TITLE 11. GAMING
                REGISTRAR'S NOTICE: The  Virginia Racing Commission is claiming an exemption from Article 2 of the  Administrative Process Act in accordance with § 2.2-4006 A 4 a of the Code  of Virginia, which excludes regulations that are necessary to conform to  changes in Virginia statutory law where no agency discretion is involved. The  Virginia Racing Commission will receive, consider, and respond to petitions  from any interested person at any time with respect to reconsideration or  revision.
         Title of Regulation: 11VAC10-20. Regulations Pertaining  to Horse Racing with Pari-Mutuel Wagering (amending 11VAC10-20-10, 11VAC10-20-190). 
    Statutory Authority: § 59.1-369 of the Code of Virginia.
    Effective Date: September 9, 2015. 
    Agency Contact: David S. Lermond, Jr., Regulatory  Coordinator, Virginia Racing Commission, 5707 Huntsman Road, Suite 201-B,  Richmond, VA 23250, telephone (804) 966-7404, FAX (804) 966-7418, or email  david.lermond@vrc.virginia.gov.
    Summary:
    The amendments conform to changes enacted by Chapters 731  and 751 of the 2015 Acts of Assembly, which revised the Virginia horse racing  statute. The amendments (i) revise the definitions of "licensee" and  "owner's license" to permit any licensee to own or operate a  racetrack, (ii) define "recognized majority horsemen's group," (iii)  limit the number of live racing days for a licensee to 125 in each calendar  year, and (iv) eliminate the minimum distance requirements for different types  of racing surfaces of a racetrack licensee.
    Part I 
  General Provisions 
    11VAC10-20-10. Definitions. 
    The following words and terms, when used in this chapter,  shall have the following meaning, unless the context clearly indicates  otherwise: 
    "Act" means Chapter 29 (§ 59.1-364 et seq.) of  Title 59.1 of the Code of Virginia. 
    "Breakage" means the odd cents by which the amount  payable on each dollar wagered exceeds a multiple of $ .10. 
    "Carryover" means the nondistributed pool moneys  which are retained and added to a corresponding pool in accordance with this  chapter. 
    "Commission" means the Virginia Racing Commission. 
    "Enclosure" means all areas of the property of a  track to which admission can be obtained only by payment of an admission fee or  upon presentation of authorized credentials, and any additional areas  designated by the commission. 
    "Entry" means two or more horses in a race that are  treated as a single wagering interest for pari-mutuel wagering purposes. 
    "Expired ticket" means an outstanding ticket which  was not presented for redemption within the required time period for which it  was issued. 
    "Handle" means the total amount of all pari-mutuel  wagering sales excluding refunds and cancellations. 
    "Horse owner" means a person owning an interest in  a horse. 
    "Horse racing" means a competition on a set course  involving a race among horses on which pari-mutuel wagering is permitted. 
    "Licensee" includes any person holding an owner's,  or operator's, limited or unlimited license, or any other license  issued by the commission. 
    "Limited license" means a license issued by the  commission allowing the holder to conduct a race meeting or meetings, with  pari-mutuel wagering privileges, for a period not exceeding 14 days in any calendar  year. 
    "Member" includes any person designated a member of  a nonstock corporation, and any person who by means of a pecuniary or other  interest in such corporation exercises the power of a member. 
    "Minus pool" means that the payout is in excess of  the net pool. 
    "Mutuel field" means two or more horses are treated  as a single wagering interest because the number of wagering interests exceeds  the number that can be handled individually by the totalizator. 
    "Net pool" means the amount of gross pari-mutuel  ticket sales less refundable wagers and retainage. 
    "Official order of finish" means the order of  finish of the horses in a contest as declared official by the stewards. 
    "Off time" means the moment at which the starter  dispatches the field. 
    "Operator's license" means a license issued by the  commission allowing the holder to conduct a horse race meeting with pari-mutuel  wagering privileges. 
