They want to treat their heifer's stds locally
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The concept of Texas Tech establishing a veterinary school in Amarillo is beginning to come into greater focus, including its potential future location.
On Tuesday morning, the Amarillo Economic Development Corporation Board of Directors is expected to discuss and consider the amended Location Incentives Agreement between the Amarillo EDC, Texas Tech University and the Texas Tech University System as a means of moving the $90 million project forward.
The Mariposa Village Community Land Trust has donated the land for the Texas Tech School of Veterinary Medicine. Mary Emeny serves as the trust board's chairperson. In 1900, her grandfather, W.H. Bush, donated land for what became St. Anthony's Hospital.
Texas Tech University System Chancellor Robert Duncan said the land donation serves as a vital component in the process.
Duncan said securing funding to construct the facility and acquiring the programmatic costs - hopefully an annual allocation of $18 million yearly from the Legislature - would help create a vet school model that meets the needs of the industry and agriculture community and bodes well for the region's future.
"It is a four-year veterinary school of medicine," he said of the Texas Tech venue. "So (graduates) will have opportunities to go anywhere and do anything they want to do. In Calgary, they had an urban center surrounded by rural areas. The challenge was how to get kids in these positions to go work in the rural environment. Calgary developed a unique curriculum and Texas Tech is using that model. To do that, they are partnering with clinics, as well as industry in the area. The students will get classroom work here while also being offered the opportunity to go out much earlier in their veterinary career to work in the rural environments. Students will gain exposure to that much earlier in their career than is normally provided in vet school."
Bucketrunner said:
Bound and determined to establish a second rate vet school. Are they hoping students stay out there if they're never given the opportunity to see east of I-35??
Never have understood why a vet school makes the tard hearts beat faster.
Big brother has one.Quote:
Never have understood why a vet school makes the tard hearts beat faster.
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Today there were votes taken and commitments made - $90 million in commitments in total.
That's right, the Texas Tech University Veterinarian School build out will cost $90 million, and that money is now funded through fundraising efforts pulling in money from the Panhandle and from communities as far as 250 miles away.
You may be asking why do we need this?
I asked the same question.
Here are a few points that make it obvious why this is a great investment in our community:I also asked about any duplication that may occur with West Texas A&M's new program. The WT program is a great cattle focused extension to the College Station A&M and has a great role in the community, but it will not be a duplication of service because the Texas Tech school will be a full graduate program with multiple animal disciplines.
- The Panhandle region is home to over three million head of cattle.
- The job demand is high because the closest veterinarian schools to us placed 100 percent of their graduates last year. The only other Texas veterinarian school takes more than 600 applicants every year and selects 130 students. That leaves 470 either out, or they go off to school outside our area and we then struggle to recruit them back to serve our area.
- Our region is in need of USDA animal health inspectors, large animal veterinarians to take the place of retiring veterinarians, and dairy farms are in constant need of trained veterinary professionals for their cattle.
Here is some research provided by the AEDC:The money is being committed by private donors and the Amarillo Economic Development Corporation. This is what we hired the AEDC to do, and this is a low risk and high gain opportunity.
- The Amarillo EDC proposes to fund up to $69 million to ensure the Texas Tech University School of Veterinary Medicine is constructed and operational in Amarillo, Texas. Along with private donations and other community support, the Amarillo EDC funds will act as a financial guarantee for this $90 million project.
- Texas Tech is contractually obligated to continue fundraising efforts. This investment by the AEDC assures the vet school will happen while at the same time challenging industry and community partners to join in the success of making it happen.
- The timing of Amarillo's investment before the legislative appropriations request will increase the momentum of private fundraising and hopefully assist the legislative funding request.
- Funding for the project will come from the annual tax revenues (sales tax) recognized by the AEDC, and no bonds are currently planned to be issued for this project.
- The estimated annual economic impact is $76 million annually to Amarillo, hence a complete return on investment in a short time-frame, dramatically impacting economy and education in Amarillo.
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Plans for the Texas Tech University Veterinarian School in Amarillo have been underway since 2015, and today, various City of Amarillo entities are working to bring those plans closer to fruition.
