Beaver County Radio Broadcasts Live at M.R.S. Physical Therapy

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Mike Romigh talks to Andrea Challis at M.R.S. Physical Therapy

Mike Romigh and Ed Hermick hosted a special live on site interview at MRS Physical Therapy.  The special on site broadcast was part of the regular monthly series of interviews air on Beaver County Radio with facility director, Dale Reckless.

Many patients received treatment during the broadcast.  WBVP and WMBA listeners got to hear first hand live testimonial conversation from actual patients at M.R.S. Physical Therapy in Stone Point Landing in Bridgewater.

 

Pictures from the live remote broadcast:

 

Turnpike Expecting 3.5 Million Vehicles.

The Pennsylvania Turnpike is expecting nearly 3.5 million vehicles to travel the toll road throughout the Thanksgiving holiday. Tuesday saw the heaviest volume and it will pick up again  on Sunday as motorists head home. All construction has been suspended except in case of emergencies. State troopers will be watching for speeders and motorists who are texting while driving.

Trump Offers Thanksgiving Message

President elect Donald Trump has posted a Thanksgiving message on social media saying, “it’s my prayer that on this Thanksgiving we begin to heal our division and move forward as one country strengthened by shared purpose and very, very common resolve.” Trump also acknowledges that emotions are raw and tensions just don’t heal overnight.

Macy’s Parade a Thanksgiving Highlight

A giant Charlie Brown balloon joined one thousand clowns and a dozen marching bands along a parade route lined with spectators and police in plainclothes for the 90th Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parade. Charlie Brown is one of three new giant character inflatables in this year’s parade. The parade draws huge crowds as it makes its way thru the streets of Manhattan before finishing up at Macy’s flagship store.

PA Lawmakers Getting Cost of Living Raise

Pennsylvania lawmakers are about to get their first pay raise in two years, padding what is already the nation’s second highest salary for legislators. The 253 seat general assembly will get a 1.34 percent increase next month, raising rank and file pay by over 11 hundred dollars to 86 thousand. State law gives legislators automatic cost of living increases.

Beaver County Commissioners Considering A Sizeable Tax Increase In 2017 Budget

The Beaver County Commissioners are said to be considering a sizeable tax increase as part of the 2017 county budget. Beaver County Radio’s Greg Benedetti was at this morning’s commissioners’ work session and says that budget director Ricardo Luckow is recommending to the commissioners a property tax increase at a minimum of 4.37 mills and a maximum of 6.85 mills. The 6.85 mil tax would be a 31% increase. The commissioners have offered no other source of revenue to make up for the current 9 1/2 million-dollar deficit. The commissioners say they will think it over during the holiday weekend. A preliminary budget is due December 5th.

Hopewell Area School Board Meets

Hopewell School Board met last night and  Dr. Michelle Miller congratulated the   Hopewell Elementary School’s staff and families  for hosting Family Fitness Nights to raise funds  to help their peers.  That’s according to Beaver County Radio News Correspondent Sandy Giordano. She was the meeting last night. She says the Caring Team  headed by elementary physical education teacher Lisa Kozlowski hosted the program.  Kozlowski, she said was last year’s BEAVER COUNTY TEACHER OF THE YEAR. She  teaches at Hopewell Elementary School. Dr. Miller reported that she joined high school assistant principal Doug Rowe  at a luncheon served by the Life Skills class at the high school  where there was interaction with students and staff. Dr. Jacie Masylk, assistant superintendent,  announced that a $50,000 grant through the Grable Foundation will enable collaboration with Hopewell, Beaver, Rochester, and the Beaver Valley Intermediate Unit for a SCIENCE TECHNOLOGY ENGINEERING ART AND MATH  PROGRAM  within the schools. The board will reorganize on Tuesday, December 6 at 7 p.m. in the board room at the district’s administration building.

Former Beaver County State Lawmaker Mike Veon Granted New Trial In Corruption Case

A former high-ranking Democrat in the Pennsylvania House who served jail time for misusing a nonprofit for his own benefit was awarded a new trial Tuesday after a state high court justice called his conviction a “criminalization of politics.” The state Supreme Court ruled a Dauphin County judge erred when he told jurors hearing the case against former Rep. Mike Veon of Beaver County that Veon did not have to gain financially to be convicted of violating the conflict-of-interest law. The Supreme Court’s main opinion said the crime must involve a financial benefit, and that intangible political benefits are not sufficient. The court ordered a new trial on the conflict of interest charge but did not say that also included the nine other counts for which he was convicted. His lawyer, Joel Sansone, argued the decision means a new trial is required on all charges and predicted prosecutors will not have the appetite to retry his client. A spokesman for the attorney general’s office said only that it was reviewing the decision.