    "Outstanding ticket" means a winning or refundable  pari-mutuel ticket which was not cashed during the program for which it was  issued. 
    "Owner's license" means a license issued by the  commission allowing the holder to construct a horse racing facility for the  purpose of conducting a limited or unlimited race meeting with  pari-mutuel wagering privileges. 
    "Pari-mutuel wagering" means the system of wagering  on horse racing in which those who wager on horses that finish in the position  or positions for which wagers are taken share in the total amounts wagered,  less deductions required or permitted by law. 
    "Permit holder" includes any person holding a  permit to participate in horse racing subject to the jurisdiction of the  commission or in the conduct of a race meeting where pari-mutuel wagering is  offered thereon as provided in the Act. 
    "Person" includes a natural person, partnership,  joint venture, association or corporation. 
    "Pool" means the amount wagered during a race  meeting in straight wagering, in multiple wagering, or during a specified  period thereof. 
    "Principal stockholder" means any person who  individually or in concert with his spouse and immediate family members, owns  or controls, directly or indirectly, 5.0% or more of the stock of any person  who is a licensee, or who in concert with his spouse and immediate family  members has the power to vote or cause the vote of 5.0% or more of any such  stock. 
    "Profit" means the net pool after the deduction of  the amount wagered on the winners. 
    "Profit split" means a division of profit among the  separate wagering interests or winning combinations resulting in two or more  payout prices. 
    "Program" means a schedule of races run  consecutively at a racetrack or simulcast to a satellite facility. 
    "Race meeting" means the whole consecutive period  of time during which horse racing with pari-mutuel wagering is conducted by a  licensee.
    "Recognized majority horsemen's group" means the  organization recognized by the commission as the representative of the majority  of owners and trainers racing at race meetings subject to the commission's  jurisdiction. 
    "Retainage" means the total amount deducted, from  the pari-mutuel wagering pool in the percentages designated by statute for the  Commonwealth of Virginia, purse money for the participants, Virginia Breeders  Fund, and the operators. 
    "Single price pool" means an equal distribution of  profit to winning wagering interests or winning wagering combinations through a  single payout price. 
    "Stock" includes all classes of stock of an  applicant or licensee corporation, and any debt or other obligation of such  corporation or stockholder thereof or stock of any affiliated corporation if  the commission finds that the holder of such obligation or stock derives  therefrom such control of or voice in the operation of the applicant or  licensee corporation that he should be deemed a stockholder. 
    "Totalizator" means an electronic data processing  system for registering wagers placed on the outcomes of horse racing, deducting  the retainage, calculating the mutuel pools and returns to ticket holders, and  displaying approximate odds and payouts, including machines utilized in the  sale and cashing of wagers. 
    "Unlimited license" means a license issued by the  commission allowing the holder to conduct a race meeting or meetings, with  pari-mutuel wagering privileges, for periods of 15 days or more in any calendar  year. 
    "Virginia Breeders Fund" means the fund established  to foster the industry of breeding racehorses in the Commonwealth of Virginia. 
    "Wagering interest" means one or more horses in a  race which are identified by a single program number for wagering purposes. 
    11VAC10-20-190. Criteria for unlimited horse racing  facilities. 
    A. Generally. Every license to conduct a horse race meeting  with pari-mutuel wagering privileges, of 15 days or more in any calendar  year is granted by the commission upon the condition that the licensee will  conduct horse racing at its facility or meeting for the promotion, sustenance,  and growth of a native industry in a manner consistent with the health, safety,  and welfare of the people. The adequacy and sufficiency with which the licensee  meets the criteria for the procedures, facilities, and equipment for conducting  a horse race meeting of such duration shall rest with the commission. 
    1. Each licensee shall accept, observe, and enforce all  federal and state laws, regulations of the commission, and local ordinances. 
    2. Each licensee shall at all time times  maintain its grounds and facilities so as to be neat and clean, painted and in  good repair, with special consideration for the comfort and safety of the  public, employees, other persons whose business requires their attendance, and  for the health and safety of the horses there stabled. 
