Friends, colleagues laud OSU’s Kelvin Koong
CORVALLIS, Ore. — About 200 friends, colleagues and family of Kelvin Koong gathered June 5 at Oregon State University’s Oldfield Animal Teaching Facility to celebrate Koong’s 28 years of service to the university.
Koong, who began his career at OSU in 1987 as associate director of the College of Agricultural Sciences Experiment Station, is retiring June 30.
He spent the past three years as executive director of the university’s Agricultural Research Foundation.
Between those two assignments, Koong held several positions, including a two-year stint as dean of the university’s College of Veterinary Medicine, interim dean of the College of Agricultural Sciences and interim director of the OSU Extension Service.
Several praised Koong during the celebration for his willingness to take on the different assignments, many for short durations, and for putting his best behind each position.
“It seems like every time we had a sticky job to do, we’d ask Kelvin,” said former OSU President John Burns.
“Some folks in a temporary role would’ve just filled out their time,” said U.S. Rep. Kurt Schrader, D-Ore., who worked with Koong on establishing a four-year veterinary college at OSU. “Not this guy. He said, ‘Why don’t we have a four-year veterinary college?’”
Schrader, a veterinarian who was serving in the Oregon Legislature at the time, said Koong was able to bring Republicans and Democrats together to back the effort to expand the veterinary college from two years to four years at a difficult budget time.
“This was a bill that we couldn’t afford,” Schrader said, “but somehow, Kelvin Koong found the money.”
Schrader said Koong also was instrumental in eliciting state funds to help back the construction of the now nearly three-year-old College of Veterinary Medicine’s Multi-Animal Teaching Facility.
“He’s very good at making us do the right thing at the end of the day,” Schrader said.
Sharon Harmon, executive director of the Oregon Humane Society, praised Koong for his work in establishing the first of its kind hands-on program for veterinary students to train at the Humane Society’s Portland shelter.
“This was groundbreaking,” Harmon said. “Prior to this, there was no partnership between a humane society and a university in the U.S.
“This program is now in place in 14 universities across the country,” she said.
“Kelvin deeply cares about this institution and the students who go here,” said Katie Fast, new executive director of Oregonians for Food and Shelter, who worked with Koong often in the Legislature in her role in government affairs for the Oregon Farm Bureau.
Phil Ward, state executive director of the Farm Service Agency who worked with Koong while serving first as assistant director and then as director of the Oregon Department of Agriculture, characterized Koong as “the best relationship builder I’ve ever known. And those relationships have stood the test of time.”
Thayne Dutson, former dean of the OSU College of Agricultural Sciences, said what many believed in closing his comments.
“OSU is a better place now because you were here,” Dutson said. “Thank you, Kelvin.”