Greyhound Action Scotland are delighted to announce that campaigner, Finleigh Wells, aged 14, has been Highly Commended in the 2007 Deutsche Bank Spotlight Awards for her contribution to the Greyhound Action Scotland campaign.
Finleigh, an S3 pupil at KnoxAcademy in Haddington, first became involved in the campaign after taking home a rescued greyhound, who was no longer able to race, when she was just 7 years old. Since then, the family has grown to include four retired greyhounds and a Lurcher.
The Greyhound Action Scotland campaign focuses on raising awareness of the plight of the racing greyhound and the aim of the campaign is to ban the sport of greyhound racing in Scotland.
Tens of thousands of greyhounds are bred each year in the UK and Ireland for use in the sport. The average career for a racing greyhound is just 18 months. Many greyhounds are discarded or culled when they are no longer able to race.
In March 2007, a CountyDurham man was fined following the discovery that he charged racing owners £10 to shoot racing greyhounds with a bolt gun and bury them on his land.
Finleigh has tirelessly worked to raise awareness of the plight of the racing greyhound by holding stalls at various events and even giving ‘talks’ at school!She has also been involved in the rescue and rehoming of greyhounds.
In addition to this, Finleigh has had a short story published in the book “Greyhound Survivors” and taken part in many demonstrations including giving a speech at the March for Greyhounds in Hyde Park Speakers Corner last November.
Finleigh says:
“I was really surprised to win this award.Its brilliant that a campaign to try to stop greyhounds from suffering is recognised.Dogs shouldn’t suffer and die in Scotland for the sake of running them round a track.We need to ban this sport. Greyhounds are wonderful dogs and make good pets –they don’t deserve to be treated this way”
The Deutsche Bank Spotlight Awards, judged by a panel including GMTV’s Ben Sheppard, are to recognise young people taking action for things that they believe in. Finleigh’s campaigning was singled out as being ‘noteworthy’ and chosen to be highly commended for her campaigning work.Finleigh was awarded a certificate and awarded £20 to help her with future campaigning.
The Latest on Wallyford 'super-stadium'. For history on this issue, please see 'Press' Section:
THE huge metal skeleton of what should be Scotland's premier greyhound racing venue - a £9 million, custom-built playground for punters - stretches into the East Lothian sky, still incomplete almost ten years after its conception.
Towering 21 metres over a field on the edge of Wallyford, the iron framework hints at what could be - a thriving racing stadium bringing jobs, income and visitors, where the sport would blossom under tight controls and animals were cared for well into old age.
But instead of a stadium that was once touted as a potential Mecca for racing fans, the rows of metal beams have now lain untouched for more than a year.
Now concerns are beginning to emerge as to whether Dirleton accountant and property developer Howard Wallace's ambitious dream will ever really come true.
"People are starting to wonder if this is ever going to happen," says one racing insider. "Everyone involved in the sport is desperate to see it and wants to be positive, but there are people in the greyhound world who don't think it will ever happen now."
Can they be blamed for wondering what on earth is going on? For if this was a race towards construction, then the Victory Lane Stadium appears to have failed to make it out of the traps.
It was back in 1997 when Mr Wallace - one of the leading lights in the campaign to save Edinburgh's Powderhall Stadium - announced his plans to develop a new eight-lane venue so grand that it would attract fans from across Europe. They would be drawn to the small community of Wallyford to watch races from the three-storey grandstand, complete with bars, fast food joints, a restaurant and even an on-site disco to complete the package.
The metal frame now visible would have the capacity to seat nearly 2000 people, with 3000 more able to stroll along the terracing. Even the dogs were expected to be pampered, for Mr Wallace's proposals included an unprecedented plan to provide the very best accommodation a pooch could wish for.
Centrally-heated, air conditioned kennels for up to 126 dogs with veterinary facilities and under-trackheating were envisaged, while for those animals too old or injured to race, a "luxury retirement home" to ease them into a cosseted old age.
Initially Mr Wallace - who runs the greyhound stadium business Sirius Sport and Leisure with his wife, Glenys - was upbeat and determined.
Plans were lodged in January 1998, when he declared his intention to model the track on the world-famous Albion Park in Brisbane, Australia. Work, it was said at the time, would be underway within that year.
Instead, planning permission was finally granted last year - by which time the costs had soared from an original £4m estimate to £6m, and then £9m.
The metal frame appeared last year, giving fresh hopes. Now, however, it seems its construction - by a company understood to be no longer linked to the development - was simply to comply with a legal requirement to enable work to begin on a housing estate on adjoining land.