The Amarillo Economic Development Corporation announced today that they will pledge up to $69 million to ensure the construction and operation of the veterinarian school. Including private funding and previous donations, these funds will act as a financial guarantee for the $90 million project.
Amarillo City Council approved up to $69 million in funding to ensure the construction and operation of the veterinarian school.
Including private funding and previous donations, these funds will act as a financial guarantee for the $90 million project.
The school will be located on the same campus as the pharmacy and medical schools.
"We're the only place in the nation now that will have all three of those on a single campus," said Jason Herrick, chairman of the Steering Committee of Amarillo Vet School. "To me, that means we're going to be on the forefront of research and development opportunities. It's really exciting about the types of businesses and the types of people we can get to our community."
"Both of those make a veterinary school perfect for the types of industry that is here," said Robert Duncan, Chancellor for Texas Tech University System. "This is the epicenter of the beef industry as well as now all the dairy industry is migrating to this region of the country."
By establishing these higher education programs, Texas Tech's vet program, as well as West Texas A&M, hope to meet the need in the area.
"I have a high level of confidence that one of our best partners will be West Texas A&M University," said Herrick. "Both for our students and for the opportunities to develop with faculty and for research opportunities that will come up between the two universities."
Before students begin Tech's three year program beginning in fall of 2021, fundraising efforts are expected to continue as well as action on the legislative level.
"The stars are aligning in a good way for us to have a strong argument with $90 million in funding for construction and say here's the need and here's why we should appropriate some money for operational funding," said Rep. Four Price, State Representative for District 87. "I'm looking forward to that opportunity"
The AEDC's payments will run through 2029 in over 10 installments.
This is the second largest project that the AEDC has been involved in.
The new school will be the 31st veterinary school in the country.
CanyonAg77 said:Big brother has one.Quote:
Never have understood why a vet school makes the tard hearts beat faster.
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$69 million
Actually, A&M had the WT stuff planned for a while. They scheduled a public announcement of that fact. A&M chancellor Sharp called the Tech chancellor, as a courtesy, to give him a heads up. After all, WT is in Tech's back yard.Andy Farmer said:CanyonAg77 said:Big brother has one.Quote:
DNever have understood why a vet school makes the tard hearts beat faster.
Seems big brother felt threatened...why?
Scrambling to throw **** together at WTAMU and fighting Tech the whole way.
CanyonAg77 said:Actually, A&M had the WT stuff planned for a while. They scheduled a public announcement of that fact. A&M chancellor Sharp called the Tech chancellor, as a courtesy, to give him a heads up. After all, WT is in Tech's back yard.Andy Farmer said:CanyonAg77 said:Big brother has one.Quote:
DNever have understood why a vet school makes the tard hearts beat faster.
Seems big brother felt threatened...why?
Scrambling to throw **** together at WTAMU and fighting Tech the whole way.
Tech is the one who then scrambled to beat A&M's announcement. They threw together a proposal, and held a press conference before A&Ms scheduled press conference.
Like putting your name on a law school.CanyonAg77 said:Big brother has one.Quote:
Never have understood why a vet school makes the tard hearts beat faster.
What green light?Quote:
but its a curious step that Tech essentially gets the green light on a vet school
Okay. Exactly why should a little female vet (>50% of vet students are female) want to move to West Texas, and wrestle cattle for $100K a year, when they can have a 9-5 Monday through Thursday practice with puppies and kitties for $200K a year.Quote:
Has less to do w big brother syndrome and more to do with the need for large animal vets in an area swamped by cattle
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A&M Chancellor John Sharp threw a not-so-subtle shot across the bow last week to set the stage for what lies ahead: "As a courtesy, last weekend I informed Chancellor Robert Duncan that the Texas A&M School of Veterinary Medicine would soon announce a presence in several Texas A&M System schools.
"In response, Mr. Duncan comes up with this long-rejected claim we should fund a vet school at Texas Tech. The Coordinating Board has specifically rejected the notion. The Legislature has rejected this for 40 years. We will proceed with our announcement as planned."
Hmmm. This was written in March of 2017, and they said they wouldn't pursue a vet school for at least two years.Quote:
Texas Tech will not pursue funding for a proposed school of veterinary medicine in Amarillo for the next two years, changing the status of the project Friday from "on pause" to halt as Tech leaders respond to Texas lawmakers' calls to tighten budgets statewide.
