Kentucky Prison Program Lets Inmates Care for Horses

Bible Doc
A program at the Blackburn Correctional Complex in Lexington, Kentucky, has given former race horses an alternative to the slaughterhouse. A Chicago Tribune article on chicagotribune.com notes that most racing horses have very little to look forward to after their racing days are over. The successful horses go to stud farms. The others, numbering about 60,000 horses per year, are slaughtered. Under the Blackburn program, inmates are given the opportunity to care for the race horses.

The Tribune cites the example of retired race horse Tomo who has formed a relationship with Joshua Maggard, an inmate at the Blackburn minimum security prison. Maggard, whose background includes drug addiction and petty theft, has found a new passion in life: caring for Tomo. He had never spent time around horses before, but found what the Tribune calls a "fresh start" with Tomo.

The program is operated by the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation, which runs seven programs, including the one at Blackburn. According to Diana Pikulski, executive director of the Foundation and quoted by the Tribune, "We are trying to spread the word about what good candidates they are for these other disciplines [other than racing]." The program brings together horses in need of care and inmates seeking a change from the daily routine of prison life. Maggard and Tomo arrived at Blackburn within months of each other and have become very close.

Tomo was never a very successful race horse, amassing a total purse of only $27,760 in 39 starts. That does not bother Maggard, who has been in and out of prisons for about half his life. Since finding Tomo, life looks different for Maggard. He will come up for parole this month and, if he is released, he wants to take Tomo home with him. "I want to adopt this guy," he told the Tribune. "He's real sweet. He's a good old boy. If everything goes right, I will take him with me. We've got 21 more days if we're lucky."

One problem Maggard will face if he does get possession of Tomo is the cost of caring for a horse. The cost of horse care in the prison, according to the Tribune, is $4.00-5.00 per day. That's if you have the facilities to house a horse. Blackburn was able to convert an old dairy barn into stables.

The cost of maintaining horses explains why so many are abandoned and slaughtered. In a response to public pressure about the slaughter, the Illinois General Assembly passed a bill that would prohibit killing horses for human consumption. The bill would have shut down a horse slaughterhouse in DeKalb, Ill., the last such place in the United States. An injunction obtained by the owners of the house blocked implementation of the law.

Sources:

Chicago Tribune, Inmates and horses get a second chance, www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/chi-thoroughbred_glantonjun11,1,7616489.story
Free Republic Forums, www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1848445/posts

Published by Bible Doc

I am a (mostly) retired minister. I spent a few years teaching Bible courses in a Christian school. One of my goals is to write. I see Associated Content as a step toward fulfilling that goal.  View profile

2 Comments

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  • Pst Peter-Kenya3/7/2009

    Firstlove community centre for the inmates care and support minirty in Kenya.God bless you all.

    My contacts are ppeterirungu@yahoo.com,

  • Pst Peter3/7/2009

    Am so glad to hear ALL the activities undertaken by inmates in Kentucky,am a director of a prison ministry called Firstlove community centre dealing in inmates care and support in Kenya.lets pray for the inmates,they are our brothers and sisters,would like to partner with you brethrens,be blessed.
    Yours Pst Peter-Kenya.

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