“For
years we have talked about uniformity but today is the first day that we can
say there is agreement as to what constitutes a violation,” said RCI Chairman
Duncan Patterson, who is also the chairman of the Delaware Thoroughbred Racing
Commission.
Twenty-four (24) substances deemed appropriate for normal equine care are included on the RCI schedule. Additional substances may be considered for inclusion in the schedule upon recommendation from the American Association of Equine Practitioners or the Racing Medication and Testing Consortium.
According to RCI, approximately 75% of all medication rule violations each year are for overages associated with substances contained on the RCI Schedule.
RCI
President Ed Martin said regulators are being encouraged to achieve uniformity
by adding the RCI schedule to their rules “by reference”, a common way to
incorporate a nationally recognized standard into public policy.
“If
everyone works from the same schedule, we will have uniformity,” Martin said,
noting that a movement coordinated by the Thoroughbred Horsemen’s Association
is already underway in several Mid-Atlantic states to implement the RCI
schedule.
Substances
not contained on the schedule will be considered “prohibited”, meaning they
should not be present in a post-race sample at any level or at levels exceeding
defined limits found elsewhere in the rules. Patterson indicated that a
proposal to address overages that may be caused by environmental contaminants
submitted by the National Horseman’s Protective and Benevolent Association
(NHBPA) will be discussed at the RCI meetings commending in New Orleans on
April 23. Also to be discussed will be modifications to the recommended penalty
guidelines.