The Texas Tech University System Board of Regents' vote on the vet school came Friday after an executive session at the end of a two-day meeting in Tech's Student Union Building.
Regent Vice Chairman Tim Lancaster made the motion before adjourning the meeting around noon.
"I move that the board adopt the following resolution: Because of limited budget funds available to the state of Texas for the next biennium, for the two fiscal years ending August 31, 2018 and August 31, 2019, and because of the need to emphasize other funding priorities for the Texas Tech University System, it shall be the policy of the board of regents of the Texas Tech University System that the system shall not further pursue funding by the 85th legislature of the school of veterinary medicine," Lancaster said.
Regent Mickey Long seconded the motion and the board approved it unanimously with no further discussion.
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is there a reason to try and prevent it?
CanyonAg77 said:Quote:
is there a reason to try and prevent it?
Waste of taxpayer dollars.
Oh, I'm sure that all the buildings, salary, and operating expenses will come from unicorn farts and fairy dust.rockylarues said:The $90 million is not coming from taxpayers dollars. And whether or not any expenditures will be a waste depends on if it becomes sustainable, it will, and if it will be filling a need not currently met, again, it will.CanyonAg77 said:Waste of taxpayer dollars.Quote:
is there a reason to try and prevent it?
CanyonAg77 said:Oh, I'm sure that all the buildings, salary, and operating expenses will come from unicorn farts and fairy dust.rockylarues said:The $90 million is not coming from taxpayers dollars. And whether or not any expenditures will be a waste depends on if it becomes sustainable, it will, and if it will be filling a need not currently met, again, it will.CanyonAg77 said:Waste of taxpayer dollars.Quote:
is there a reason to try and prevent it?
Oh, no, wait. Your chancellor has already said he'll need $18,000,000 a year to keep it going. ANd we all know that government spending goes up over time.
And, by the way, there isn't $90m yet. That's what they say they need. They've already blown through $4m to "study" the school, and the Amarillo Economic Dev guys have already promised $15m of that $90m......that comes from taxpayer money.
CanyonAg77 said:
Amazing how you can discern motives from a few internet posts.
Nearly as amazing as how you think EDC money is not tax money, just because it is kept in a different pocket.
CanyonAg77 said:What green light?Quote:
but its a curious step that Tech essentially gets the green light on a vet school
The only one that matters is the higher education coordinating board. Which has not given a green light, and has repeatedly given it a red light in the past.
CanyonAg77 said:Quote:
A&M Chancellor John Sharp threw a not-so-subtle shot across the bow last week to set the stage for what lies ahead: "As a courtesy, last weekend I informed Chancellor Robert Duncan that the Texas A&M School of Veterinary Medicine would soon announce a presence in several Texas A&M System schools.
"In response, Mr. Duncan comes up with this long-rejected claim we should fund a vet school at Texas Tech. The Coordinating Board has specifically rejected the notion. The Legislature has rejected this for 40 years. We will proceed with our announcement as planned."
http://www.lubbockonline.com/article/20151212/NEWS/312129886Hmmm. This was written in March of 2017, and they said they wouldn't pursue a vet school for at least two years.Quote:
Texas Tech will not pursue funding for a proposed school of veterinary medicine in Amarillo for the next two years, changing the status of the project Friday from "on pause" to halt as Tech leaders respond to Texas lawmakers' calls to tighten budgets statewide.
The Texas Tech University System Board of Regents' vote on the vet school came Friday after an executive session at the end of a two-day meeting in Tech's Student Union Building.
Regent Vice Chairman Tim Lancaster made the motion before adjourning the meeting around noon.
"I move that the board adopt the following resolution: Because of limited budget funds available to the state of Texas for the next biennium, for the two fiscal years ending August 31, 2018 and August 31, 2019, and because of the need to emphasize other funding priorities for the Texas Tech University System, it shall be the policy of the board of regents of the Texas Tech University System that the system shall not further pursue funding by the 85th legislature of the school of veterinary medicine," Lancaster said.
