Stalemate at Bangalore Turf Club
By Sharan Kumar

May 09, 2006

Traditionally, the Bangalore Summer Season has turned out to be a summer of discontent with one problem or the other threatening the smooth running of races. Be it the weather playing truant, jockeys’ strike or syces discontentment or trainers’ grievances, these isssues have always erupted during the season, causing anxious moments everywhere. Perhaps, the heat hits everyone! 


Though these exercises have often not reached their logical conclusion, all that the discontent does is to keep the anxious race goers on tenterhooks as they are always kept in the dark about the happenings. This year too, the first week’s races are under threat as all the trainers, licensed by Bangalore Turf Club, have surrendered their licenses, protesting the newly incorporated clause that holds them responsible for all the liabilities of the past, present and future with regard to the vexed problem of paying Provident Fund to the syces. The case filed by the Karnataka Trainers’ Association is in the courts but the Bangalore Turf Club has sought to safeguard its position by identifying the principal employer of syces through this clause but the trainers, backed by the Karnataka Race Horse Owners Association, have brought about a stalemate by surrendering the licenses granted to them. The first and final entries, handicaps and scratchings now stand postponed to Wednesday and the parties’ concerned hope to resolve their respective apprehensions by that deadline failing which the first week’s races will go void.

The parties concerned right now are involved in an ego clash, harping on technicalities. Is the syce (a person who looks after the horses) an employee of the trainer or that of the turf club is the question that begs to be answered. The owner entrusts the job of training horses to the trainer who in turn employs personnel to take care of them and as such there is no ambiguity about who has to fulfill the statutory obligations with regard to the employees. However, the trainers dispute this and say that by accepting the clause that they are the principal employers of syces, they are inviting disaster as they may face the unenviable task of having to undertake to pay the Provident Fund with retrospective effect if they lose their case.

Ashok Raghavan, Secretary of the Karnataka Racehorse Owners’ Association says that "the term employer has been defined under various enactments differently and the true meaning of such term will be squarely decided by the definition under the relevant enactment concerned. Further, such definition can be interpreted and decided by the courts of law and any other person claiming authority to define the same does not arise."

It is contented that the trainers have not been notified as an establishment under the PF Act as on date whereas the clubs and associations have been notified as an establishment for this purpose right from 31-5-1963.

Several rounds of talks with the representatives of the Management of the Bangalore Turf Club, the Karnataka Trainers’ Association and the Karnataka Racehorse Owners’ Association have not resolved the deadlock and at the time of writing, no body is prepared to hazard a guess except being optimistic about the racing season starting on time.

The KROA and KTA says that the simple way to solve the crisis is to withdraw the newly introduced clause unconditionally and leave the matter to the courts and act when and if a final judgment is delivered by the courts. The BTC on its part is not willing to postpone the inevitable and wants individual trainers to undertake the responsibility as they are the ones who employ the syces, pay their salary and all other requisites under the law.

For the record, the Western India Trainers’ Association pays the Provident Fund to syces after registering itself as an establishment with authorities concerned. "Why should we be in undue haste to identify the source from which the PF has to be paid when it may take several years for the case to take a concrete shape. And the whole is exercise is tantamount to waking up the giant we may not be able handle," opines Raghavan.

The simple resolution to the problem could be for all the parties concerned to sit together and work out a plan to face the contingency by creating a corpus fund for this purpose through contributions from 'all the limbs' that constitute racing.

The problem is not insurmountable but the ego clash seems to be the biggest hurdle. 

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