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Articles: Press Release
USEA President Kevin Baumgardner's Report on the Strategic Planning Meeting
March 21-22 in Leesburg, Virginia.
Contact:
United States Eventing Association
Old Waterford Road, NW
Leesburg, VA 20176
703-779-0440
Read on useventing.com, http://useventing.com/blog/?p=162
I told you that I would report back to the membership after our Strategic
Planning meeting in Leesburg, which took place this past Friday and
Saturday. Before I do so, please allow me to describe the avalanche of
responses I have received from concerned members since I posted my message
on the USEA website early last week soliciting your input. So far,
approximately 500 members have emailed or called me. Dozens more have
contacted the various Area Chairs or the USEA staff. Those who have
contacted us have included a broad cross-section of our
membership--grass-roots Eventers as well as some of the biggest names in the
sport. I have heard from adult amateur riders at every level, trainers and
coaches at every level, young riders at every level, Olympic gold
medalists, riders who are just taking up the sport and hoping to compete at
beginning novice, members who have been involved in the sport for
forty-plus years, Badminton champions, riders whose lifelong goal is to
move up to preliminary, veterinarians, officials, organizers, course
designers and builders, owners of four-star (and in some cases Olympic
medalist) horses, spouses and parents of elite-level riders, and many, many
concerned parents of aspiring young riders. I have also received a number
of emails from Eventers in Canada, New Zealand and England. I have heard
from many people who are considering leaving the sport, are currently on
the sidelines considering whether they are comfortable re-entering the
sport, or who are wrestling with whether to allow their children to take
up (or continue in) the sport.
Perhaps most significantly, I have heard from nearly 200 of you who have
identified yourself as members of the "silent generation" of Eventing
professionals, a group who have heretofore usually not spoken up about
their concerns regarding the direction of the sport. What is truly
extraordinary is that dozens of well-known riders and trainers--some of whom
have been competing at the four-star level and vying for U.S. Equestrian
Team positions--consider themselves part of that "silent generation."
Equally extraordinary is what you have to say. These have not been
one-line messages. Instead, the vast majority of you have poured out your
hopes, dreams, fears and frustrations in great detail, and have often
confided in me your personal stories in Eventing to help put your insights
and suggestions into better context. I am deeply impressed by the
thoughtfulness of your messages and the nearly universal recognition of the
complexity of the issues our sport faces. It is clear that you "get it,"
and you are hoping that we (those of us in the governance of the sport) get
it too.
I have returned dozens of your messages, but no one has yet invented a
30-hour day, so I must confess that my capacity to respond in a timely
fashion to everyone who has called or written has suffered a major
meltdown. Even many of my close friends in the sport have not yet received
a response. I ask all of you to please forgive me for the delay in
responding. I am reading every message I get--and sharing your ideas with
my colleagues--and will respond personally to each and every one of you who
emails or calls. That process will just take some time. The USEA will
also take steps to set up regular forums for communication with members and
otherwise to keep the dialogue with the members going, and we will
additionally be developing ways to utilize the talents of the scores of you
who have volunteered to be part of the solution (and to get more involved
with the Association generally in various capacities). Again, please bear
with us as we process all of this extremely valuable (and very heartening)
input.
And finally, please do not read my disclaimer about being swamped by
responses as a cry for mercy. If you have something to say (or even if you
already contacted me but now have something more to say), don't hesitate to
email or call me. There was no artificial deadline created by the
Strategic Planning meeting, and we still want (and need) to hear your
voices. Again, my email address is kbaumgardner@corrcronin.com, and my
phone number is (206) 621-1480.
What message did you give us? Well over 90 percent of those who responded
said some variation of the following:
We must reverse the prevailing trends in cross-country course design at
all levels--that is, let's tone down the emphasis on technical difficulty,
on packing courses with tight turns and complexes taken at show-jumping
speed, and on sorting out the field. Instead, let's swing the pendulum
back towards courses that emphasize the rhythm of the gallop and that are
focused on being horse and rider-friendly .
Another message that came through loud and clear:
We must slow down optimal speeds where appropriate given the nature of
the course, constraints imposed by the size of the venue, terrain, footing,
etc.
Then there was this:
The direction of our sport should not be dictated in a top-down fashion
by a few entrenched individuals; instead, we need accountability at all
levels and need new voices to be heard in the governance of Eventing in
this country.
And finally this:
Let's make Eventing fun again.
Those were by far the four most prevalent messages. Your emails also
contained dozens of other creative ideas on topics including safety, how to
open up governance of the sport, etc. I did my best to synthesize and
communicate your input to the participants in the Strategic Planning
session (who included, among others, a majority of the USEA board of
governors).