According to the minutes of a legal agreement between East Lothian Council, David Wilson Homes and Sirius, dated November 2004: "No house shall be erected on any of the housing area unless and until the stadium has reached a stage of construction whereby the following elements have been completed: the foundations, underbuilding and steel structure, and the provision of water and drainage connections to the stadium, grandstand and kennels."
"Of course everyone is wondering what is going on," admits Wallyford councillor Pat O'Donnell. "Mr Wallace has had permission to go ahead for a while now and people are obviously wondering if it has run into problems or not.
"The actual steel framework has been up for ages, and most people in the area were looking forward to it all happening. There used to be a track in Wallyford and there was a time when buses full of people used to pour in on a Monday and Friday night to the racing. Some people weren't keen on this, but many see the potential for jobs and visitors.
"Any time I speak to Mr Wallace he is fairly confident about things. But the fact is that the structure is there and nothing seems to be happening."
Previously happy to speak about his plans, Mr Wallace has suddenly become less keen to talk of his stadium dream, now refusing to comment or be interviewed.
The last statement from his camp, published in the Evening News last week, confirmed £2.6m has already been spent on the project, with the basic structure, drainage and ground works now complete. It said: "The internal and external designs for the stadium are complete, as is the design work for the approach and access roads, lighting, etc.
"However, there has been a temporary delay caused by matters associated with the adjoining lands. We expect work to start the next phase of the stadium development as soon as these issues are resolved, and to have the stadium up and running in 2007."
Quite what those issues are remain a mystery. According to East Lothian Council, planning permission has been granted and Mr Wallace has five years to complete his project or face re-submitting his application. "From a planning and legal point of view, everything is straightforward," says a council spokeswoman. "We have no problems or concerns about this application at this stage."
Others are feeling less relaxed, however. "We are really getting a bit concerned now," says Edinburgh-based greyhound owner Janice Carmichael. "It's quite frightening for us if Mr Wallace is refusing to talk about things - everyone is hoping that everything is alright because we need this racing track.
"Wallyford would be a proper track operating under National Racing Greyhound Council rules - at the moment there's only Shawfield in Glasgow and we're travelling there three times a week, adding to our costs.
"I've never known something take so long to be built. They can throw up a housing estate in months, but this is taking ages.
"Financially, we can't go on for much longer putting money into something but not getting results back. There are lots of rumours flying around and no-one really knows what is happening, except for Mr Wallace."
TRACKING POWDERHALL'S COLOURFUL HISTORY
THE pastime of dog racing has long been popular with the people of Edinburgh.
Powderhall Stadium in Beaverhall Road was originally built in 1870 for cycling and athletics and the site hosted Scottish rugby matches and Hearts and Hibs games.
Dog racing began there in 1929, and later speedway team the Edinburgh Monarchs made it their home for 19 years.
The stadium survived a £25,000 fire in 1987, a dog doping scandal and a "jinx" which saw a number of dogs greyhounds injured.
But in 1995 Powderhall went bust as owner Eddie Ramsay used stadium money to pay debts on nightclubs, and its terraces were bulldozed.
Since then there has been only one greyhound track operating in Scotland under the rules and control of the National Greyhound Racing Club - at Shawfield, Glasgow.
Greyhound stadium plan 'still on track'
THE man behind a £9 million unfinished greyhound stadium has insisted the project will be completed.
East Lothian businessman Howard Wallace of Sirius Sport and Leisure said the eight-lane Victory Lane Stadium at Wallyford would hopefully be completed by the end of the year.
Work, he added, was expected to re-start in the next month.
The steel frame of the stadium's grandstand was erected last summer but has not been completed.
Mr Wallace said: "I had rainwater issues to resolve before I could go any further but that has now been dealt with.
"It is definitely going to happen. There is no one more passionate about greyhounds than me. I had hoped to have it open last year. It's just taken longer to get things organised.
He added: "It is only part of the overall development that will take place in Wallyford as I have applied to build a small supermarket, pharmacy and a medical centre. My vision is to help with the regeneration of Wallyford."
Hotel bid to stop greyhound arena from going to the dogs
STEPHANIE BUNGAY
A DEVELOPER has unveiled ambitious plans to build a hotel, supermarket and medical centre alongside a greyhound stadium in Wallyford.
Businessman Howard Wallace has revealed he wants to transform the site into a major entertainment and tourism venue, costing in excess of £15 million.
The businessman is currently building a greyhound arena at Victory Lane Stadium, which he hopes to establish as one of the country's premier venues.
The scheme has run into trouble in recent months - with costs having soared to £14m. But today he sought to reassure locals he remained committed to the venture and is now setting his sights on regenerating the rest of the area.
