About NAVEC

Brought together by a shortage that never had to happen.

NAVEC is a coalition of clinic owners, veterinarians, and the people who depend on veterinary care — united by the pain this shortage has caused. Clinics that can't hire. Families that wait weeks for an appointment, or skip care they can't afford. Animals with no one left to treat them. We came together for one reason: this crisis was avoidable — and America has already solved it once before.

What we stand for

America corrects its shortages.

A free society does it through merit-based competition, through regulatory transparency that protects consumers while answering to the public good, and through the right to fair, merit-based professional licensing. When the need for a profession grows, supply is supposed to grow to meet it. That's how nearly every field in this country expands.

The anomaly

Why veterinary medicine couldn't.

Veterinary medicine handed every gate to the profession — accreditation, testing, and licensure — to private organizations granted unchecked monopoly power, with no state oversight and no transparency. The mechanisms a free market would use to correct a shortage were simply switched off. So supply never rose to meet demand. It was never allowed to.

Where absolute power meets an absence of transparency, the abuse of that power isn't a risk. It's an inevitability.
Two professions, one problem

Human medicine faced the same pressure — and chose differently.

Human medicineVeterinary medicine
AccreditationCompeting accreditors — supply rises to meet demandA single private accreditor with multiple bottlenecks — supply capped below demand
The examTransparent, audited, accountable board exams — a merit gateway that protects the public without unfairly limiting licensureICVA's private monopoly over the NAVLE — no transparency, public accountability, or audit, and unanswered questions on quality and scoring; it can shut qualified candidates out of licensure
International talentEfficient, merit-based pathways — about 25% of U.S. doctors are internationally trainedRedundant bottlenecks — only ~263 internationally trained vets licensed a year
The resultSupply meets the needA deepening shortage

Same pressures, different path. The difference is design — not talent, and not demand.

The fix is known

The solution already exists.

We don't have to invent the fix — we have to apply one that already works. Restore competition among accreditors, so new schools can open. Open the licensing exam to genuine merit and public accountability. Build credentialing pathways that match qualified veterinarians to the country's need. This isn't an experiment: the model is well tested and already implemented in human medicine and other professions. Veterinary medicine can apply it too.

Why now

Waiting is no longer an option.

The crisis has reached a breaking point. Every month it only deepens — and the harm compounds: clinics forced to close, preventable suffering, pets dying for want of care, and a growing danger to the nation's food supply. This is irreversible harm, and it is happening now.

And the ground is finally shifting. At both the federal and state level, antitrust authorities are increasingly unwilling to let private incumbents control who enters a profession — and the same scrutiny is reaching the state boards that hand off the public's authority and never supervise how it's used. Closed, unaccountable systems like these grow harder to defend every year — which is why reform isn't only necessary now. It's finally within reach.

Accreditors "cannot erect anticompetitive hurdles" that restrict the number of veterinarians.
U.S. Department of Justice, Antitrust Division — December 2025

Governance

NAVEC is in its founding stage. The organization was initially formed with a transitional organizing board for filing, banking, and startup compliance purposes.

NAVEC is now expanding to an independent governing board and advisory council composed of veterinary, animal welfare, nonprofit, legal, and public-interest leaders. We will publish the full board roster as independent directors are formally elected.

NAVEC has adopted conflict-of-interest and related-party transaction safeguards to ensure that organizational decisions are made in the public interest and not for private benefit.

The need is urgent. The model is proven. The moment is now.

We can solve the veterinary crisis together — but only if we come together and act.

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