A WSU medical school in Spokane gets thumbs up from Legislature

The number of doctors trained in Washington could double in the next few years.

Legislation giving Washington State University the green light to establish a medical school in Spokane passed in the Washington State Senate on Tuesday morning, hours after an identical bill cleared the House of Representatives.

State Sen. Michael Baumgartner, R-Spokane: This shouldnt be the Apple Cup of medical education. This is really a choice for more doctors.

The legislation repeals a 98-year-old law that gives the University of Washington sole authority to operate a state-sponsored medical school. It also repeals a forestry school monopoly given to the UW in 1917.

Don Barbieri, a WSU Regent, described as great news the votes in Olympia. Elson Floyd, WSUs president, called the Legislatures action a powerful message that a century old policy is inadequate to the needs of 21st -entury Washington.

But the Legislature has yet to authorize any money to pay for the WSU med school. Wazzu is asking for $2.5 million to hire faculty and pursue accreditation. Eventually, with classes of 120 entering students, about $40 million would be needed to pay the states share of medical education.

The University of Washington Medical School accepts 120 students from this state each year. Yet, a total of 350 Washington undergraduates go on to study medicine, nearly two-thirds of them in out-of-state schools.

This shouldnt be the Apple Cup of medical education: This is really a choice for more doctors, said state Sen. Michael Baumgartner, R-Spokane, sponsor of the legislation. It passed by a 45-4 vote in the Legislature;s upper chamber.

The House vote was 85-17. We have a growing need in our state: We are not meeting that need currently or looking to the future, said State Rep. Marcus Riccelli, D-Spokane. We can do better in this state and change this 100-year-old law. This is about community based medical education. This is about patient-care access.

In a statement that will be tested, Riccelli argued that Spokane possesses the needed infrastructure to hit the ground running right away.

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A WSU medical school in Spokane gets thumbs up from Legislature

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