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Framework for Brexit challenges published

The Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons (RCVS) has published its three ‘Brexit Principles’ in order to create a framework for risks that are posed by Brexit. It also aims to maximise opportunities it offers.

The Principles were formally adopted by RCVS Council at its meeting on 2 March 2017, and will now serve to guide the College’s relationship with the Government during the forthcoming Brexit negotiations.

The Principles were drawn up over a series of months by the Brexit Taskforce, set up by RCVS President Chris Tufnell in July 2016, and were discussed in draft form in a number of forums including a ‘Brexit roundtable’, co-hosted by the College and the British Veterinary Association (BVA), at the Palace of Westminster on 24 February.

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This event aimed to create a unified voice within the veterinary profession on shared goals, and the College’s Principles received the approval of BVA and its divisions.

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Representatives from the Department for the Environment, Food & Rural Affairs were also in attendance and Nigel Gibbens, the Chief Veterinary Officer, thanked the RCVS for positively engaging with the Brexit process.

The first Principle, that ‘vital veterinary work continues to get done’, reflects concerns that potential immigration restrictions could cause significant labour shortages in the UK, particularly in the meat industry and in public health.

Policies attached to this Principle include lobbying to ensure that EU vets and veterinary nurses currently working in the UK are allowed to remain indefinitely, and in the longer-term ensuring that any reduction in numbers from abroad is offset by an appropriately-funded increase in home-grown talent, while upskilling and extending the role of veterinary nurses.

To promote the second Principle, ensuring that ‘high standards of animal health and welfare remain and improve’, the College will work towards advancing standards of global accreditation, and – once concerns about workforce shortages have been allayed – argue that any restrictions placed on the number of EU graduates registering in the UK should be focused on schools that do not have European Association of Establishments for Veterinary Education accreditation.

Further to the third Principle, that ‘the RCVS is a global force for good’, the College will seek to ensure that: the rights of UK vets working in the EU are preserved; that UK vets working abroad continue to be held up as exemplars of the profession; that our global membership continues to grow; and, to develop a world-leading evidence-based veterinary medicine hub that will transform animal treatment globally.

RCVS Chief Executive Nick Stace said: “It is crucially important for the College and the profession as a whole to think boldly about the post-Brexit future; we cannot expect government to give us all of the answers, instead we must work to find solutions ourselves so as to shape the future of the profession from within.”

 

For more information visit www.rcvs.org.uk/brexit

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