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USET
BOARD VOTES TO CONDITION SETTLEMENT TALKS; MEDIATION REACHES IMPASSE |
USA Equestrian (formerly
American Horse Shows Association) announced today
that efforts to settle the formal dispute over the status of equestrian
sport's National Governing Body (NGB) before the United States Olympic
Committee (USOC), through mediation, have apparently reached an impasse.
In a trustees' meeting
of the United States Equestrian Team (USET) held
yesterday, October 24, 2001, its board voted by a narrow margin to refuse
to
engage in further settlement talks with the USOC mediators and USA
Equestrian unless its president, Alan F. Balch, withdraws a motion pending
in New Jersey Superior Court, "immediately dismissing the New Jersey
lawsuit." The motion now pending in Court seeks enforcement of a
previous
court order, issued in the case Balch vs. USET, on August 16, 2001,
declaring USET's corporate actions this year "null and void."
Balch explained, "We
have continually offered, at USET's request, to ask the
Court to postpone the hearing on the motion until November 16, by which
time
we had hoped a settlement could be reached. The Court initially declined
to
do so. We then offered to make a further joint plea to the Court. However,
USET apparently refused to consider that option. Our attorneys advise
us
that to unilaterally withdraw the motion at this point in the proceedings,
as opposed to postponing it, will prejudice our position. Given the
importance of our case, and the terms of the decision issued August 16,
we
simply cannot do so. Our officers are all in agreement on this point."
Nevertheless, as a
further gesture of good faith, Balch authorized his New
Jersey attorney to make renewed efforts seeking an adjournment of the
pending motion until November 16. Just after 3 pm today, the Court agreed
to the adjournment. Unfortunately, the USOC mediator has had to notify
the
USOC that the mediation appears to be at an end. Armand Leone, Jr.,
president of the USET, had informed the mediators earlier in the day that,
"I am not authorized to proceed any further with negotiations with
the
AHSA."
"The foundation
of any mediation, working toward a settlement," Balch
stated, "is that neither organization's previously existing position
be
prejudiced in any way. That was understood when both USA Equestrian and
USET entered the talks upon conclusion of the USOC hearings in Austin,
Texas, on October 15. Our court motion was pending at the time, and was
not
considered an obstacle to settlement discussions then. So obviously
something changed. From what I heard at the USET trustees' meeting
yesterday, it appeared that a majority of the USET board does not want
to
consider a settlement along the lines that the mediator, along with the
leadership of both organizations, were in the process of developing. The
demand that we halt our pending litigation is simply unreasonable; it
is
neither in our own interest nor the sport's larger interest of assuring
non-profit corporate governance within the law. I would expect the USET
to
have the same reaction if our organization were to demand at this point
that
the USET drop or withdraw its formal USOC challenge, which began all this
litigation in the first place, back in February."
With the mediation
apparently ended, the formal result of the hearing held
before a USOC panel in Austin, Texas, October 13-15, 2001, is expected
to be
revealed in due course, barring any further attempts at mediation that
still
might be undertaken. It is subject to ratification by the entire USOC
board
of directors. Both USET and USA Equestrian have previously waived any
right
to further argument or debate before the USOC board of directors, by mutual
agreement with the USOC.
USA Equestrian Inc., as the National Equestrian Federation of
the U.S., is the regulatory body for the Olympic and World Championship
sports of dressage, driving, endurance, eventing, reining, show jumping,
and vaulting, as well as 19 other breeds and disciplines of equestrian
competition. As the country's largest multi-breed organization, the Federation
has over 77,000 members and recognizes more than 2,800 competitions nationwide
each year. It governs all aspects of competition, including educating
and licensing all judges, stewards, and technical delegates who officiate
at these shows.
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