“What has happened at our track is deeply upsetting and absolutely unacceptable,” Churchill Downs Incorporated CEO Bill Carstanjen said in a statement
Churchill Downs Incorporated (CDI) is suspending racing operations on its iconic racetrack after a dozen horses have died over the previous month, the company said in a statement on its website.
The location, which is home to the Kentucky Derby, has experienced an “unusual” number of horse injuries on the racetrack, which has led to the deaths, and it is shutting down the track as a precaution. It said it will also undergo an internal review of safety and surface protocols while the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission and Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority conducts an investigation.
“What has happened at our track is deeply upsetting and absolutely unacceptable,” Churchill Downs Incorporated CEO Bill Carstanjen said in the statement. “… We need to take more time to conduct a top-to-bottom review of all of the details and circumstances so that we can further strengthen our surface, safety and integrity protocols.”
Churchill Downs Incorporated said it has not yet been able to identify a single factor as to what is causing all the injuries or “detected” a pattern linked with the deaths, and reports from experts on the track have shown that there aren’t any surface issues and is consistent with prior measurements taken from the track in past years.
The company, which is in the middle of its Spring meet, said operations will be suspended starting on June 7 and last through July 3, and the event will be relocated to Ellis Park in Henderson, Kentucky starting this weekend.
“In addition to our commitment to providing the safest racing environment for our participants, we have an immense responsibility as the economic engine of the Thoroughbred industry in Kentucky, which provides jobs and income for thousands of families every day,” Carstanjen said.
“By relocating the remainder of the meet to Ellis Park, we are able to maintain this industry ecosystem with only minor disruption,” he continued. “We are grateful to the Kentucky horsemen for their support, resiliency and continued partnership as we collectively work to find answers during this time.”
However, the decision to move the event and not cancel it has drawn criticism from animal rights groups like PETA, whose Senior Vice President Kathy Guillermo condemned the move in a statement to media outlets. .
“… Churchill Downs must not play Russian roulette with these horses’ lives by simply shifting the problem elsewhere,” Guillermo told the publication TriState. “Putting the bullet in a different chamber could have the same lethal outcome.”
“Until racetracks install synthetic surfaces and utilize CT scanning equipment to detect injuries, among other improvements, they can’t pretend to be mystified by fatalities,” she added.