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24 January 2007‎

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There is a major controversy that is never mentioned at all in this page.

USEF is now a minority organization; the majority of show horses in the USA no longer participate in USEF.

In recent years, the American Quarter Horse, along with many of the other Western breeds (Paint, Pinto, etc.), split off from USEF. They wrote their own set of rules, set up their own Judge recognition program, and started their own drug testing & show supervision program. [a] As of October 2015, AQHA membership has fallen to 185,000 as listed in their monthly members' magazine. The USEF Equestrian Magazine advertising information states that in 2014, readership was over 80,000. [b]

This was a major blow to USEF, since the size of these breeds & the number of exhibitors meant that the majority of USEF's members & member shows left. With most of them leaving, this put a big financial hole in the USEF budget. [c]

As I understand it, the reasons for the split were financial and attention. Financially, AQHA members felt that the membership dues and fees USEF charged were excessive in relation to what services they provided to AQHA members & shows. For example, USEF collects a drug fee from every horse at every recognized show, but AQHA members felt that they seldom saw USEF drug testers at their shows, the testers mostly went to shows of breeds like Saddlebreds & Arabians. They felt they were paying most of the fees, but those fees were spent on other breeds. [d]

Attention-wise, AQHA members felt that they received little attention from USEF, despite being the largest part of the membership. They thought that disciplines like Dressage, Eventing & Jumping received most of USEF's attention, and they were comparatively neglected. So they split. [e]

It would be difficult to go into the details of this without getting a lot of back-and-forth arguments, and losing the Neutral Point of View. But this was a major incident in USEF history, and it remains a major fact about USEF today. It seems like it ought to be at least mentioned in the article. [f]

— Preceding unsigned comment added by T-bonham (talkcontribs) 07:43, 24 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Remember to sign your posts! <grin>
My take is that while on one hand it's true there are a lot of groups in the western color breeds that left, that's really the only group that bailed recently, even though in numbers of horses it was certainly noticed. But--and this is also significant--the AQHA itself actually left a VERY VERY long time ago--they were gone when I started showing in the early 1970's and that particular angle on the controversy has been dead for years. I think they may have still contracted some of the drug testing stuff with USEF (then AHSA) and that may not be happening any more (not sure on that part), but AQHA has had their own judges and rules for decades. The loss of the Paint, Pinto and Appaloosa crowd is more recent. The split between a reining division with USEF and the NHRA is yet another "political" issue.
On the other hand, USEF also evolved to become the single entity responsible for the US Olympic Equestrian team, incorporating the old USET. They also have added more of the smaller "new" breeds like the Andalusian, Paso Fino, and Friesian.
[g]
My take on the issue is that USEF had a rough few years in the past decade as it shifted from the old AHSA to the new USEF. But things appear to have settled out. It now does some things differently from what it used to do. It seems to be becoming more a "discipline" organization than a "breed" organization. The remaining breeds all have their own breed associations and most breed shows have some kind of dual approval...mostly because they all still want to have USEF do their drug testing and judge certification, I suspect.
[h]
As far as "minority" organization, the AQHA is the 10,000,000 pound gorilla in any grouping and skews any other analysis. I mean, you could as easily say that all other horse breeds in the USA are "minority" breeds...you can't turn around without tripping on a quarter horse these days...their registrations are up 53% over the last 10 years while everyone else in the industry is tanking...but that's a different issue. The AQHA does anything it wants, it is big enough to afford to do so.
I think that if there is POV in the existing article, it could be replaced with accurate statistics--I haven't really looked. But as far as visiting the "political" stuff, I think that's a can of worms that doesn't really need to be in an encyclopedia. We COULD do like they do with the Equestrian at the Summer Olympics page and create a chart of all the breeds and disciplines that ever were a part of AHSA/USEF, noting on the chart the years a given breed was added or left, but that's more work than I feel up to doing, personally, but maybe a good project if someone wanted to tackle it... Montanabw 21:30, 24 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]
[i]

