This is funny because I too have been accepted to NYCPM, OCPM and TUSPM. I have yet to decide for sure and I need to do so shortly (of course). I really liked the facilities at OCPM, they cant be beat by any other school I have seen (podiatry and non-podiatry). Temple had a lot to offer too as well as new york. I have heard that Temple is most respected though. OCPM has had 100% residency placement for 19 years. I guess it really does come down to where you wanna live, where you can be most successful, what kinda students you wanna be with, faculty, course schedule, etc. I would like to hear more from you since we are in the same situation.
I would be careful putting a lot of stock into the statements I have italicized.
Regarding any particular school being the most respected is a bit of a regional issue IMO. For example, I am from Michigan and MANY of the practicing pods i have met or even read about in the area went to OCPM, the majority of them are excellent physicians, and this bodes well for OCPM in the area. Now just to go along with my example, say there are a couple of physicians from Barry (I mean no disrespect for Barry's program, and this is completely hypothetical) that are in practice in the area and they get some bad reviews, given the small sample size this does not speak well for Barry. Now, the patients aren't going to investigate where you went to school, but your physician counterparts will take note. If doctor A knows 10 pods and 8 went to OCPM, 7 of which he would refer to, and the other 2 went to Barry, who he wouldnt refer anyone to, OCPM would get more respect from that doctor based on the encounter quality vs. sample size alone. To end my rambling, respect is given based on the information you have at hand, which isn't always the whole story. That said, all 8 schools (Western excluded) are certififed, so none really deserve more respect than the others b/c all have pros and cons.
As for the OCPM residency stats, (disclaimer as this may change given the potential residency shortage.) at this point I would be more concerned with the proportion of students getting their first or second choice residency than residency placement rate. I'm not sure how long its been since the last residency shortage, but I am pretty sure over the past few years every graduating student from every school was placed in to a residency.
My rant on those issues aside, your advice is pretty sound as to what to look for to make your decision the only other thing to think about given these troubled economic times is cost of living, and i only say that b/c of the large disparity b/t OCPM and NY.