ABCDE said:
Actually are you are incorrect at least for large animal vets which is the need Tech is trying to address.
"In July 2016, the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board adopted a report reiterating the critical shortages of large animal and rural veterinarians in Texas."
Link to full article with quote.
https://www.avma.org/News/JAVMANews/Pages/180715k.asp
It is not a matter if there is a shortage in the state and particularly in the Panhandle it is simply a matter of how the need is filled. A&M wants to protect its turf understandably so. Tech wants serve the area in which it resides and has received substantial financial and community support understandably so. Competition is a good thing but A&M is using the state funding issue as a red herring to submarine another state school having a vet school. Make no mistake about it the need has been identified as real.
The absolute simplest way to address this need is to put together a student loan forgiveness program for a new vet grad to serve say 5 years in a rural community.
A vet graduates and is licensed as a vet. Not a cat vet.. Not an equine vet. Not a cow vet. A vet. An area of interest can be emphasized but at day's end they are licensed as a vet.
Young grads, wanting to start families, saddled with student loans, face a choice: large animal vet in nowhere, TX with not even another vet to take call and significantly less dollars or mixed animal/small practice in larger town for more $$?
Loan forgiveness, other incentives will bring vets to rural Texas. If we need more, add 20% to the already spectacular vet school in the state. Tech is proposing no clinical experience at the school. Students will supposedly gain that at vets in the area.
Rural vet life is tough. Less $$, no relief, less opportunity to help animals because large animal owners typically try everything they can think of to avoid using vet. By the time they do call, things are often in tough shape.
Loan forgiveness, tax abatement, incentives (small towns do this for everything from docs to wind farms) will meet the need at a tiny fraction of the cost. Just the loan forgiveness would be a fraction of one percent of what they are planning to spend on a shell of a "vet school."
This is indeed a d*** measuring contest. A stupid one at that,
Full disclosure: my son is an Aggie vet. But I am a taxpayer and Panhandle dweller who is sick of the rhetoric around this issue.
A link quoting a local vet: Not an Aggie, BTW. Keep in mind local vets are to provide the clinical experience for this priposed vet school. When we Texans already have a spectacular hospital at TAMU. The whole thing is just dumb.
http://hppr.org/post/texas-am-vet-school-tells-texas-tech-state-aint-big-enough-two-us