Notes

  1. ^ (*CORRECTION:This is not true as the AQHA was created & incorporated in 1940. AQHA members have NEVER paid USEF fees, etc. I do not know where the OP of this editorial got their information but it’s incredibly incorrect.) These breeds are, numerically, the largest in America, and have the largest series of horse shows. WikiHorse (talk) 16:40, 23 October 2015 (UTC)
  2. ^ With the recent (October 2015) controversy over the Western Pleasure gaits demonstrated at the All American Quarter Horse Congress and an abusive warm up pen video taken by Susan M. Chrysler, the AQHA has once again fallen under fire. The USEF has made great strides in the last few years improving it's stewardship of the horses and riders including banning Rolkur, relaxing the upper level dressage movement requirements for Eventing (see Jimmy Wofford WSJ article), increasing drug testing, and revamping rules and policies on an active basis - not just once a year. WikiHorse (talk)
  3. ^ (*Note: The AQHA was never a member show. This is also nonfactual.) — Preceding unsigned comment added by Sunnybrooke117 (talk • contribs) 01:01, 21 July 2018 (UTC)
  4. ^ (Also, not factual. Besides the facts that the AQHA was never a member organization, that AQHA members never paid USEF fees, and the entire premise of this article is incorrect: AQHA members never paid national organization drug fees until 2005, when they were set at $3/per horse per judge. This fee has now increased to $5/per judge. Furthermore, 2 shows per state per year (excepting California) are drug tested by the AQHA in a rule change that occurred in 2005. The AQHA made an arrangement with the USEF to send their (AQHA) samples to the USEF lab at a discounted, quantity discount. The AQHA hires either USEF testers or more often, area veterinarians to collect samples. All AQHA drug testing is random selection.) — Preceding unsigned comment added by Sunnybrooke117 (talk • contribs) 01:01, 21 July 2018 (UTC)
  5. ^ (*Untrue. AQHA was never a member. NRHA (National Reining Horse Association - an all breed sport-specific nation governing body for the sport of Reining) temporarily joined USEF in an attempt bring about Reining as an FEI sport (it succeeded) as a means to hopefully bring Reining to FEI, & the goal, the IOC for Olympic consideration. (As FEI & IOC will only accept 1 nation governing body for all equine sports. This is the USET, which became part of USEF -then AHSA in early 2000s in a major conflict.) However after Reining became an FEI sport the partnership rapidly dissolved. This maybe bevthe conflict author was thinking of. AQHA, again, was never part of USEF.) — Preceding unsigned comment added by Sunnybrooke117 (talk • contribs) 01:01, 21 July 2018 (UTC)
  6. ^ (Actually, since it is completely false, it should NOT.) — Preceding unsigned comment added by Sunnybrooke117 (talk • contribs) 01:01, 21 July 2018 (UTC)
  7. ^ This above was only after a prolonged legal battle between USET & AHSA which is also how USEF was created. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Sunnybrooke117 (talk • contribs) 01:01, 21 July 2018 (UTC)
  8. ^ Actually, (above) the western breed do all their own judges certification, were never USEF members & other than the volumn discount legal contract signed by the USEF & AQHA (as completely Unique Corporations) in regards to lab work testing samples, the USEF does nothing for any of the western breeds. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Sunnybrooke117 (talk • contribs) 01:01, 21 July 2018 (UTC)
  9. ^ This ENTIRE opinion piece is not based on 1 single sourced fact. It’s compete & utter nonsense. The AQHA has always been a separate corporation since it’s founding in 1940, and the ApHC since 1938. APHA sinice 1950. I have no clue where this original author got this nonsense. (Sunnybrooke117) — Preceding unsigned comment added by Sunnybrooke117 (talk • contribs) 01:01, 21 July 2018 (UTC)

Recent changes and reverts

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@LEXBG: Wikipedia articles are not online profiles for companies. As such, the subjects of wiki articles don't "own" them, nor can they control them. I understand that you might think this is a profile and therefore the establishment of the current corporation [1] would be what you consider the starting point, without mentioning the earlier history of how USEF came to be. However, in Wikipedia, articles are sometimes shared with several related topics.

I have made a few changes to separate USEF from its predecessors, however the article will likely continue to contain content about AHSA as it is part of the history of USEF. (Isn't it?) You mentioned there are parts that are "factually inaccurate and have been handled through litigation". You're welcome to email me anything if you think it will help me to understand the problem(s).

Lists of directors are not usual information in Wikipedia articles, especially if the source of it is the subject's own website where anyone could simply look that up there (and also get the most current version). Also, Wikipedia policies do not allow for content to be added that is cut-and-pasted verbatim from elsewhere. See WP:Copyright violations for further information. Another Wikipedia policy describes the limits of what can be sourced directly from the subject itself (in this case, usef.org).

I know, I know; so many policies just to start out with Wikipedia. But I'm willing to help you with this article.   ▶ I am Grorp ◀ 21:43, 13 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]

In the current article, the following statement is not correct:
“In 2003, USA Equestrian and the United States Equestrian Team (USET) joined to take on responsibilities as a national governing body and became the United States Equestrian Federation. USEF was incorporated in New York on March 27, 2003.
USET did not join in the creation of USEF. You can see this in the document that you cited, as USET is not named in the document. The USET is a separate entity that still exists. Thank you. LEXBG (talk) 13:04, 15 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I found an independent source that explains how the USET drama all came about. (I’m also old enough to remember the drama in the 2000s— — I first joined AHSA in 1973, lol ) I have updated and cited the relevant sections. I concur that this is not a puff page for the organization, and I disfavor inclusion of constantly changing material like who is on the Board of Directors at the moment. The current website is pretty mediocre until you dig into the actual rulebook, but this should do. I like the history section and we should keep it, but it does need sourcing. I believe it is accurate, but the original source was probably an old USA Equestrian webpage that no linger exists. Montanabw(talk) 18:40, 21 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Montanabw, this is excellent!   ▶ I am Grorp ◀ 00:37, 22 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]

@LEXBG:, it appears that you are not fully aware of the history organization you represent. The ASHA was a long and proud predecessor to the USEF and most of its functions are still carried on today. I don’t have access to the actual legal agreement with the USOC, but it was quite apparent that all of the USET’s actual duties were absorbed into the USEF. I recall at the time people called it a “merger” even if it was technically more like a shotgun wedding. Montanabw(talk) 18:59, 21 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]

@Grorp:, I tweaked this article quite a bit, and other than trying to find some sources for the history section, I think I’ve got most of the rest of it sourced. I think the history can stay with some citation tags on it as I don’t believe that it is inaccurate, just unsourced. I don’t know if we really need a list of all the affiliates in there – the list there is incomplete— but maybe it’s OK to just have the three big ones I don’t know. I also don’t care that much, so do as you please with that little list. Montanabw(talk) 20:22, 21 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I like what you have done to the article, Montanabw. I read the whole thing from start to end. It fills in all the gaps I could see but had no background with which to fill in.   ▶ I am Grorp ◀ 00:37, 22 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]