RACING will restart in Ireland on Monday, June 8th.
The resumption date was brought forward from June 29th following a Cabinet meeting on Friday morning. Racing had been rife with rumours that good news was imminent in the previous 24 hours and it was confirmed at around 1.30pm when Fine Gael TD Peter Buke posted a tweet to state: "Horse Racing to return behind closed doors with strict protocols from June 8th. Much needed certainty for the sector."
Just before 3.30pm, Horse Racing Ireland issued a statement welcoming the news that racing can resume behind closed doors from June 8th.
The statement said only key personnel necessary to run fixtures will be permitted to be on-site where they will be subject to strict Covid-19 protocols. All those in attendance will be subject to health surveying in advance and thermal temperature screening on entry.
HRI's chief executive Brian Kavanagh said: "We are grateful to be one of the sectors permitted to go back to work and acknowledge the responsibility on everybody in racing to ensure the events are run in a safe way.
“We know from our own experience in March when we safely ran 10 meetings behind closed doors – and from what is happening in other countries like France, Germany, Australia, Hong Kong, Japan and America – that racing can be staged safely within the requirements of social distancing.
“With significant input from the IHRB’s chief medical officer Dr Jennifer Pugh, we have strengthened the HRI Covid-19 protocols and so, while race fixtures will return in Ireland on June 8th, they will be very different from what people will have experienced before.”
NEW PROTOCOLS
Among the new protocols that will be enforced when fixtures restart are:
1. Only key personnel will be permitted to attend race fixtures
2. All attendees will be subject to health screening in advance and thermal temperature screening on arrival – anyone presenting with elevated temperatures will be denied access and instructed to consult with their GP
3. Mandatory wearing of face coverings for many attendees including jockeys, stalls handlers, medical professionals, security staff, those working inside etc
4. Social distancing will be strictly enforced by a dedicated Covid-19 protocol officer at each fixture
Kavanagh added: "We will publish our full protocols tomorrow [Saturday] and will require any key personnel necessary to run a race fixture to read the document in full. There must be full compliance with these protocols and to assist the industry in becoming familiar with the changed workplace, a series of webinars on the Covid-19 Protocols will be announced next week.
FIXTURE LIST
“On Sunday we will release a revised fixture list up to the end of June, including confirmation on when the classics, traditionally scheduled for this time of year, will be run.”
Racing restarted behind closed doors in Germany on May 7th and in France on May 11th, while in Australia, Japan and Hong Kong the industry continued operating behind closed doors. In Britain, the British Horseracing Authority plans to resume racing on June 1st.
Kavanagh added: "I would like to acknowledge the constructive engagement with the Government throughout the consultative process through the Minister for Agriculture, Food and the Marine, Michael Creed and his officials. It was reassuring that the importance of horse racing as an industry was fully appreciated.
"The industry supports 29,000 jobs in rural Ireland, and we are the third largest producer, and largest exporter, of thoroughbreds in the world, all of which depends on racing taking place on track.
“The decision to allow racing to resume behind closed doors will be welcomed within the industry. For flat racing in-particular, but also for a significant portion of the National Hunt population, there is a seasonal and cyclical nature to the industry and these are key months in the trade and export of horses with proven form on the race track, as well as a vital period in the sales season.
“These will not be race meetings as you might traditionally imagine them, rather stripped back events which will determine the best horses in various categories, a vital factor for the breeding industry. Attendance will be kept to an absolute minimum and Covid-19 protocols will be strictly enforced.”
More news on this story will be published in The Irish Field on Saturday, and online from 7pm Friday.
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