Shiari - I tried, but I can't rep you right now as I have to spread it around a bit more first! I've been a certified veterinary technician for as long as you have been alive (Florida hasn't gone to licensing vet techs...yet, and I hope they never do). Your description of the job is perfect! Too many people start out thinking that all we do is play with the puppies and kittens. They also don't realize just how much a vet tech actually does in the day-to-day running of an animal hospital. In human medicine, they have all the various different kinds of nurses, lab techs, x-ray techs, anesthesiologists, dental hygienists, etc, etc, etc. We are all of that rolled into one.
KJUN is correct about the amount of time and schooling it takes to become an actual veterinarian. There are fewer vet colleges in the country so you have students from multiple states all vying for the few positions available each year. Competition is tough to even be considered as a vet student by one of those colleges!
Salary is going to vary quite a bit depending upon where you live. All I can tell you is what I'm currently making. And remember, I graduated and became certified in 1983 and have been working at my current position for just about 11 years (anniversary is the 26th of this month, and is when I hope to get another raise). My current pay is $15/hour and my average work week is around 38 hours. My boss pays for most of my uniforms and for most of my continuing education. I get 2 weeks paid vacation and 40 hours of paid sick/personal days per year (I never use those so get an additional 40 hours pay each year). I get veterinary services and supplies at cost, and there are staff rewards from some of the veterinary supply manufacturers. I have access to medical insurance through a group, but since hubby is an insurance agent, we get it cheaper on our own. There is no retirement plan/401K/whatever, but I did work for one hospital that actually put about $20,000 into an IRS for me.
I have heel spurs on both ankles from all the years I've spent on tile floors which cause me pain every time I stand and walk, I have a permanently damaged knuckle on my right index finger from a cat bite, scars on my nose from a dog bite, the skin on my hands is currently severely dry, cracked, very painful and sometimes bleeding from the constant hand washing and is compounded right now due to the winter. I consider myself extremely lucky to be blessed with the back of an ox as most of the techs I work with have back problems from lifting and wrestling large dogs. I have been feeling the aches and pains of being just about 50 years old every time I have to get up off the floor, which is about 50 times each day. I am known to take 3 ibuprofen AND 2 excedrin all at once to deal with the migraines I get from inhaling disinfectants, anesthetic gases, formalin, etc compounded by eye strain from attempting to get enough blood from a 5 pound chihuahua to run a CBC, full serum chemistry, thyroid panel and ACTH stimulation test (and then from a grossly obese cat and a third time from a 20 year old dehydrated cat), hours looking at a computer screen, then a microscope, then the fine print of the insert of some medication to see if it is okay for nursing or pregnant dogs (only to find that they have not made any of those studies). I start at 8AM, get 1/2 hour for lunch, and stop at 5PM+, except on Tues when I go to 7PM+. I also work every Saturday from 8-1 and I am off on Sundays and Mondays. I am scheduled off on Wed, but work from 8 to about noon doing the ordering and inventory that I am unable to get done the rest of the time because of all the other tech duties. And I have to tell the rest of the staff to not bother me on Wed so I can get that other work done, otherwise I end up drawing blood, taking x-rays, etc because of various reasons I shouldn't go into here... (I love my job, I love my job, I love my job...)