Your Reading List

Quebec sets up grants for future livestock vets

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: February 12, 2010

Quebec’s agriculture ministry plans to encourage veterinary students to consider livestock medicine by granting new bursaries to those who do.

The ag, food and fisheries ministry (MAPAQ) said Thursday it plans to provide bursaries of $5,000 and $10,000 for veterinary students, in their fourth and fifth years of study, who plan to work with livestock upon graduating.

With these grants, MAPAQ said, it hopes to stimulate interest in livestock among veterinary students while maintaining access to veterinary services in all regions of the province.

To be considered for the grants, a student must be enrolled in a fourth of fifth year of university study and registered for the doctorate program in the University of Montreal’s faculty of veterinary medicine at St-Hyacinthe.

Read Also

FILE PHOTO: A worker applies sanitizing talcum powder to livestock amid an increase in cases of screwworm since August, with the outbreak steadily moving north, in San Antonino Castillo Velasco, Mexico, October 3, 2025. REUTERS/Jorge Luis Plata/File Photo

Mexico agriculture secretary says still no date for restarting cattle exports to U.S.

Mexican Agriculture Minister Julio Berdegue said on Wednesday that Mexico and the United States have not yet set a date to resume Mexican cattle exports amid an outbreak of the flesh-eating screwworm parasite.

An applicant will also need to state his or her intention to steer a veterinary career toward work with food animals, the province said.

The deadline to apply for the grants is Feb. 26, 2010, MAPAQ said.

Statistics from the province’s veterinary medical association show a significant number of veterinarians plan to retire within the next three years, MAPAQ said, and the ministry aims to provide a succession plan for veterinary service in all regions.

explore

Stories from our other publications