Greyhound inquiry calls for cap on breeding

1 day ago 2

Greyhound inquiry calls for cap on breeding

We’re sorry, this feature is currently unavailable. We’re working to restore it. Please try again later.

Skip to sections navigationSkip to contentSkip to footer

A long-awaited report into Greyhound Racing NSW has recommended a cap on greyhound breeding and an end to a US export program, and identified “significant governance and operational failures” with the organisation under its former management.

The report found a flagship program to rehome ex-racing greyhounds to the US was “distressing and sometimes fatal” for the dogs, and identified significant issues with workplace culture in the industry.

Greyhound racing will end at Wentworth Park by 2027.

Greyhound racing will end at Wentworth Park by 2027.Credit: Janie Barrett

The findings were the result of an inquiry led by the former head of integrity at the Law Enforcement Conduct Commission Lea Drake, which took place over 31 hearings between September 2024 and February this year.

The 722-page report was released on Tuesday after more than 80,000 documents and 1600 public submissions were reviewed.

In response to the report, GRNSW will be issued with a new operating licence by the state government legally requiring the industry to clean up animal welfare issues and improve oversight over greyhound rehoming.

GRNSW must improve reporting on greyhound rehoming data, improve reporting to the industry regulator the Greyhound Welfare Integrity Commission (GWIC) on greyhound deaths from unknown causes, and ensure all clubs implement updated minimum track standards.

The industry must also introduce policies to improve workplace culture and governance after multiple former employees alleged failures within GRNSW around recruitment and human resources.

GWIC was on Tuesday issued a direction from Gaming and Racing Minister David Harris to improve transparency around track safety, rehoming and injuries to greyhounds and publish reports on catastrophic injuries on a per-track basis.

Despite the report calling for an end to the program exporting dogs to the US, the government will instead require the industry to prioritise domestic rehoming “where possible”.

The regulator must also develop standards for kennels and rehoming facilities, analyse breeding and whelping rates to “support a sustainable industry” and review euthanasia policies. The government’s response did not say whether the review would lead to a cap on breeding, as the report recommends.

The minister has demanded these measures be acted on by June 2026.

“Greyhound racing is an important industry across our state, especially in regional and rural communities where it provides jobs for many people and makes a major economic contribution,” Harris said.

“The government is committed to ensuring the NSW greyhound racing industry is competitive, responsible and sustainable with the highest standards of governance, animal welfare and integrity.”

The report was handed down as the NSW government announced greyhound racing will disappear from the inner city, after it decided not to renew the NSW Greyhound Breeders Owners and Trainers Association’s lease at Wentworth Park. Instead, the site will become sporting fields and public green space to allow for the surrounding area to be rezoned for an extra 2000 homes.

The racing industry was given a lifeline in 2016 when then-Liberal premier Mike Baird reversed a decision to shut it down following revelations of mass greyhound killings and live baiting.

The Drake report found that the governance practices of GRNSW were not appropriate, and highlighted deficiencies in GRNSW’s financial management and procurement practices among other shortcomings. Former chief executive Tony Mestrov, who went on to be CEO of NRL team Manly Sea Eagles, was singled out over failures in procurement processes.

Drake was also critical of the recruitment practices undertaken by Mestrov’s successor Rob Macauley. The report found the culture under Mestrov had been “reasonably positive” but deteriorated during Macauley’s tenure from 2022 to 2024 and was “poor”.

More to come

Most Viewed in Politics

Loading

Read Entire Article
Koran | News | Luar negri | Bisnis Finansial