Regent Mickey Long seconded the motion and the board approved it unanimously with no further discussion.
http://politics.blog.mystatesman.com/2017/03/03/in-battle-over-veterinary-school-texas-am-routs-texas-tech/
Andy Farmer said:CanyonAg77 said:What green light?Quote:
but its a curious step that Tech essentially gets the green light on a vet school
The only one that matters is the higher education coordinating board. Which has not given a green light, and has repeatedly given it a red light in the past.
Strange.
Better tell Tech to quit wasting their time then....
Aggie1 said:
http://www.newschannel10.com/story/38139134/city-of-amarillo-approves-aedc-pledge-of-up-to-69m-for-texas-tech-veterinary-school
Tuesday, May 8th 2018, 9:51 pm CDT
City of Amarillo approves AEDC pledge of up to $69M for Texas Tech veterinary schoolQuote:
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Plans for the Texas Tech University Veterinarian School in Amarillo have been underway since 2015, and today, various City of Amarillo entities are working to bring those plans closer to fruition.
The Amarillo Economic Development Corporation announced today that they will pledge up to $69 million to ensure the construction and operation of the veterinarian school. Including private funding and previous donations, these funds will act as a financial guarantee for the $90 million project.
Amarillo City Council approved up to $69 million in funding to ensure the construction and operation of the veterinarian school.
Including private funding and previous donations, these funds will act as a financial guarantee for the $90 million project.
The school will be located on the same campus as the pharmacy and medical schools.
"We're the only place in the nation now that will have all three of those on a single campus," said Jason Herrick, chairman of the Steering Committee of Amarillo Vet School. "To me, that means we're going to be on the forefront of research and development opportunities. It's really exciting about the types of businesses and the types of people we can get to our community."
"Both of those make a veterinary school perfect for the types of industry that is here," said Robert Duncan, Chancellor for Texas Tech University System. "This is the epicenter of the beef industry as well as now all the dairy industry is migrating to this region of the country."
By establishing these higher education programs, Texas Tech's vet program, as well as West Texas A&M, hope to meet the need in the area.
"I have a high level of confidence that one of our best partners will be West Texas A&M University," said Herrick. "Both for our students and for the opportunities to develop with faculty and for research opportunities that will come up between the two universities."
Before students begin Tech's three year program beginning in fall of 2021, fundraising efforts are expected to continue as well as action on the legislative level.
"The stars are aligning in a good way for us to have a strong argument with $90 million in funding for construction and say here's the need and here's why we should appropriate some money for operational funding," said Rep. Four Price, State Representative for District 87. "I'm looking forward to that opportunity"
The AEDC's payments will run through 2029 in over 10 installments.
This is the second largest project that the AEDC has been involved in.
The new school will be the 31st veterinary school in the country.
CanyonAg77 said:Andy Farmer said:CanyonAg77 said:What green light?Quote:
but its a curious step that Tech essentially gets the green light on a vet school
The only one that matters is the higher education coordinating board. Which has not given a green light, and has repeatedly given it a red light in the past.
Strange.
Better tell Tech to quit wasting their time then....
Did the coordinating board approve it and I missed it? You know, the group with the final say?
All they have so far is $4m.Andy Farmer said:CanyonAg77 said:Andy Farmer said:CanyonAg77 said:What green light?Quote:
but its a curious step that Tech essentially gets the green light on a vet school
The only one that matters is the higher education coordinating board. Which has not given a green light, and has repeatedly given it a red light in the past.
Strange.
Better tell Tech to quit wasting their time then....
Did the coordinating board approve it and I missed it? You know, the group with the final say?
I highly doubt Tech is going to get the necessary funding and have THECB turn them down. Call it a hunch....
Aggie1 said:
accredited?
CanyonAg77 said:All they have so far is $4m.Andy Farmer said:CanyonAg77 said:Andy Farmer said:CanyonAg77 said:What green light?Quote:
but its a curious step that Tech essentially gets the green light on a vet school
The only one that matters is the higher education coordinating board. Which has not given a green light, and has repeatedly given it a red light in the past.
Strange.
Better tell Tech to quit wasting their time then....
Did the coordinating board approve it and I missed it? You know, the group with the final say?
I highly doubt Tech is going to get the necessary funding and have THECB turn them down. Call it a hunch....
It wouldn't be the first time they were turned down.