    3. Each licensee shall honor commission exclusions from the  enclosure and eject immediately any person found within the enclosure who has  been excluded by the commission and report the ejection to the commission.  Whenever any licensee ejects a person from the enclosure, it shall furnish a  written notice to the person ejected and shall report the ejection to the  commission. 
    4. No later than 15 days before the first day of any race  meeting, each licensee shall submit to the commission the most recent  inspection reports issued by governmental authorities regarding the condition  of facilities, sanitation, and fire prevention, detection, and suppression. 
    5. Each licensee shall provide the commission daily attendance  reports showing a turnstile count of all persons admitted to the enclosure and  the reports shall indicate the daily number of paid admissions, taxed  complimentary admissions, and tax exempt admissions. 
    6. Each licensee shall furnish to the commission within three  months of the closing of its fiscal year, three copies of its balance sheet and  of its operating statement for the previous fiscal year with comparison to the  prior fiscal year, the same duly sworn to by the treasurer of the association,  and certified by an independent certified public accountant. The financial  report shall be in the form as may be prescribed from time to time by the  commission. 
    7. Each licensee shall maintain a separate bank account to be  known as the "horsemen's account," with the amount of purse money  statutorily mandated to be deposited in the account within 48 hours of the running  of the race. Withdrawals from this account shall at all times be subject to  audit by the commission, and the horsemen's bookkeeper in charge of the account  shall be bonded: 
    a. All portions of purse money shall be made available when  the stewards have authorized payment to the earners; and 
    b. No portion of purse money other than jockey fees shall be  deducted by the licensee for itself or for another, unless so requested in  writing by the person to whom such purse moneys are payable, or his duly  authorized representative. Irrespective of whether requested, at the close of  each race meeting the horsemen's bookkeeper shall mail to each owner a  duplicate of each owner's account showing every deposit, withdrawal, or  transfer of funds affecting such owner's account. 
    8. Each licensee shall remit to the commission within five  days of the day on which the revenue for pari-mutuel taxes, admission taxes,  and breeders' funds were collected. The remittance shall be accomplished by a  direct deposit in a financial institution designated by the commission. On  those days when the fifth day is a holiday or a weekend day, the payment must  be made by the succeeding business day. At the close of each month in which  racing is conducted, the licensee must report to the commission all deposits of  taxes and breeders' funds for that month. 
    9. On each day that deposits are made by the licensee, a  report must be filed with the commission containing the following  recapitulation: total retainage, pari-mutuel tax; state and local admissions  taxes; purse moneys; total breakage; and breeders' fund taxes. 
    10. Each licensee shall provide areas within the enclosure  where publications, other informational materials, and tip sheets, may be sold  to the public. All persons holding a tip sheet concession at the facility must  possess a permit from the commission as vendors. Such vendor shall post in a  conspicuous place the previous day's tip sheet and the outcome of the races.  Such vendor shall deliver one copy of the tip sheet to a commission representative  at least one hour before post time. 
    11. Each licensee shall supervise the practice and procedures  of all vendors of food, horse feed, medication, and tack, who are licensed and  have access to the stabling area. No licensee by virtue of this regulation  shall attempt to control or monopolize proper selling to owners, trainers, or  stable employees; nor shall a licensee grant a sole concession to any vendor of  feed, racing supplies, or racing services. 
    12. Each licensee shall provide to the commission copies of  all subordinate contracts, in the amount of $15,000 annual gross and above,  entered into by the owner, owner-operator, or operator, and such contracts  shall be subject to approval of the commission. 
    13. Each licensee shall submit to the commission each calendar  year a request for live racing days for the next calendar year as provided in  11VAC10-20-200. The holder of an unlimited a license shall  schedule not less no more than 150 125 days live  racing days in the Commonwealth each calendar year; however, the commission may  alter the number of live racing days based on what it deems to be in the best  interest of the Virginia horse industry. 
