Laserfiche WebLink
<br />,- :' ( } <br /> <br />TUESDAY <br /> <br />NOVEMBER 25, 1980 <br /> <br />The regular semi-monthly meeting of the Council of the City of Martinsville, Virginia, <br /> <br />with Mayor Barry A. Greene presiding, was held Tuesday, November 25, 1980, in the Council <br /> <br />Chamber, City Hall, beginning at 7:30 P.M. All members of Council were present, viz., <br /> <br />Barry A. Greene, Mayor; William C. Cole, Jr., Vice Mayor; L. D. Oakes; Henry C. Reed; and <br /> <br />Francis T. West. <br /> <br />After the invocation, Council approved--as recorded--the minutes of its regular meeting <br /> <br />held November II, 1980. <br /> <br />Council acknowledged receipt of a check in the amount of $7,551.38 from the Commonwealth of <br /> <br />Virginia, representing the City's pro-rata share of un-used funds allocated to the Henry- <br /> <br />Martinsville Health District (i.e., Martinsville-Henry County Health Department) for the <br /> <br />fiscal year ended June 30, 1980. <br /> <br />By letter dated November 17, 1980, and in person, Dr. Elizabeth W. Roycroft, Director of <br /> <br />the Henry-Martinsville Health District and Health Director, brought to Council's attention <br /> <br />"......the need for increased space at the Henry-Martinsville Health Department", noting <br /> <br />that in 1964, when the Health Department building was completed with 4,500 square feet of <br /> <br />space, later enlarged to 6,600 square feet, the staff consisted of a total of 13 persons <br /> <br />providing limited medical services to a regional population of 65,411; whereas, at present, <br /> <br />with the same 6,600 square feet of building space, the staff consists of 37 persons (some <br /> <br />part-time) providing expanded services to a population expected to reach 96,700 by the <br /> <br />year 2000. Dr. Roycroft further noted that the present building provides the equivalent <br /> <br />of only 89 square feet per 1,000 residents, compared with the Lynchburg Health Department's <br /> <br />650 square feet per 1,000 residents and the Danville Health Department's 472 square feet per <br /> <br />1,000 residents, and that the proposed addition to the Henry-Martinsville facility would <br />