News about Danville Regional Medical Center
 
 
 

Thursday, July 29, 2010
Danville Regional Medical Center Initiates New Recycling Program

DANVILLE, Va. (July 29, 2010) - Danville Regional Medical Center is ‘Going Green’ this summer with the implementation of a new program that will recycle nearly 75 percent of the hospital’s disposable materials. The recycling program is estimated to reduce waste that would normally go to the local landfill by 324 tons, or 648,000 pounds, annually.

“As a large facility, we recognize that we have a responsibility to be good stewards of our materials and dispose of them in the most environmentally-friendly way,” said Eric Deaton, CEO of Danville Regional. “Danville Regional is a community hospital, and we hope that we can lead by example and encourage everyone in the Dan River region to be more mindful of recycling.”

The hospital-wide initiative will accept a variety of materials for recycling, including fluorescent light bulbs, computer electronics, batteries, newspaper, plastic and aluminum cans. These materials will be collected in bins placed around the hospital and then picked up by the City of Danville to be properly sorted.

Danville Regional is also recycling old computers, monitors, broken telephones and other electronics. The electronics are taken to Computer Recycling of Virginia, where they are refurbished and donated to Virginia schools free of charge. By recycling these electronics, thousands of pounds of environmentally toxic materials like mercury are diverted from Virginia landfills, where they could eventually contaminate soil, streams, rivers and lakes.

“We are very excited to get this new recycling program going,” said Joan Yeatts, Director of Environmental Services at Danville Regional. “This initiative will help the community by significantly reducing the amount of waste in the local landfill and decreasing the energy and pollution that results from incinerating large amounts of trash.”

Danville Regional is the leading medical center in the Dan River Region of Virginia and North Carolina, providing open heart surgery and advanced cancer treatment. Approximately 140 physicians are on the medical staff. The medical center employs approximately 1,400 people.

# # #