Under his ambitious plans, he hopes to build a 240-bedroom hotel on land to the south west of the stadium. He admitted he is yet to approach any company about the project, but he said he would be looking to establish a partnership with a prestigious chain.
"It wouldn't necessarily be a budget chain. I want to bring a hotel operator in. It will be within walking distance of the stadium
"This will be an entertainment base, people will travel far to come here and will want to enjoy themselves and stay the night rather than have to drive home. We can make it a complete weekend, like offering golf weekends or racing with Musselburgh Race Course."
Mr Wallace said the plans were in the early stages, but if successful hoped the hotel to be ready within 18 months. He also wants to turn a business park to the south of the stadium on land he bought several years ago into a supermarket, medical centre and chemist, which would take up two thirds of the area, with the rest for offices.
Mr Wallace, who owns greyhound stadium business Sirius Sport and Leisure with his wife, Glenys, said it had proved difficult to get companies to relocate to the site. He said: "It proved impossible in getting anyone to take it on. Wallyford is not everyone's cup of tea, there are too many alternatives that people prefer."
Undeterred he has now applied to East Lothian Council for change of use. Councillors will discuss his proposals later this year and Mr Wallace, 59, is hopeful of getting approval.
"They don't have a supermarket, medical centre or pharmacy here, so it will be providing something for people. Of course it may be that they prefer another site, but I think this is ideal."
If successful, he plans to sell the site and estimates he could make around £6m. That money would be used to safeguard the future of the greyhound stadium, which Mr Wallace has been working on for nearly a decade. It is now three years behind schedule. He said paperwork was to blame for the delay, which has also seen the cost of the project rise from its initial £4m to over £14m.
"Because time has gone on, the costs have gone way beyond what I ever envisaged paying. Construction costs have gone through the roof over the past few years and it is a headache facing a lot of companies."
Cutting back on unnecessary extras, such as expensive wood finishing, and reducing the number of lanes from eight to six, has brought costs down to £9.9m.
But with a budget of £7m, on top of the £2.6m he has already spent so far he still faces a £2.9m shortfall. He hopes the sale of the land for a business park will make up the difference.
But if the application is unsuccessful then he said he would look at going into partnership with someone.
Mr Wallace, who hopes the stadium will be open by next year, said: "I am still very much committed to it, it is my passion. It is just very much dependent on how that will happen."
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The Sunday Times 'Killing Fields', County Durham Investigation - July 2006
A man was found to be killing greyhounds with a Bolt-gun and burying them for £10 - its estimated he killed 10,000 greyhounds surplus to the racing industry's requirements over a 15 year period. To date two NGRC greyhound trainers and an Assistant race track Manager have been suspended pending further investigation. The dogs came from a licensed NGRC track. We wait to see whether any further news emerges.
The Sunday Times
July 30, 2006
Greyhounds killed for losing races
Daniel Foggo
Death was price of poor results
TWO greyhounds whose deaths are at the centre of a scandal that has engulfed the dog-racing industry were shot because they had performed poorly a few days earlier. The dogs, whose names are now known to be Clash Nitro and Rent a Flyer, were pictured by an undercover photographer for The Sunday Times being led to their deaths by David Smith, the industry’s unofficial “executioner”. He is said to have killed up to 10,000 greyhounds over 15 years.
Smith was photographed just moments later pushing the greyhounds’ bodies in a wheelbarrow to bury them behind his house. Both dogs were less than three years old when they were killed this month.
It has now been established that the dogs were considered worthless by their owners, Gillian Young, a licensed trainer, and her husband Graeme, assistant racing manager at Pelaw Grange greyhound track in Co Durham.
Each dog had won races earlier this year but after they under-performed at a meeting three weeks ago the Youngs decided they did not want to continue racing them. The couple were told by a rehoming charity three days later that they would have to wait about a week before the greyhounds could be taken.
Instead, the next morning Clash Nitro and Rent a Flyer were taken to be shot in the head by Smith, a builders’ merchant from Seaham, Co Durham.
Their deaths were the subject of an exposé two weeks ago by The Sunday Times which showed how trainers were resorting to the mass slaughter of greyhounds no longer considered fast enough to race.
The revelations have shaken the greyhound industry and led to a government inquiry. Last week there were fresh calls for the animal welfare bill before parliament to be amended to subject trainers and owners to external regulation.
The Sunday Times secretly filmed the dogs being taken by Gillian Young and her father Sid Fenwick, also a licensed trainer, to be put down by Smith, who was then shown burying them in his back garden with a mechanical digger.
He told an undercover reporter it took him three years to fill the one-acre plot with bodies.
