West Virginia University - News and Information ServicesIn a ceremony at West Virginia University’s Student Recreation Center Thursday (March 13), Morgantown became only the 10th city in the nation to receive the designation of “Well City” from the Wellness Councils of America (WELCOA).
Stephen LaCagnin, chairman of the board of WELCOA, presented the award to Morgantown Mayor Ron Justice.
To achieve the award, 20 businesses from the Morgantown area – representing more than 20 percent of the city’s work force – had to first earn WELCOA’s “Well Workplace” designation.
Those include:
LaCagnin said members of the local business community, in cooperation with WELCOA, have been working toward the designation since 1998 during the early years of the Vision 2000 project, which launched the rail-trail and other fitness and wellness initiatives in the area.
Among the longtime Well City Initiative Committee members are Janette Gidley, chair, WVU Foundation; Kristan Rogers, Pfizer; David Harshbarger, UHA/WVU Health Sciences/WVU Hospitals; Kimberly Zaph, WVU Division of Human Resources - Employee Wellness Program; Brett Rice, NIOSH; Kelly Nix, WVU Extension; and LaCagnin, Jackson Kelly.
Speaking on behalf of WVU, Vice President for Student Affairs Ken Gray said the host site for the announcement, the Student Recreation Center, is truly one of the premier fitness and wellness facilities of its kind in the country.
“Student Affairs is proud that the rec center is one of WVU’s 5 ‘Well Workplaces’ and one of the 20 ‘Well Workplaces’ that contributed to this elite designation for Morgantown,” he said.
“For the University, and perhaps for many of you, it is important to be able to underscore Morgantown’s reputation as a healthy place to live and work as we go about recruiting faculty and staff,” Gray added. “It’s also critical in helping us retain the great employees we already have here.”
With more than 2,500 member organizations throughout North America, WELCOA is recognized for its innovative and results-oriented approach to worksite wellness.
“There is an art and a science to designing a results-oriented workplace wellness program,” said David Hunnicutt, president of WELCOA. “These Morgantown companies have mastered this by demonstrating that their programs have advanced employee health, reduced health care costs and improved productivity and morale.”
The Wellness Council of West Virginia spearheads WELCOA’s workplace wellness initiatives in the state and was the first wellness council in the U.S.
For more information, visit www.welcoa.org; www.wcwv.org.