|
At the
behest of State Rep. Jimmy Stewart, R-Dist. 92, State Rep. Shawn
Webster, R-Dist. 53, chairman of the Higher Education
Subcommittee of the Finance and Appropriations Committee, for
the first time toured OU-COM Jan. 19 and met with the medical
school’s dean, Jack Brose, D.O., and Ohio University
President Roderick McDavis, Ph.D., and several other college
officials. Stewart is vice chairman of the subcommittee.
It was not Webster’s first
visit to the Athens campus, however. Webster recalled a visit to
Ohio University for the grand opening of its Convocation Center,
home of the university’s basketball team, in 1968. “OU played
Ohio State,” said Webster.
Webster, a
practicing veterinarian, grew up in Ironton. He said he’s “a
state representative on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday and a
veterinarian on Monday, Friday and Saturday.”
Accompanied by the college’s
legislative liaison, George Dunigan; Brose; Stewart; and
John Schriner, director of admissions, Webster saw the
college’s newly revamped osteopathic manipulative medicine lab,
the gross anatomy lab, Irvine lecture halls, Learning Resource
Center and patient simulation lab.
“You’ve got good facilities.
I’m very glad I visited, and I’m happy to see that you’re
serving people that otherwise wouldn’t get medical care,” said
Webster. “I think it’s absolutely wonderful that such a
significant number of your graduates are primary care
physicians. That’s extremely important.”
Fifty-seven percent of the
college’s graduates are in primary care, and 64 percent of the
college’s practice in Ohio. Thirty-nine percent practice in
communities of 50,000 or fewer.
After the tour, Webster
discussed several of his concerns regarding health care, the
state budget and education in Ohio.
“One thing that been a
frustration for me is trying to convince people that preventive
medicine is cost effective. All they typically see is the
upfront money.”
A lot of money in the state’s
budget, said Webster, is spent treating diseases that could be
eliminated by preventive medicine.
But preventive medicine and
health education have to go hand-in-hand and be programmed in a
consistent manner in order for them to result in cost-effective
disease reduction, said Webster.
Those are the kinds of programs
that the college’s Mobile Health Vans bring to 21 counties
through Community Service Programs’ cancer and diabetes
screenings, a variety of health clinics and health education
efforts, noted Stewart.
In preparation for submitting
his subcommittee’s budget, Webster said he’s educating himself
about every line item that’s a part of the budget.
“We’re just going to take a
hard look at the budget and make sure that everybody is being
treated fairly,” he said.
“Even though Jimmy and I come
from districts — and we certainly want to do the best for our
districts, as far as projects and a fair share — we’re really
here for Ohio, and we’re focused on Ohioans and not just
individual districts. At least, that’s certainly my philosophy.
I’m from the 53rd District, which is part of Butler
County, but I work for all Ohioans.”
Unfortunately, he says, he
can’t see where there will be any new money, but he said he will
work very hard to make sure everyone gets their fair share of
the money that is available.
“My goal is not to have winners
and losers. The winners need to be all Ohioans.”
The state’s education budget
loomed large in Webster’s discussion with McDavis. He invited
McDavis to speak to his committee regarding any concerns he
might have with the state’s funding to the university.
Any additional funding
state-supported schools might receive would be to assure they
were getting their fair share. And that additional funding would
come from reallocations not new money, said Webster.
The direction of education in
Ohio also was among his concerns, of which remediation and the
findings of the commission for higher education and the economy
figured prominently.
“I really want to address the
remediation problems we’re having. We have to better prepare the
students that come out of high school for the universities and
colleges,” he told McDavis, “but the universities and colleges
have an obligation to let the secondary people know what they
expect. We need some uniformity.
“Rep. Stewart and I were on the
commission for higher education and the economy and its report
wants a 30 percent increase in baccalaureates in 10 years. The
only way we’re going to get there is to marshal our efforts.
That’s the only way we’ll get there.
“If we’re going to be serious
about what the higher education commission came out with, we’ve
got to have a statewide higher education system.”
News for
the week of Jan. 17 – Jan. 22
News for
the week of Jan. 10 – Jan. 15
News for
the week of Jan. 3 – Jan. 8
News Archives
|