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Left to right: Tom MacLeay, Chairman and CEO, National Life Group;
Judy Tarr, President and CEO, Central Vermont Medical Center, Senator Patrick Leahy.
National Life Group announces major contribution to help bring cancer treatment to
Central Vermont
Facility to be named the National Life Cancer Treatment Center
BERLIN, Vt. (Sept. 4, 2008) - National Life Group today announced a
$250,000 contribution through its charitable foundation to assist in the construction of a radiation therapy
facility at Central Vermont Medical Center.
The announcement came Thursday at a groundbreaking ceremony for the 15,000-square-foot
facility, which will allow thousands of residents of Central Vermont to receive cancer treatments closer to home.
"National Life was a primary force behind the creation of this hospital in the 1960s and we
have been committed to its growth and continued success since then," said Thomas H. MacLeay, president, chairman
and CEO of National Life Group. "Our strong financial support of this project was never in doubt. Thousands of
Vermonters will benefit from having a cancer treatment center here at Central Vermont."
CVMC President and CEO Judy Tarr announced that the facility, in recognition of National
Life's steadfast support of Central Vermont Medical Center over the last half century, will be named the National
Life Cancer Treatment Center.
"We are pleased to have National Life Group as a significant partner in bringing radiation
therapy services to the region," said Tarr. "Community members and physicians have been asking for this service for
many years because of the hardship on patients and families in traveling to existing service sites in Burlington,
Vermont or Lebanon, New Hampshire."
The cancer treatment center is the result of a pioneering partnership featuring CVMC,
Dartmouth Hitchcock's Norris Cotton Cancer Center and Fletcher Allen Health Care's Vermont Cancer Center.
The National Life Cancer Treatment Center is scheduled to be completed in the summer of
2009 and is forecast to provide 6,960 radiation therapy treatments during its first year of operation.
MacLeay said the financial contribution for the construction of the center will come primarily
from the National Life Group Charitable Foundation, which was created in 2006 to enhance National
Life's commitment to give back to its community.
MacLeay said that one of his predecessors, Deane C. Davis, was a leading force behind the
decision to construct the hospital in the 1960s and that National Life donated $150,000 to launch the $1 million
fundraising campaign to build CVMC.
"Our donation then helped to jumpstart the effort to make this hospital a reality and I
hope our commitment today has the same effect in making the cancer treatment center a reality," said MacLeay.
National Life has been a steady financial supporter of CVMC. The company was a major
contributor to the just-completed modernization project. In addition, the company was a major donor of the
hospital's intensive care center, which is named in honor of Deane C. Davis, who served as president of National
Life from 1950 to 1966. He served as governor of Vermont from 1969-1973.
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