.

@Ken M
And there you have it. Totally discredited for your ridiculous comment – so let’s introduce a completely non-related and inane scenario in the hope it will fly. Yeah … nah, as usual you have been found wanting.

LOL
Only in your imagination. Your attempting to use a fringe case or two to slander a whole industry is absurd. You’re ridiculous and reaching so far that it’s hilarious to watch. Then when your mid witted argument is laughed at you pretend using fringe cases elsewhere is totally different.

If it wasn’t for double standards, you’d have none at all.

@Ken M
Fringe cases? Jockey of the Caulfield Cup winner …. trainer of a Melbourne Cup winner … you have heard of those races haven’t you?

How about the welt marks on the 2019 Melbourne Cup winner, Vow and Declare – as per this report (https://horsesandpeople.com.au/whip-welts-on-melbourne-cup-winner/) … oh and at the end of the article is a link to the veterinary pathology report which concluded “the skin lesions are most consistent with wheals or welts”.

These are outcomes in the ‘races that stop the nation’. But hey, they are ‘fringe’ events and are not absolute proof that there are issues – because you say so. That has to be the classic moronic avoidance of reality.

When it comes to arguments of wit, you continually demonstrate you are only half way there.

LOL
Are you serious right now? You want to use an article from a kooky activist where “We took photos from a distance of a horse, and we think there are welts, but we can’t prove it. We claim an unnamed veterinary pathologist told us they are welts! Strangely, the mandatory post race veterinary inspection of every horse made no mention of welts, but trust us bro!”

Again, you’re ridiculous.

Horse races are televised. If there were any concerns of actual, rather than perceived by luddites cruelty, the RSPCA would be on it in an instant.

@Ken M
Your opening comment: “Nobody is mistreating million dollar race horses …”
I have presented factual reports which show that is simply not true.
You have not been able to present one piece of factual evidence to debunk any of those reports. Oh other than your constant prattling that you are right and everyone else is wrong.
Like I said, time and time again, you prove you are only half way there in a battle of wits.

LOL
Continuing to tell lies I see.
You have used a single fringe case, and an article by a kooky activist filled with speculation, made up nonsense and “trust me bro!” that was not at all supported by a post race veterinary inspection of the horse in question.

Again, you’re ridicolous.

Ken M
LMAO … you are so pathetic in your presentation of arguments, that in the face of actual factual information you declare them to be lies. In both the forensic report on the photos and the Racing Victoria statement there is admission that the pictures show welts.

As for the other two cases, they are factual reports from the Victorian Racing tribunal.

Face it – you have been caught making a ludicrously unsupported statement and you can’t find any way out.

Go away and come back with facts, because I am not interested in your “because I say so” argument. Until then, you can have the last word – which I know in advance, will just be more of your unsubstantiated claptrap.

Your delusion knows no bounds. You attempt to use speculation from an activist as some kind of evidence, and want to pretend that’s not plainly hilarious. And a single fringe case, that was dealt with by the racing industry, as some kind of deranged attempt to paint horse racing as filled with animal cruelty.

Amusingly, these things are the industry policing itself, and setting far higher standards than even the RSPCA do. If there was any actual animal cruelty going on, it would be dealt with by the courts, and not the racing tribunal, genius.

You’re full of it, as usual.

@Ken M
Now you are just lying. Where did I say “… horse racing as filled with animal cruelty.” Your moronic reality might make you think that – but the reality is I challenged and proved you wrong when you made the statement “Nobody is mistreating million dollar race horses …”

End of story. Just stop lying and admit you got caught up in your own rant.

No small irony that a group called Greens wants to take all the colour out of life. Boring people seeking solace with other boring people focused on destroying the excitement that others get out of non-boring pastimes.

“Just give up 70 million dollars in economic benefit because we don’t like horse racing”.

The greens really are ridiculous and should never be given the ability to oversee the local economy. We would all live in grey commie blocks and stand in line for 4 hours, with a wheelbarrow full of money, to buy bread and a turnip under their economic vision.

As a ratepayer, I would be really impressed if the Greens were able to implement a ban on racing.

I don’t gamble and have no interest in racing myself, but a lot of people do.

As a ratepayer, you would be charged even more to cover the shortfall generated by this idiocy from the greens.

So get rid of it because you don’t like it? Anything else you don’t like we can get rid of?

“The 2022-23 MOU provided $6.8 million of public funds to the Canberra Racing Club. That year, the Canberra Racing Club gave out $5.96 million in prize money and $976,000 in payments to key management personnel,” she said.

“It looks an awful lot like the public is funding horseracing prize money and CEO salaries.”

Ms Clay once again doing the standard Green line of ignoring the tens of millions of dollars in gambling taxation revenue received to make it look like the industry isn’t a significant contributor to ACT Government revenue.

There is nothing independent about the report. It’s just another report commissioned by an industry or government that is intended from the start to deliver what the commissioning party wants.

It will almost certainly claim benefits that have nothing to do with racing and understate the cost of the damage done by the gambling on races.

“The report by IER – a research company specialising in event, tourism and sporting industries – was commissioned by the industry in August 2023” – I would love to see a report from these people saying anything negative ever about these industries

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