
Hollywood Casino Team Joins Ranson Earth Day Cleanup
Four Hollywood Casino employees traded their work uniforms for work gloves to help clean up Ranson, West Virginia, joining local volunteers for an Earth Day community project. Sometimes the brightest impact starts with neighbors picking up litter together.
Four Hollywood Casino employees traded their work uniforms for work gloves this April, joining neighbors across Ranson, West Virginia, for an Earth Day cleanup that reminded everyone why local matters.
Lindsey Lebo, Jess Chambers, Leo Miranda, and Tim Kile spent Saturday, April 25, removing litter from their community as part of the City of Ranson's Earth Day Community Cleanup Project. The casino team members joined dozens of other local volunteers who fanned out across the city with trash bags and determination.
Earth Day cleanups have become a tradition in many communities, but this year's effort in Ranson carried extra meaning. The Eastern Panhandle region continues to grow rapidly, and keeping pace with development means residents need to double down on protecting what makes their home special.
The casino employees volunteered on their day off, choosing to spend free time improving the place where they work and live. That choice matters more than it might seem.

The Ripple Effect
When local businesses encourage employees to volunteer, something shifts in a community. Workers become more invested in their neighborhoods. Customers notice companies that care beyond their bottom line. Other businesses often follow suit.
Ranson's cleanup also created something harder to measure but just as valuable. Volunteers from different backgrounds worked side by side, united by the simple goal of making their shared home cleaner. Those connections often outlast the event itself.
The trash collected that day is gone, but the message remains: small actions by ordinary people create real change. You don't need a grand gesture to make your community better. Sometimes you just need a Saturday morning and a willingness to show up.
Earth Day comes once a year, but the spirit behind it can last all twelve months.
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Based on reporting by Google: volunteers help
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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