- Agriculture
- Featured
- Research
- Community
TAMUS Entities to Come Together to Celebrate Grand Opening of Veterinary-Focused Buildings in Canyon
CANYON, Texas — The Texas A&M College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences (CVMBS), West Texas A&M University (WT), and the Texas A&M Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory (TVMDL) will celebrate on Thursday, Nov. 19, the grand opening of two facilities that will further expand upon the Texas A&M University System’s (Texas A&M System) veterinary medical, education, service, and research missions in the Texas Panhandle.
Texas A&M System Chancellor John Sharp, Texas A&M President Michael K. Young, WT President Dr. Walter Wendler, CVMBS Dean Dr. John August, and TVMDL director Dr. Bruce Akey will commemorate the opening of the Veterinary Education, Research, & Outreach (VERO) Building and the Charles W. Graham, DVM TVMDL Building during a ceremony beginning at 11 a.m. Nov. 19 at the VERO Building lobby.
Both facilities opened in September, signaling the culmination of the Texas A&M System’s investment in large animal health in the Texas Panhandle. The project is supported by $90 million in capital improvements and $5 million in faculty hires for a total of $95 million in investment in the Panhandle. Ground was broken on both buildings in December 2018.
About the VERO initiative and building
The VERO Building is a $22-million 36,000-square-foot facility that now serves as a regional veterinary teaching center that creates a gateway to the CVMBS for students interested in pursuing veterinary medicine from the Texas Panhandle and West Texas, while also facilitating collaborative, multidisciplinary research among scientists from across the region.
Not only are WT pre-veterinary students taught in the facility but it will also serve as the home for the CVMBS’ 2+2 Doctor of Veterinary Medicine (DVM) program, which will enroll its first cohort of up to 18 first-year DVM students in the fall of 2021.
The VERO initiative offers other unique educational opportunities for current CVMBS veterinary students, including fourth-year clinical rotations, immersive externships, summer internships, and food animal production-focused tours that introduce them to the region and the livestock industries.
The building also houses on-site researchers who will continue to address Panhandle-specific issues and those with broad impact on the livestock industries.
To support the educational mission of VERO, the Texas A&M System also announced earlier this year a $5 million commitment to support additional faculty hires.
About the Panhandle-based TVMDL and building
The TVMDL facility, named after a Texas A&M Distinguished Alumnus and one of Texas’ most renowned equine veterinarians, is a $17.6-million, 22,000-square-foot building that features the latest technology for diagnostic services in bacteriology, pathology, serology, and virology, as well as spaces for receiving and processing and necropsy and support.
The opening of the building in September signaled a relocation to Canyon from its previous location in Amarillo, which was opened in 1975 to specifically serve the Panhandle’s cattle feedlot industry as an extension of the College Station-based laboratory.
Almost 50 years later, TVMDL’s Panhandle laboratory has expanded its clientele to more than just livestock producers, offering testing for almost every animal species for some of the largest animal agriculture companies in the world as well as the ever-important smaller independent producers.
The Canyon-based facility offers an open-flow laboratory environment for enhanced collaboration, including one of only two high-containment, biosafety level 3 (BSL-3) laboratories in Texas specifically designed to test for high-consequence animal diseases that pose a significant threat to the agriculture economy and public health.
Even as one of the largest and busiest diagnostic labs in the country, TVMDL makes education and training of colleagues a priority and will serve as a practical training ground for future veterinarians, while also actively providing training experiences for undergraduates, residents, newly minted DVMs, and postdoctoral students.
Both the VERO facility and TVMDL’s relocation to the WT campus will further strengthen the TAMUS’ focus on veterinary medicine in the Panhandle.
The grand opening ceremony will be streamed live at vetmed.tamu.edu/vero/grand-opening/.