    14. Each licensee shall post in a conspicuous place in every  place where pari-mutuel wagering is conducted a sign that bears a toll-free  telephone number for "Gamblers Anonymous" or other organization that  provides assistance to compulsive gamblers. 
    B. Facilities. Each unlimited licensee shall provide  all of the facilities for the conduct of horse racing so as to maintain horse  racing of the highest quality and free of any corrupt, incompetent, or  dishonest practices and to maintain in horse racing complete honesty and  integrity. 
    1. Each licensee shall provide for flat racing a main  racing surface of at least one mile in circumference; for flat or jump racing  on the turf a racing surface of at least seven-eighths of a mile in  circumference; for harness racing a main racing surface of at least  five-eighths of a mile in circumference; and for other types of racing a racing  surface of generally accepted standards. 
    a. 1. Prior to the first race meeting at a  facility owned or operated by the holder of an unlimited license, the licensee  shall provide to the commission a certified report of a qualified surveyor, certifying  the grade and measurement of the distances to be run. 
    b. a. Distances to be run shall be measured from  the starting line at a distance three feet out from the inside rail. 
    c. b. The surveyor's report must be approved by  the commission's executive secretary prior to the first race day of the  meeting. 
    2. Turf course requirements include the following: 
    a. The licensee shall maintain an adequate stockpile of  growing medium, and shall provide an irrigation system or other means of  adequately watering the entire turf course evenly. 
    b. All turf course paths from inside rails to turf courses  shall resemble the rest of the terrain, with no rails leading from the main  course to the turf courses. 
    c. A portable rail shall be secure to absorb the impact of a  horse. 
    3. Main track requirements include the following: 
    a. Each licensee shall provide a safety rail on the inside of  each racing surface and such other fencing that is appropriate to safely  enclose the racing surface for horses and riders. 
    b. The rail height shall be from 38 inches to 42 inches from  the top of the cushion to the top of the rail. All top rails shall be bolted to  poles and shall be smooth with no jagged edges. Rail posts shall be of a  gooseneck type design and shall have no less than a 24-inch overhang with a  continuous smooth elevated cover over posts. 
    c. All rails shall be constructed of materials designed to  withstand the impact of a horse running at racing speed. 
    d. All rail posts shall be set in concrete at least six inches  below the surface and 24 inches deep. A portable turf rail shall be secure to  absorb the impact of a horse. No rail or post shall be used that will not take  the impact of a horse or will break away, such as fiberglass, PVC, wood or  hedges. 
    e. The design and construction of rails shall be approved by  the commission prior to the first race meeting at the racetrack. 
    4. Each licensee shall provide distance poles marking off the  racing surface and the poles shall be painted in the following colors: quarter  poles, red and white; eighth poles, green and white; and sixteenth poles, black  and white. All distance poles, including photofinish mirror imaging equipment  and any other equipment, shall be set back a minimum of 10 feet from the back  of the inside rail. 
    5. Each licensee shall provide racing surfaces whose  construction, elevation, and surfaces have received scientific approval as safe  and humane, adequate and proper equipment to maintain the racing surface, and  sufficient trained personnel to properly operate the equipment. Daily records  of maintenance shall be open for inspection. 
    6. Each licensee shall provide stabling in a sufficient amount  to conduct a successful horse race meeting. The horses shall be quartered in  individual stalls with separate feeding and watering facilities. Each barn,  including the receiving barn, shall have a hot and cold water supply available,  be well-ventilated, have proper drainage to prevent standing water and be  constructed to be comfortable in all seasons during which racing is conducted. 
    7. Each licensee shall provide a stabling area that is  maintained in approved sanitary condition with satisfactory drainage, manure,  and other refuse kept in separate boxes or containers distant from living  quarters, and the boxes or containers promptly and properly removed. 
    8. Each licensee shall provide a systematic and effective  insect control program and programs to eliminate hazards to public health and  comfort in the stabling area and throughout the enclosure. 
