Scott Powers of Floridapolitics.com reports that harness racing, heading toward what may be its final turn in Florida, would be offered another ride in a bill approved Wednesday by a House committee.
Coral Springs Democratic Rep. Dan Daley, whose father and mother raise Standardbred racehorses, has been trying to find a way to prevent the last run since the Legislature first started contemplating decoupling parimutuel racing from casino action.
His latest proposal (HB 1289), offered as a chance to save the standardbred horse business, made it through the House Regulatory Reform Subcommittee Wednesday.
That bill would allow parimutuel operations that do not now offer harness racing ā at thoroughbred tracks and former greyhound dog tracks ā to host harness racing as well. That would provide hope to a standardbred horse industry that Daley said employs 10,000 Floridians directly or indirectly.
TheĀ 2021 Gaming CompactĀ with the Seminole Tribe, which has since beenĀ struck downĀ in federal court, included legislation allowing casinos operating at parimutuel tracks to operate without the tracks, or to ādecouple.ā DaleyĀ tried in vainĀ last year to find a way to protect harness racing, which could seem obsolete from a wagering business point of view.
āThey have put out to horsemen: āThis would be the last season at Pompano Park.ā This is a track thatās been around since, I think, the ā40s or ā50s. I grew up in part on that track,ā Daley said. āJust yesterday,Ā Caesars Entertainment hosted a groundbreaking at that track.ā
Opposition of Daleyās bill came from Republican Rep.Ā Mike BeltranĀ of Lithia, who viewed HB 969 as an expansion of gambling in Florida. Beltran said he had vowed to oppose any more expansion of gambling.
āItās not the horse racing, per se, that would be the reason for my vote. There would be new races at new locations that would be wagered on,ā Beltran said.
Until Wednesday, HB 1269 was nearly dead. The Regulatory Reform Subcommittee was to be its first stop. But the panel never took it up before adjourning what was to be its last meeting on Feb. 8.
Last year, Daleyās proposal died from lack of support in the Senate. This year, the Senate counterpart (SB 1794) isnāt moving yet. The bill from Miami Gardens Democratic Sen.Ā Shevrin JonesĀ has gotten no committee hearings.
(Reprinted with permission from Floridapolitics.com)Ā