Also impacted are Waipukurau and Woodville, both also targeted for closure over ensuing years, including doing away with training facilities.
The proposals hit small communities throughout New Zealand, but some were taking the watch-this-space approach with the proposals needing legislation to be effected, although Peters and the Government are committed to change.
Wairoa Racing Club chairman Paul Toothill has called on the communities of Gisborne and Wairoa to get together on deciding on the best future for racing in the area, but was last night commenting no further.
The club is one of the oldest in New Zealand, with a history dating back to 1879 and having raced at Te Kupenga since 1925, but has survived numerous other threats of closure, including one in which the two-day meeting in 2006 was transferred to Makaraka because the running rail and other facilities were considered sub-standard.
Hawke's Bay Racing general manager Andrew Castles, preoccupied with preparations for the first day of the Spring Racing Carnival which starts today, is planning to comment early in the new week when he's had time to consider the report in full.