What a day. Within the space of a few hours this afternoon, Mike Baird announced greyhound racing would be shut down in NSW, and the ACT soon made a similar announcement, putting an end to a decades-long industry.
Here's what you need to know:
- Mike Baird has announced greyhound racing, and breeding the dogs for the purpose of racing, will be banned from July 1 next year because of cruelty in the industry
- Greyhound tracks will be turned into public land
- The ACT made a similar commitment, but is yet to announce a timeline on when this will happen
- A report released today by the Special Commission of Inquiry into Greyhound Racing in NSW had recommended the industry be shut down or significantly reformed
- At least 48,000 greyhounds were killed in the past 12 years because they did not run fast enough, in part of the industry's "wastage", racing minister Troy Grant said
- Members of the greyhound industry have reacted with shock to the move to shut it down
- Greyhound Racing NSW has suspended all races across the state for a week
- Animal rights groups have praised the move
- Welfare organisations are calling for people to consider adopting the greyhounds formerly used for racing
There's already been plenty of comment around the decision.
Peter Davis, a former board member of Greyhound Racing NSW, called the decision "appallingly single-minded".