    9. Each licensee shall provide satisfactory living quarters  for persons employed in the stabling area as well as satisfactory commissary,  recreation, and lavatory facilities, and maintain the facilities in a clean and  sanitary manner. No employee shall be permitted to sleep in any stall or barn  loft. 
    10. Each licensee shall provide on every racing day  satisfactory sanitary toilets and wash rooms, and furnish free drinking water  for patrons and persons having business within the enclosure. 
    11. Each licensee shall provide a paddock where the horses are  assembled prior to the post parade. Each licensee shall provide a public  viewing area where patrons may watch the activities in the paddock. Each  licensee shall also provide a sufficient number of roofed stalls so that horses  may be housed during inclement weather. 
    12. Each licensee shall provide satisfactory facilities for  jockeys or drivers who are participating in the day's program. The facilities  shall include accommodations for rest and recreation, showers, toilets, wash  basins, reducing facilities (sauna or steam room), arrangements for safe  keeping of apparel and personal effects, and snack bar during horse race  meetings. 
    13. Each licensee shall maintain an information desk where the  public may make complaints regarding the facilities, operations of the  licensee, or rulings of the commission. The licensee shall respond promptly to  complaints, and inform the commission regarding any alleged violation of its  regulations. 
    14. Each licensee shall maintain a test barn for use by  commission employees in securing from horses that have run a race, samples of  urine, saliva, blood, or other bodily substances for chemical analysis. The  test barn shall include a wash rack, commission veterinarian office, a walking  ring, and a sufficient number of stalls each equipped with a window  sufficiently large to allow the taking of samples to be witnessed from outside  the stall. The test barn shall be located convenient to the racing surface and  shall be enclosed by a fence so that unauthorized persons shall be excluded.  Space shall be provided for signing in and signing out of permittees whose  attendance is required in the test barn. 
    15. Each licensee shall maintain a receiving barn conveniently  located for use by horses arriving for races that are not quartered in the  stabling area. The licensee shall have a sufficient number of stalls to  accommodate the anticipated number of horses, hot and cold running water, and  stall bedding. The licensee shall maintain the receiving barn in a clean and sanitary  manner. 
    16. Each licensee shall provide and maintain lights so as to  ensure adequate illumination in the stabling area and parking area. Adequacy of  track lighting for night racing shall be determined by the commission. 
    17. Each licensee shall provide and maintain stands commanding  an uninterrupted view of the entire racing surface for the stewards with the  location to be approved by the commission. The licensee shall provide patrol  judge stands so that the floor shall be at least six feet higher than the track  rail. For harness racing, each licensee shall provide space for a patrol judge  in the mobile starting gate that will accompany the horses during the race. 
    18. Each licensee shall furnish office space, approved by the  commission, for the commission's use within the enclosure and an appropriate  number of parking spaces so that its members and staff may carry out their  duties. 
    19. Each licensee shall submit to the commission, at least 30  days prior to the opening day of a meeting, a complete list of its racing  officials, as set forth elsewhere in these regulations, and department heads.  No person shall hold any appointment for a horse race meeting unless approved  by the commission after determination that the appointee is qualified for his  duties, not prohibited by any law of the Commonwealth of Virginia or regulation  of the commission, and eligible to hold a permit issued by the commission. 
    20. Each licensee shall provide a condition book, or for  harness racing, a condition sheet, listing the proposed races for the upcoming  racing days and prepared by the racing secretary, to the commission at least  one week prior to opening day. Additional condition books or condition sheets  shall be provided to the commission as soon as published. 
    21. No licensee shall allow any person to ride in a race or  exercise any horse within the enclosure unless that person is wearing a  protective helmet with the chin strap buckled. For flat racing, the term  "exercising" is defined to include breezing, galloping, or ponying  horses. 
