By Danny Russell
A rebel board member has called for a spill of the Melbourne Racing Club committee following scathing criticism of Caulfield Racecourse’s new $160 million mounting yard facilities as well as the club’s $250 million plans to replace the Rupert Clark Grandstand.
Sitting committee member John Kanga announced on Thursday night he had has created a Save Our MRC group and has called a special general meeting.
In a statement to announce the challenge, Kanga’s group called for the removal of MRC executive committee members Matt Cain, Nick Hassett, Mark Pratt, Brooke Dawson and Scott Davidson. They have also asked for a representative of the Mornington advisory group to replace Jill Monk on the eight-person MRC board.
The statement was released late on Thursday, hours after a MRC committee meeting.
Club chief executive officer Josh Blanksby announced his resignation in July and chairman Cain is stepping down next month. Cain and Hassett have been contacted for comment. Cain will respond on Friday.
Kanga, who joined the MRC board more than 12 months ago, said he had taken action over concerns the club was in “disarray” following stage one of its masterplan – which included a new mounting yard, new subterranean tie-up stalls and new jockey-trainer-broadcast facilities.
This masthead reported in June that the male jockeys room at Caulfield Racecourse was going to be renovated only three months after it was unveiled because it was too small to accommodate riders on busy race days.
Kanga’s group also labelled the $250 million grandstand concept, which involved knocking down the glass-fronted Rupert Clark Stand and building a new one in its place, a “white elephant”.
He said change was needed at board level to ensure members’ views were considered on key issues such as selling Sandown Racecourse and fixing Caulfield.
Kanga’s push for change has been backed by powerful owner Rupert Legh, who raced superstar sprinter Chautauqua, and Warrnambool businessman Colin McKenna, who has been a long-time supporter of the Ciaron Maher stable.
Kanga, who has a background in finance and business, said the five replacement committee members proposed by the Save Our MRC group were Lofts Quarries founder Paul Lofitis, communications executive Belinda Meyers, town planner and construction manager Robyn Gray, transport executive David Gambell and 5Ways Foodservice director Frank Pollio.
In supporting the push for change, Legh said the new mounting yard at Caulfield lacked “atmosphere and has no soul and that defeats the purpose of being at the races”.
“We need to return the mounting yard to its original rightful location (in front of the members’ stand) as soon as possible,” Legh said.
“It would also, in my opinion, be irresponsible for the committee to pursue its current proposal to spend hundreds of millions of dollars on replacing a grandstand that works perfectly well at it is.”
McKenna added: “What they have done to Caulfield Racecourse is a joke and the people
responsible need to be sacked.”
Kanga said if his push to spill the board was successful, the new committee would return the mounting yard to its original position, rule out building the new grandstand, keep racing at Sandown and optimise development value on surplus land.
“I have been overwhelmed with feedback from members about their frustrations with what has happened at Caulfield recently, and it is my belief these members need to be listened to,” he said.
“The board has been wracked by division and is in disarray. Voting in a new group
of committee members with a clear mandate will allow the club to move forward with a
united purpose.”
Kanga has owned and raced group 1 winners Russian Camelot and Miami Bound with trainer Danny O’Brien.
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