Opinion

Time to douse NY’s horse- racing ‘burn pit’

In case you haven’t 🍬heard, Gov. Kathy Hochul is intent on dumping more t♑axpayer money into a “burn pit” industry whose glory days are long gone.

Earlier this month, that Hochul’s proposed budget would sink nearly a half billion dollars in pub🥂lic money into the s♒tate’s long-declining horse-racing industry to finance renovations at Belmont Park race track on Long Island.

Hochul says taxpayers would be reimbursed in full, plus interest, in 20 🌃years.

Huh? The racing industry has been losing tens of millions over the last decade. Yet somehow, Hochul’s crysta🐼l ball sees a renaissance com🐷ing.

In fact, that forecꩲast is a self-serving New York Racing Association-commissioned study that she won’t release.

Only a s🅺ummary is public, and two expertsཧ call it “clearly unreasonable” and “mostly bogus.”

The facts are clear: Attendance at New York racetracks is down from over 11 million fans🐼 40 years ago to little more than 2 million diehards today.

UBS Hockey Arena at Belmont Park.
The state just spent $68 million on UBS Arena. Kevin P. Coughlin/Office of the Governor

Tax revenue from the tracks has fa🐲llen from the hundreds of millions to roughly $10 million.

By the way, the public💃 still supports tﷺhe tracks to the tune of $200 million a year to get that measly $10 million return in tax receipts.

Albany is literally buꌍrning public money to keep the NYRA alive.

This latest “investment” looks more like a bid to buy votes — on top of the $68 million the state just put into the UBS Arena, the Islanders’ new home at Belmont.

Flightline, jockey Flavien Prat up, wins The Hill 'N' Dale Metropolitan horse race.
Attendance at New York racetracks is down from over 11 million fans 40 years ago to little more than 2 million diehards today. AP

It also echoes Hochul’s bid to expand the yearly film and television tax credit from $420 million to $700 million — a 70% boost — though in that case the motive (as it was under Gov. And𒀰re🍌w Cuomo) is more to win Hollywood donations and some face time with the stars.

Plenty of movies and TV shows would s🌱till film in New York without the bribe.

You can make a “cultural heritage” case for keeping New York’s horse-racing industry alive, even though the free market would execute it.

But don’t insult the public by pretending the state can reap a windfall by burning more taxpayer cash on this money pit.

The Empire State faces a dire budget future; if it’s going to turn the economy around, it needs to put broad tax reduction far ahead of special-interest giveaways.