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Southern contacts Kirksville school about medical school partnership

Published: Thursday, April 22, 2010

Updated: Thursday, April 22, 2010 16:04

An osteopathic medical school in Kirskville has been contacted about partnering with Missouri Southern, a local doctor says.
Dr. Larry McIntire, chair of a steering committee charged with investigating a medical school branch at Southern, said Wednesday that preliminary overtures have been made to A.T. Still University and its Kirksville College of Osteopathic Medicine. Kansas City University of Medicine and Biosciences, an osteopathic school Southern had hoped to partner with, voted unanimously against the proposal on Tuesday.
"We've not had any direct meeting with anyone, we have made one call," McIntire said.
"We are making an effort and are hoping for some negotiations with A.T. Still University in Kirksville," he added.
McIntire said he wasn't surprised at the result of the vote by KCUMB's board of trustees.
"We knew that was coming," he said. "It would have been a real surprise for them to say differently because of our understanding of what's happening in Kansas City, so we were okay. We've had three or four months for the shock to wear down."
McIntire said the next move in the effort to bring a medical school to Joplin is for the steering committee to meet and analyze alternatives. He said that committee has lost no commitment to the concept, and has instead gained ground in the forms of exposure and a better understanding of the region.
"It's not been a waste of time and we don't sense, other than we need to make other arrangements, we don't sense this has in anyway been a failure to get ourselves prepared," he said.
While McIntire declined to get into specifics about the makeup of the committee, he said both hospitals in Joplin are represented. Board member Dwight Douglas also serves on the committee, along with University President Bruce Speck. Community leaders on the committee include Chamber of Commerce President Rob O'Brian and Bill Gibson, President and CEO of Empire Electric.
Additional members will be named, as well, he said.
Danny Weaver, the interim president of KCUMB and leader of the institution's board, said this week his school would consider talking with Southern again in the future once issues facing that school are resolved. McIntire said that was an "option of value."
"I agreed with him that we would certainly like to come back to the table in the event we have not been able to move other directions," McIntire said. "And if it's timely enough, of course."
 

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2 comments Log in to Comment

BornToRaiseHackles
Thu Apr 29 2010 17:53
The presidential cohones are hanging waaay out on this one! He is so desperate to make some positive impact on the community, to say nothing of currying favor with his Long Time Companion and with Freeman Hospital, that he is doubtless contacting the Ringling Brothers Clown College to see if THEY want to build a medical school here!

The fact is, it would be nice to have it! The effort should be headed up by community leaders, not by the embattled, socially inept, constantly befuddled lame duck president of the local university! The poor man has enough to do keeping his own students from turning his car upside down on the oval! Leave the man alone, and let him concentrate on the one task that would benefit students, community, faculty, and himself -- finding another job far away from here!

Doug Dwightless
Fri Apr 23 2010 01:29
Speck jumped the gun on this, has already invested hundreds of thousands of dollars on architectural plans and the environmental impact study, all of which puts MSSU in the most desperate of positions when it comes to future negotiations with any interested medical schools. When it comes to being president, he's in way over his head. Unfortunately, so are the board members who seem completely unwilling or unable to deal with the Speck-problem. I don't know how bad things will have to be before they take their board responsibilities seriously, but they should know a lot of people are disappointed in their do-nothing approach to oversight.

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