    22. Each licensee shall employ at least three outriders for  flat and steeplechase racing to escort starters to the post and to assist in  the returning of all horses to the unsaddling area for flat races. No outrider  shall lead any horse that has not demonstrated unruliness, but shall assist in  the control of any horse that might cause injury to a jockey or driver or  others. During racing hours, outriders will wear traditional attire. For flat  race meetings, outriders shall be required to be present on the racing strip,  mounted, and ready to assist in the control of any unruly horse or to recapture  any loose horse, at all times when the track is open for exercising. 
    23. Each licensee shall employ for flat meets a sufficient  number of valets to attend each jockey on a day's program. Valets will be under  the immediate supervision and control of the clerk of scales. Each licensee  shall provide uniform attire for valets who shall wear the uniform attire at  all times while performing their duties within public view. 
    24. No licensee shall allow any person to ride in a race or to  exercise any horse within the enclosure unless that person is wearing a  protective safety vest. The vest shall be designed to provide shock-absorbing  protection to the upper body of at least a rating of five as defined by the  British Equestrian Trade Association (BETA). 
    C. Equipment. Each unlimited licensee shall provide  all of the equipment for the conduct of horse racing so as to maintain horse  racing of the highest quality and free of any corrupt, incompetent, dishonest,  or unprincipled practices, and to maintain in horse racing complete honesty and  integrity. 
    1. Each licensee shall maintain at least two operable starting  gates for flat meetings and two operable mobile starting gates for harness  racing. The licensee shall have in attendance one or more persons qualified to  keep the starting gates in good working order and provide for periodic  inspection. For flat meetings, the licensee shall also make at least one  starting gate along with adequate personnel available for schooling for two  hours each day during training hours, exclusive of nonrace days. For flat race  meetings, the licensee shall have an adequate number of assistant starters to  ensure the integrity of the start and to provide safe conditions for horse and  rider. If a flat race is started at a place other than in a chute, the licensee  shall maintain in good operating condition backup equipment for moving the  starting gate. The backup equipment must be immediately available to replace  the primary moving equipment in the event of failure. For harness racing  meetings, a mobile starting gate shall be made available for qualifying races  and schooling. 
    2. Each licensee shall maintain photo-finish equipment to  assist the stewards and placing judges, where employed for flat race meetings,  in determining the order of finish of each race. The licensee shall provide two  electronic photofinish devices with mirror images to photograph the finish of  each race. The location and operation of the photofinish devices must be  approved by the commission before its first use in a race. The licensee shall  ensure that the photofinish devices are calibrated before the first day of each  race meeting and at other times as required by the commission. The standards  and operations of the photo-finish camera as well as the methodology of the  personnel shall be subject to the approval of the stewards: 
    a. The photo-finish photographer shall promptly furnish the  stewards and placing judges prints as they are requested, and the photographer  will promptly inform the stewards and placing judges of any malfunction of his  equipment; 
    b. A print of a photo finish where the placing of horse is a  half of length or less shall be displayed either by posting copies of the print  or video means to the public promptly after the race has been declared  "official"; and 
    c. Each licensee shall be responsible for maintaining a file  of photo finishes of all races for one year after the closing of the horse race  meeting. 
    3. Each licensee shall provide color video tape recordings of  the running of each race clearly showing the position and actions of the horse  and jockeys or drivers at close range. Each licensee shall provide at least  three cameras to record panoramic and head-on views of the race. One camera  shall be located on the finish line: 
    a. Promptly after a race has been declared  "official," video tape recordings shall be replayed for the benefit  of the public. In those races where there was a disqualification, video tapes  of the head-on views may also be shown with an explanation by the public  address announcer. 
    b. The licensee shall safeguard the tapes of all videotapes  for one year after the close of the horse race meeting. 
    c. The stewards may, in their discretion, direct a video  camera operator to videotape the activities of any horses or persons handling  horses prior to, during or following a race. 
    4. Each licensee shall provide an electronic timing system.  The system shall have the capability of timing the leading horse in at least  hundredths of a second. Each licensee shall also provide a qualified person to  manually time each race, including splits of each quarter of a mile, in the  event of a malfunction of the electronic system. 