So what did we do in Leesburg? To begin with, we scrapped the
long-established agenda and, with the excellent on-the-fly help of our
facilitator Bud Crouch, spent virtually all of the session on this one
topic. It was an intense and emotionally exhausting day-and-a-half. We
discussed, debated and argued with uncompromising frankness the issues
faced by the sport. We tried to confront head-on the truths that lie right
under the surface of those issues. One of those truths is that Eventing is
a risk sport--nothing we do will ever change that fact. Another truth is
that anyone who gallops an Event horse out of a start box must exercise a
good measure of personal responsibility. Yet another is that anyone who
tells you there is a quick and easy way to resolve the multiple challenges
facing the sport is either a fool or a liar (or both). The issues are
complex, and so will be the solutions. For that reason, we discussed a
wide range of safety-related ideas (many suggested by members in their
messages) including such diverse examples as instituting mandatory
competitor meetings before cross-country, increasing minimum ages for
riders to compete at preliminary and intermediate, increasing the
availability of ICP-certified instructors, funding a study relating to the
cause and prevention of pulmonary hemorrhages in sport horses, and finding
ways to identify and penalize dangerous riding on a much more regular
basis--there were many more, I couldn't even begin to list them all. We
also agreed--and here acknowledge--that there are legitimate concerns about
conflicts of interest that need to be addressed.
But in the end, convinced that the complexity of the issues facing the
sport should not be an excuse for inaction, we determined that the most
pressing immediate need was to deal with the cross-country course design
and optimal time issues. So we unanimously voted to take immediate action
to reverse the trends in course design and to slow down speeds where
appropriate. We also unanimously voted on a set of six guiding principles
that address our overall philosophy in responding to the four main areas of
member concerns communicated to us.
We did not formulate specific cross-country course design or speed
standards (although we discussed those topics at length, and came up with
some ideas). Instead, we decided that it was appropriate to give the USEA
Eventing Standards Task Force--the group I appointed in December to address
this very issue, and that has been chaired by Darren Chiacchia--a strong
directive to develop proposed standards on an expedited basis so that they
can be submitted for action by the USEF Eventing Technical Committee at the
meeting that will take place on the Wednesday before the Rolex Kentucky
Three-Day Event. As I mentioned in my earlier message, Gina Miles has
agreed to serve as acting chair of that task force during Darren's
convalescence.
The specific motion that was the end-product of our discussions, first
passed on a unanimous vote of the Strategic Planning Group, then
immediately ratified and adopted by a unanimous vote of the Board of
Governors (a quorum of the Board was present at the meeting), reads as
follows:
The USEA Board of Governors, on March 22, 2008. hereby unanimously resolves
to:
1. Adopt the six Guiding Principles as a policy statement of USEA:
USEA Guiding Principles
1. We will not wait for the FEI or the rest of the world; we will
lead.
2. The sport shall emphasize the success of horse and rider, not a
philosophy of elimination.
3. Identifying and implementing appropriate standards of course
design and speed at each level.
4. Addressing and respecting our members' concerns at competitions
and in the governance of the sport.
5. Encouraging and developing opportunities for members to
participate in all facets of leadership at all levels.
6. In all of our endeavors and pursuits, we affirm our commitment to
the welfare of the horse.
2. Direct and authorize the Eventing Standards Task Force to take
immediate action to reverse the trends in course design and slow down
speeds where appropriate, consistent with Item 3 in the Guiding
Principles.
3. Direct and authorize the Eventing Standards Task Force to present
rule change proposals in accordance with Item 2 above, to be acted on by
the USEF Eventing Technical Committee in its April 23, 2008 meeting.
4. Provide the Eventing Standards Task Force with communications
received from USEA members to guide them in making these rule change
proposals.
So here's the plan: The Eventing Standards Tasks Force is scheduled to
meet (via telephone) this coming Thursday, March 27, to start the process
of hammering out proposed rule changes. As noted in paragraph 4 of the
motion passed by the Board, we will provide the task force with the emails
and other communications I and my colleagues have received from you (with
the exception of those messages that you have asked me to hold
confidential) to help guide them in this process. Again, we hope and
expect to have rule change proposals regarding cross country design and
speed standards drafted, approved by the task force and submitted to the
USEF Eventing Technical Committee (chaired by USEA Governor and Strategic
Planning participant Malcolm Hook, who is also a member of the Eventing
Standards Task Force) in advance of the Rolex meeting in late April. I am
a member of the Eventing Technical Committee, as are several other USEA
Governors.
We will update you regularly in this space as this process unfolds.
I am very pleased to report that USEF Safety Committee chair Andrew Ellis
has contacted the USEA and informed us that he endorses this effort.
I should emphasize once again that we in the USEA leadership are not losing
sight of the other issues identified by the membership, including the need
for more two-way communication between the leadership and Eventers at all
levels of the sport, the need for fostering frank discussion without the
perception of intimidation, and the need for introducing "new blood" into
the governance of the sport. Nor are we planning on abandoning the many
other safety-related ideas put forth by our membership. To the contrary,
we plan to address those ideas once this initial expedited push on
cross-country course design and speeds has taken place. This will be a
continuing process.
And I want to mention one other thing that I believe is crucial to this
process: We must not become bogged down in finger-pointing or characterize
this issue as "good guys" versus "bad guys." We are at a crossroads now in
the direction of our sport, and all of us, and the sport itself, will be
losers if we divert our focus from taking positive steps forward and
instead become mired in personal attacks. That is not to say we should
avoid standing up and fighting for what we believe in, but to my mind one
of the great strengths of our sport has always been the quality of the
people involved--all of the people involved--so let's pull together and move
forward as a community.
Again, please don't stay on the sidelines. We solicit your input, and
fully expect to be accessible and accountable to our membership.
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