At the time the identities of Fenwick, the Youngs and the names of both dogs were unknown. Last week, however, the trainers’ details emerged and both Fenwick and Gillian Young were suspended by the National Greyhound Racing Club (NGRC), the sport’s governing body, pending an inquiry that could see them banned.
Fenwick claimed he had been given the dogs by an unnamed man and did not know their identities, but their full histories have now been established.
Each illustrates how greyhounds are exploited to provide cheap entertainment and betting fodder before commonly being killed once their usefulness has ended.
For Clash Nitro, a male brindle, life began on November 1 2003 in Ireland. His potential was apparent early on. In his first race at Youghal stadium in Co Cork on July 5, 2005, Clash Nitro came second. Several more races followed, culminating in another second at Newbridge, Co Kildare, on December 3 that year.
Less than three weeks later Clash Nitro made the trip to Britain after being sold to Graeme Young. Young knew a good prospect when he saw one. He is the breeder of Laser Beam, a champion that is one of the top racers in Britain.
On January 21 last year Clash Nitro won an A5 race (most dogs compete in competitions graded from 11 to 1), and followed his victory a week later with another first place in the even faster A3 category. His racing form took a turn for the worse with successive fifth-place finishes and it was decided he was slightly lame.
Instead of taking him to a vet the Youngs opted for a “dog physiotherapist”, who recommended he be rested. After he was considered to have regained some fitness, he was raced again at Pelaw Grange on July 8. It was to prove his final lap, however. Another fifth place was one failure too many for his exacting owner.
Rent a Flyer, a black male, had an even shorter career. Born in Ireland on May 11, 2004, he made his racing debut 15 months later at Thurles, Co Tipperary, coming in fourth.
By December 2005 he had managed his first win, at Derry racetrack in Northern Ireland. Over the following two months he notched up three further wins and one second place.
Gillian Young bought Rent a Flyer, evidently thinking he was a good prospect. But trials were disappointing. The dog appeared to be suffering from slight lameness. In April he was taken, together with Clash Nitro, to see the “physio”.
After resting him, Gillian put him back on the track at the start of June but his practice performances were mixed. Later she tested Rent a Flyer in a trial at Pelaw Grange.
Like Clash Nitro, however, his efforts were considered insufficient to warrant further attention and money being spent on him. It was decided both dogs had to be “retired”. That day David Holmes, secretary of Northumberland Greyhound Rescue, a voluntary enterprise that has rehomed hundreds of unwanted “retired” dogs, received a call from someone acting as an intermediary for the Youngs. He said the Youngs were asking for the dogs to be taken off their hands.
“I said that we had no room right then, but that we would call back three days later on the Tuesday when we were expecting two other dogs to have been moved out,” said Holmes.
“I often get calls from guys saying if you don’t come and pick up the dog today it is set to be put to sleep in the morning. We have to get in the car and drive to a motorway car park or similar to pick them up.
“We called back on the Tuesday and said we still didn’t have room, but would have in a week to 10 days.”
NGRC rules state that dogs must be put down only when it is either medically necessary or all other options have been tried. Even then, they should be killed only by a vet using injections. The next morning, July 12, both dogs were bundled into a small Peugeot van and driven to Smith’s makeshift abattoir, referred to as “the Garden of Eden” by some in the greyhound industry.
Smith was paid £20 and both dogs were dispatched with a bolt gun.
Last night both Smith, whose practice is also the subject of inquiries by the RSPCA and the tax authorities, and the Youngs were on holiday and unavailable for comment. Graeme Young has also been suspended from his job at Pelaw Grange and faces a separate inquiry by the track’s owner, Jeff McKenna.
Fenwick, who insisted last week he had not known who owned the dogs he took to be killed, said: “I didn’t know the dogs’ names, I never bothered about them. I had no idea my daughter owned the dog.”
Finally, when pressed, he said: “Well, I had an inkling.”
CELEBRITY PROTEST
Greyhound racing has long been associated with the working classes, but the welfare of the dogs has become a cause célèbre for the rich and famous.
Among those who have pressed the government to intervene are actors such as Annette Crosbie, Richard Wilson and Charlotte Cornwell, as well as Joanna Lumley, Dame Diana Rigg, Alexandra Bastedo and Simon Callow.
Other supporters include Rory Bremner, the impressionist, Sir John Harvey-Jones, the businessman, Germaine Greer, the feminist writer, and Twiggy, the 1960s model.
Crosbie, star of BBC’s One Foot in the Grave and founder of Greyhounds UK, a welfare pressure group, said The Sunday Times exposé of the mass killing of retired greyhounds had “forced the issue onto the agenda in a spectacular way”.
She said some of the celebrity campaigners had owned greyhounds and lurchers themselves