    5. Each licensee shall provide an internal communication  system which links the stewards' stand, racing secretary's office, pari-mutuel  department, jockeys' or drivers' room, paddock, test barn, commission  veterinarian's office, starting gate, film patrol office, ambulances, public  address announcer, patrol judges, and any other personnel designated by the  commission. 
    6. Each licensee shall provide a public address system whereby  calls of the races and other pertinent information may be communicated to the  public. This system shall be utilized by a qualified person, and the system  shall have the capability of transmitting throughout the stabling area. 
    7. Each licensee shall provide a totalizator and employ  qualified personnel to operate the system, provide maintenance of the hardware,  software, and ancillary wagering devices, and be able to perform emergency  repairs in case of emergencies. The licensee shall also provide a mutuel board  in the infield where approximate odds, amounts wagered in the win, place, and  show pools on each betting interest, and other pertinent information may be  prominently displayed to the public: 
    a. The totalizator shall maintain at least two independent  sets of pool totals and compare them at least once every 60 seconds. The  totalizator shall record in a system log file any difference in the final pool  totals; 
    b. The totalizator shall have the capability of calculating  the mutuel pools, approximate odds, probable payoffs and display them to the  public at intervals of not more than 60 seconds; 
    c. The totalizator shall have the capability of being locked  and wagering terminated automatically at the command of a steward. Any failure  of the system to lock at the start of the race shall be reported immediately by  the mutuel manager to the stewards; 
    d. The totalizator shall have the capability of displaying the  probable payouts on various combinations in the daily double, exacta, and  quinella wagering, and displaying the payoffs to the public; 
    e. The totalizator shall have the capability of recording the  wagering by individual wagers, including the amount wagered, the betting  interest, and the mutuel window where the wager was placed. The records of the  wagering shall be promptly made available to the commission upon request. The  licensee shall preserve the records of the wagering for one year after closing  of the horse race meeting. The records shall not be destroyed without  permission of the commission; 
    f. The personnel operating the totalizator shall report  immediately to the stewards any malfunction in the system, or what they  perceive to be any unusual patterns in the wagering; 
    g. The totalizator personnel shall make available to the  commission any special reports or requests that may assist the commission in  carrying out its statutory duties and responsibilities for the conduct of horse  racing; and 
    h. The commission may require an independent certified audit  of the totalizator's software attesting to the accuracy of its calculations and  the integrity of its accounting processes. 
    8. Each licensee shall provide at least one human ambulance  and at least one equine ambulance within the enclosure at all times during  those hours when the racing and training surface is open for racing and  exercising. However, a human ambulance shall not be required to be present  during the exercising of Standardbred horses. The ambulances shall be manned  and equipped to render immediate assistance, and shall be stationed at a  location approved by the stewards. 
    a. The equine ambulance must be a covered vehicle that is low  to the ground and large enough to accommodate a horse in distress. The equine  ambulance must be able to navigate on the racetrack during all weather  conditions and transport a horse outside the enclosure. 
    b. The equine ambulance must be equipped with large portable  screens to shield a horse from public view, ramps to facilitate loading a  horse, adequate means of loading a horse that is down, a rear door and a door  on each side, a padded interior, a movable partition to initially provide more  room to load a horse and to later restrict a horse's movement, a shielded area  for the person who is attending to the horse, and an adequate area for the storage  of water and veterinary medicines and equipment. 
    c. A licensee shall not conduct a race unless an equine  ambulance or a commission veterinarian-approved substitute is readily  available. 
    d. The equine ambulance, its supplies and attendants, and the  operating procedures for the vehicle must be approved by the commission  veterinarian. 
    e. The licensee shall maintain a properly equipped human  ambulance, staffed with certified paramedics at any time the racetrack is open  for racing or exercising horses. However, a human ambulance shall not be  required to be present during the exercising of Standardbred horses. If the  ambulance is being used to transport an individual, horses may not be raced or  exercised until the ambulance is replaced. 
    f. Unless otherwise approved by the stewards, a human  ambulance shall follow the field at a safe distance during the running of  races, or in the event of inclement weather, two ambulances shall be parked to  render immediate service. The human ambulance must be parked at an entrance to  the racing surface unless the ambulance is being used to transport a person or  when it is following the field during the running of a race. 
    g. During a racing day, the licensee shall maintain a first  aid room equipped with at least two beds and other appropriate equipment, and  the services of at least one physician during flat race meetings. 
