File #: 22-0108    Version: 1 Name:
Type: Partnership Agreement Status: Approved
File created: 1/11/2022 In control: FPD Board of Commissioners
On agenda: 2/8/2022 Final action: 2/8/2022
Title: PROPOSED PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT Request: Requesting authorization for the Forest Preserves of Cook County (the "Forest Preserves") to enter into a Partnership Agreement with the University of Illinois (the "University"), Champaign, Illinois and the Chicago Zoological Society ("CZS"), Brookfield, Illinois. Reason: The Forest Preserves is proposing to partner with the University of Illinois (the "University") and the Chicago Zoological Society ("CZS") to support a three-year veterinary residency program focused on wildlife health management. The resident would participate in clinical programs at the Forest Preserves, including providing dedicated veterinary care for managed animals within the Forest Preserves' nature centers, medical services and biological sampling for wildlife field studies, assistance with the application of wildlife disease management programs, and interpretation of diagnostic test results. The resident would also work with the Wildlife Epidemiology Lab at the U...
Indexes: (Inactive) ARNOLD RANDALL, General Superintendent
title
PROPOSED PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT

Request: Requesting authorization for the Forest Preserves of Cook County (the "Forest Preserves") to enter into a Partnership Agreement with the University of Illinois (the "University"), Champaign, Illinois and the Chicago Zoological Society ("CZS"), Brookfield, Illinois.

Reason: The Forest Preserves is proposing to partner with the University of Illinois (the "University") and the Chicago Zoological Society ("CZS") to support a three-year veterinary residency program focused on wildlife health management.

The resident would participate in clinical programs at the Forest Preserves, including providing dedicated veterinary care for managed animals within the Forest Preserves' nature centers, medical services and biological sampling for wildlife field studies, assistance with the application of wildlife disease management programs, and interpretation of diagnostic test results. The resident would also work with the Wildlife Epidemiology Lab at the University of Illinois, and practice zoological medicine for wildlife under human care at the Chicago Zoological Society's Brookfield Zoo in association with Forest Preserves research programs. These efforts will further investigation into zoonotic disease, and the role of wildlife health towards the sustainability and success of conservation efforts in Cook County.

The program is available to post-graduate students who have received their Doctor of Veterinary Medicine degree and consists of three (3) years of clinical study, research, presentations at conferences and symposia, and formal coursework. It is designed to provide the resident with advanced training under the guidance of clinical faculty and mentors at the Forest Preserves, the University, and CZS to satisfy requirements for certification as a specialist in free-ranging wildlife health management. If approved, this would be only the second American College of Zoological Medicine residency program primarily focused ...

Click here for full text