Source: Chris Gruber, 785-532-4465
Photo available. Contact media@k-state.edu or 785-532-6415
News release prepared by: Joe Montgomery, 785-532-4193, jmontgom@vet.k-state.edu
Tuesday, July 10, 2007
DALE SCHWINDAMAN TO RECEIVE 2007 ALUMNI RECOGNITION AWARD FROM K-STATE
MANHATTAN -- Dr. Dale F. Schwindaman, Rockville, Md., has been selected by the Kansas State University College of Veterinary Medicine and its Veterinary Medical Alumni Association to receive a 2007 Alumni Recognition Award.
The award is in recognition of time and effort devoted to advancing veterinary medicine and for being an exemplary role model for future alumni in a professional and community setting. It will be presented by Ralph Richardson, dean of K-State's College of Veterinary Medicine, at the annual convention of the American Veterinary Medical Association in Washington, D.C., Monday, July 16.
Schwindaman retired in November 1996 after a 40-year career with the U.S. Department of Agriculture in regulatory veterinary medicine with the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, formerly the Bureau of Animal Industry.
"It is a joy and a very special honor for my professional work to be recognized by the K-State College of Veterinary Medicine Alumni Association," Schwindaman said. "As the years pass, I find more time to reflect with growing appreciation on the people and institutions in my native state of Kansas who made it possible for a farm boy like me to go to Manhattan, work my way through college and graduate from K-State in veterinary medicine.
"The professors and colleagues who set such a high standard of excellence for me have made a profound difference in my life. It is very gratifying to have my efforts serve as examples and be recognized as making a contribution to our profession and to the state and country we all love," he said.
"We take great pride in recognizing Dr. Schwindaman's professional successes and personal accomplishments," Richardson said. "Dr. Schwindaman has had a tremendous influence and impact in our profession at a national level. His career demonstrates some of the unique opportunities that are available with an education in veterinary medicine and the ways in which our graduates can follow that example and serve the greater good of our country."
After graduating from K-State with both a bachelor's degree in science and a doctorate in veterinary medicine in 1953, Schwindaman worked for a private practice in Wisconsin. He then served in the Air Force for two years. When he was discharged, Schwindaman accepted a position as a field veterinarian with the state of Minnesota, where initial intensive bovine brucellosis and tuberculosis eradications programs were under way.
Schwindaman was hired by the U.S. Department of Agriculture in 1957 and held progressive field positions in Michigan, Illinois, New Jersey and Delaware, where he was the state's federal veterinarian-in-charge. After doing postgraduate work at the University of Delaware-Newark in 1964-65, he moved to Washington, D.C., in 1966 to begin work as part of the Agriculture Department's newly formed animal care staff. He assisted in writing the initial regulations and standards for the first federal legislation dealing with the humane care and use of animals in research, as well as subsequent amendments in 1970, 1975 and 1985 that expanded federal regulation of animal welfare to cover other species and uses in exhibitions, wholesale pet trade and in the transportation of animals. The Horse Protection Act of 1970 and the amendments of 1978 also became part of his staff responsibilities.
In 1985 Schwindaman transferred to a different section within the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service to head the technical assessment staff, where he organized and directed a task force to develop goals and infrastructure for the National Animal Health Monitoring System. He also developed plans for the proposed expansion of the animal care unit, designing the infrastructure of field offices and recruiting veterinary and technical personnel to implement the first field force dedicated specifically to animal care responsibilities. He became assistant deputy administrator in 1988 of this new Animal Care Division. In 1989, as a member of the senior executive service, he was reassigned to veterinary services as Western regional director, stationed in Denver and responsible for animal disease eradication and other regulatory activities for 12 states. He returned to Washington, D.C., in 1992 as the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service's deputy administrator for regulatory enforcement and animal care where he remained until retiring in 1996.
Schwindaman has written numerous articles in scientific and trade journals, and chapters in two books. Since retiring, he has been a consultant in regulatory veterinary medicine to private business and research enterprises and serves on the advisory board of the Scientists Center for Animal Welfare. He is a lifetime member of the U.S. Animal Health Association, as well as a member of both the American Veterinary Medical Association and the Animal Welfare Institute. Schwindaman served two years as the president of the National Association of Federal Veterinarians.
Schwindaman received the Superior Service Award in 1978 from the U.S. secretary of agriculture in recognition of the implementation of the Animal Welfare Act and its amendments. He was recognized in 1994 by the American Society of Laboratory Animal Practitioners for exemplary support to the Inaugural Laboratory Animal Medicine Preceptorship Program. He also received the 1996 Harry C. Rowsell Award from the Scientists Center for Animal Welfare for major contributions to fostering the dual goals of good science and the humane care of animals.
Schwindaman and his wife, Jean, have three children and five grandchildren.