    9. Each licensee shall maintain lighting for the racetrack and  the patron facilities that is adequate to ensure the safety and security of the  patrons, participants and horses. Lighting to ensure the proper operation of  the videotape and photofinish devices must be approved by the commission. 
    a. The licensee shall maintain adequate additional lighting in  the stable area as required by the commission. 
    b. If racing is conducted at night, the licensee shall  maintain a backup lighting system that is sufficient to ensure the safety of  patrons, participants and horses. 
    D. Safety. Each unlimited licensee shall employ  sufficient trained personnel to provide for the safety and security of the  public and others who have business within the enclosure. Each licensee shall  also take all measures to prevent the outbreak of fires within the enclosure  and develop plans for the quick extinguishing of any fires that should occur. 
    1. Each licensee shall provide sufficient trained security  personnel under the supervision of a qualified director of security. If the  licensee contracts with a private security service, the security service must  be bonded and meet all applicable licensing requirements. If the licensee  establishes its own security force, then director of security shall forward to  the commission detailed plans for the screening, hiring, and training of its  own personnel. 
    2. The director of security of each licensee shall cooperate  fully with the commission and its staff, federal and state law enforcement  agencies, local police and fire departments, and industry security services to  enforce all laws and regulations to ensure that horse racing in the  Commonwealth of Virginia is of the highest integrity. 
    3. Each licensee shall develop a detailed security plan  describing the equipment, (i.e., fences, locks, alarms, and monitoring  devices); the procedures to admit persons to restricted areas, (i.e.,  stabling area, paddock, jockeys' or drivers' room, vault, mutuel lines,  totalizator room, and test barn); and the trained personnel in  sufficient numbers to provide for the safety and security of all persons during  racing and nonracing hours. 
    4. Each licensee may provide a perimeter fence around the  entire enclosure, but shall fence off the stabling area. The entrance to the  stabling area shall be guarded on a 24-hour basis by uniformed security  personnel so that unauthorized persons shall be denied access to the restricted  stabling area. The licensee shall also provide for routine patrolling by  uniformed security personnel on a 24-hour basis within the stabling area. 
    5. During racing hours, the licensee shall provide uniformed  security personnel to guard the entrances to the paddock, jockeys' or drivers'  room, and other restricted areas as may be deemed appropriate by the commission  so that unauthorized persons shall be denied access to them. 
    6. The licensee's director of security shall submit to the  commission a written report describing every arrest or completed incident of  security investigation or rule violation including the person charged, the  charges against the person, the present whereabouts of the person, and  disposition of the charges, if any. 
    7. The licensee's director of security shall submit to the  commission a detailed plan describing the procedures to be followed in case of  fire or any other emergency within the enclosure. The plan shall contain the  resources immediately available within the surrounding communities to cope with  fire or other emergencies, route of evacuation for the public, controlling  traffic, and those resources available from the surrounding communities for  police, fire, ambulance, and rescue services. 
    8. Each licensee shall observe and enforce all state and local  building codes and regulations pertaining to fire prevention, and shall  prohibit the following: 
    a. Smoking in horse stalls, feed rooms, or under the shedrow; 
    b. Open fires and oil or gasoline burning lanterns or lamps in  the stable area; 
    c. The unsafe use of electrical appliances or other devices  which would pose a hazard to structures, horses, permittees, or the public; and  
    d. Keeping flammable materials including cleaning fluids or  solvents in the stabling area. 
    
        VA.R. Doc. No. R15-4425; Filed July 17, 2015, 3:09 p.m.