I personally think Touro is a very good school. Before I applied, I spent about a year researching and exploring the schools I could go to before decided TUCA was hands down my top choice (MD or DO). I ended up having fairly high numbers, so I only applied there and tailored my application to the school.
Since that point, I've discovered Touro is actually a better school than my initial impression.
Some of the things I like most about the school are as follows:
*Very good student environment. Everyone feels like part of a family and actively tries to support/help each other, rather than gunning and we sometimes go on very cool adventures together over the weekends. I actually like every single person in my class, which was not something I was expecting.
*The school has an exceptionally good OMM department.
*The school puts a very strong focus on training you for being good at doctoring, rather than just learning information for the boards. This was something I specifically cared about in my selection process, but also something a lot of programs have noticed and I believe helps Touro students match well.
I also think these things are very positive attributes:
*Everyone here is very open minded.
*We are in a great location, both for the school and access to the bay area+the nature in the area.
*A lot of the faculty here are super cool, and most are happy to spend 1 on 1 time with you when you need it.
(both of these lists were off the top of my head so I'm missing some things).
Basically, I'm just really happy and thankful to be at this school.
Also since some people have asked, I strongly advocate living on Mare Island.
I had the option of living a 45 minute drive away (no traffic for commute) at free housing in an extremely nice area. I decided against that, partly due to liking Mare Island, but primarily because I didn't want to have to deal with burning my time on a commute. If you want to have fun in the bay area, you can travel to it with minimal effort when you're not in class. The restaurants here are definitely worse than those in San Francisco, but that's the only major difference I've noticed (and cared about).