According to recently released state records, more than seven hundred greyhounds were reported injured at Wheeling Island Racetrack and Casino since 2008, and more than one thousand dogs were prevented from racing because they were lame, injured, or because of illness.
“These terrible greyhound injuries are occurring every day at Wheeling Island,” said GREY2K USA Executive Director Carey Theil. “Dogs are suffering broken legs and other serious injuries on a daily basis.”
In total, at least 707 greyhounds were reported injured at Wheeling between January 2008 and September 2009, according to state records provided by the West Virginia Racing Commission. More than one hundred of these injuries involved broken legs, and other reported injuries included dislocations, broken ankles, lacerations, fractured skulls and spinal injuries. Additionally, 62 dogs died or were euthanized during this period.
These reports also document individual dogs that suffered fatal injuries. For example:
– On July 1, 2009 a greyhound died after being hit by the mechanical
lure and suffering head trauma and seizures.
– On September 2, 2009 a dog was euthanized after suffering a spinal
cord injury.
– On September 4, 2009 a greyhound was euthanized after suffering a
broken leg. On the same day, another dog collapsed after a race and
died.
In addition, state records indicate that 561 greyhounds were prevented from racing because of lameness or injury, and 576 greyhounds were prevented from racing because of illness.
“Greyhound racing is cruel and inhumane and should end,” said Theil. “Dogs play an important role in our lives, and deserve to be protected from individuals and industries that would do them harm.”
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Tags: Animal Charities, Animal Cruelty, Animal Welfare, carey theil, injured greyhound, injured greyhounds, Social Issues
Let’s not forget to post a rebuttal
By VICKI SMITH
Associated Press Writer
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) A national group determined to outlaw greyhound racing says 62 dogs died or had to be euthanized at a West Virginia racetrack between January 2008 and September 2009, while more than 700 were injured.
GREY2K USA, a Massachusetts group that helped outlaw racing last year in that state, said Friday the injury rate at Wheeling Island Hotel-Casino-Racetrack is the highest of any track its studied so far.
Executive Director Carey Theil said his organization has conducted similar studies of greyhound injuries at tracks in Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Arizona, Texas, Iowa, Kansas and Wisconsin.
Dogs are suffering broken legs and other serious injuries on a daily basis, he said, adding the problems included skull fractures and spinal injuries. This is the West Virginia dog racing industrys dirty little secret.
But a state veterinarian who developed a database to track greyhound injuries six years ago said late Friday the group misconstrued her data. Dr. Lori Bohenko said its simply wrong to suggest dogs are seriously injured on a daily basis.
There are some days I just sit here and watch races and do not touch a dog, she said.
The track also issued a statement calling GREY2Ks numbers a skewed version of the facts and said more than 98 percent of its races are run without serious injury.
As for the numbers cited by this group, it said, the overwhelming majority of the injuries were minor and were caused by such factors as muscle cramps, scrapes or cracked cuticle nails.
Wheeling Island has a long standing history as being a top-quality racing operation, it said. … The health and safety of all racing greyhounds is of paramount importance to us.
GREY2Ks numbers for Wheeling Island are based on Bohenkos internal reports and were obtained from the West Virginia Racing Commission after seven Freedom of Information Act requests, Theil said.
His staff spent two months studying data he called dense and complicated but said he was confident the groups numbers were accurate.
Greyhound racing is cruel and inhumane and should end, Theil said.
The West Virginia Racing Commission declined comment, referring questions to Bohenko, who said she was offended by the suggestion she does not properly care for the dogs.
These dogs probably get quicker attention than you would if you were in a car wreck, she said. I am by their sides within a minute or two of their injuries.
GREY2K said it was unable to obtain injury data from West Virginias other greyhound track, Tri-State Racetrack & Gaming Center in Nitro. A copy of a Sept. 17, 2009, letter from Vice President Daniel Adkins says the track does not maintain any public records on injuries.
West Virginia racing regulations do not require racetracks to report dog injuries to the Racing Commission.
Tri-State reviews accidents to ensure they are not related to the surface of the track and makes repairs as necessary, Adkins said Friday. Though injuries do happen, he calls them extremely rare.
We have 360 performances, 15 races in each performance and eight dogs in each race. Thats 43,200 dogs in a years time that are on our track, he said.
Last year, 549 dogs were injured, or only 1.27 percent of the total, Adkins said. Thirty dogs were euthanized.
Of the total injuries, 456 were track- or race-related, Adkins said. The other 100 included everything from illness and tendon injuries to broken toenails.
The safe handling of these dogs is very, very important, he said, adding injuries arent taken lightly.
Adkins said the dogs are housed well, fed well, trained, and theres an enormous effort … at the end of their careers to make sure these dogs are placed in good homes.
Theil could not say why the injury rate at Wheeling Island appears to be higher than at other, comparably sized tracks. GREY2Ks analysis shows:
707 injuries total, 325 of which involved broken bones or dislocations, and 28 of which were skull fractures or spinal injuries;
62 deaths or euthanizations, including one dog that suffered head trauma and seizures when it was hit by a mechanical lure in July 2009;
576 greyhounds were unable to race because they were too ill.
Bohenko said the 707 injuries include things as small as a muscle cramp, and that catastrophic injuries are rare. That hundreds of dogs were prevented from running is a good thing, she said, indicating sick or weak animals are protected rather than forced to compete.
In the 21-month period GREY2K studied, she said, the track raced 86,000 dogs. Only 55 died.
So 99.9 percent of these dogs compete and survive … and 99 percent compete without suffering an injury, period, she said. And of those dogs that do incur an injury, 50 to 60 percent come right back and continue to race.
I wonder why it took 7 Freedom of Information requests before the data was handed over?
The life and death of a racing greyhound is governed purely and simply by economics – internationally.
Once a dog has exceeded their usefulness as a betting medium and becomes a financial liability, they are destroyed and replaced with a younger, healthier dog.
Destruction of dogs due to sustaining an injury will remain constant – as is the need for tracks to make a profit.
“Only 55 died”. What does she mean, “only”? 55 dogs died just because people with nothing better to do wanted to bet on them running round a track. How can that ever be justified, even if it was only one dog that died?
Let’s also not forget that injuries to the dogs, horrific as they might sometimes be, are not the worst aspect of greyhound racing.
Even worse is the mass slaughter of greyhounds which are no longer wanted by the racing industry.
Our latest research indicates that as many as 15,000 greyhounds, bred because of the demand created by British tracks, are “put down” every year, after failing to make the grade as racers or when their racing “careers” come to an end.
The number of tracks in the USA is only slightly less than the number in the UK, so the chances are that the situation for greyhounds on the other side of the Atlantic is just as tragic.
See our website at http://WWW.greyhoundaction.org.uk for more information.
Tony Peters
UK Co-ordinator
Greyhound Action
Please have the courage to watch this informative but graphic video.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6yR9c4vEbJI
Please do not support this cruelty inherent in commercial greyhound racing – thank you