This year commemorates the 70th anniversary of when Beaver County’s first radio station, WBVP, was heard over the airwaves for the the first time on May 25, 1948. To mark the historical event, each week, another “70th Anniversary Moment” will be showcased on the airwaves and published on the station’s online feeds.
The title of “Hometown Hero” can be used to describe Mike Romigh. Mike grew up in Beaver Falls and still resides within the school district in the nearby borough of Koppel. Even as a youngster walking the hallways of Beaver Falls junior high and senior high schools, Mike would dream about becoming a disc jockey, and being on the radio. Often times this meant walking over the the studio windows of his hometown radio stations, WBVP and sister F.M. radio station, WWKS, then located in the basement floor of the First Federal Savings and Loan Bank at the corner of 14th Street and 7th Avenue in Beaver Falls, and watching legendary announcers like Jim Reynolds and Bill Kelly work their craft. In a recent interview, Mike talked about how his interest in radio had piqued his interest at a young age. “I’m somebody who went to bed with a transistor radio under my pillow. So I would listen all night, until I fell asleep. I would move the dial up and down and listen to the static, find the next station that would come in. It was something that really captured my imagination.”
After working at Hydril in Rochester for four years after graduating from high school, Romigh felt those radio waves, that he dreamed about as a youngster, calling him again, so he enrolled in a correspondence course offered by the Columbia School Of Broadcasting in Pittsburgh. After completing the training, Romigh landed his first radio job at WFEM in Ellwood City. in 1981.
He wouldn’t stay in Ellwood City long. That same year, Mike was hired by WBVP and WWKS, Kiss 106.7 FM General Manger, at the time, Scott Lowe. Initially, Romigh hosted an overnight music show on both radio stations. WBVP was a live radio program, and WWKS featured the recorded voice of Mike Romigh during predetermined breaks that were slotted in by the automated music system used by the F.M. radio station. His big break came in 1983, when Dave Felts, who was hosting the morning talk show, “A.M. Connection” on WBVP went on Vacation. Chris Shovlin was now the General manager of the two Beaver Falls radio stations, and even though Romigh had never hosted a talk show before, Shovlin asked him to fill in for a day or two. The temporary fill in duty went so well, that Romigh was asked to do the entire week, and for the rest of his career, Romigh would now be known as a talk show host, as this proved to be the niche that he excelled in.
Soon, Romigh was a regular host of “A.M. Connection” at WBVP. The timing was perfect, in a sense, for a talk show host, anyway. Thousands of local workers had been laid off from the collapsing steel industry in Beaver County, so there was a huge opportunity with scores of people wanting and needing information about coping with financial and employment stress coupled with the fact that they had all day to listen to the radio. Romigh was well connected with local labor, and worked in a Mill himself for a while, so this was the perfect storm for him.
Romigh was more than just a soothing voice on the airwaves at WBVP and WWKS. In those early years, he organized efforts for the radio stations to raise money by selling hot dogs and soda out of a Coca Cola trailer on 7th Avenue to help the City of Beaver Falls to purchase new American Flags for the street poles. On another occasion, he raised awareness through the “A.M. Connection” talk show about the missing Christmas Lights in Beaver Falls. Not only were they found in storage over at Col-Fin Specialty Steel in Fallston, Romigh, along with Frank “Sluggo” Couts, and other station employees, brought the lights to the radio station, cleaned them up and arranged for an electrical contractor to install them for the upcoming season.
After leaving WBVP and WWKS in 1985, Romigh took his talents south to WMBA and hosted a talk show initially called “Straight Talk”, later to be renamed “Live Mike”. He joined a stellar staff at the Ambridge radio station that also included Bobbie Vaughn, Al McDowell, R.D. Summers and Sam Nicotero.
Around 1987, Mike Romigh was hired by KDKA Program Director, Chuck Dickman, to do Weekends and part time fill in work. For a while, Romigh worked at Both WMBA and KDKA, but in 1990, He began to work on a regular basis at KDKA and had to drop WMBA from his hectic schedule. Romigh became the regular host of the evening shift at KDKA for about 10 years and afterwards, crossed state lines and hosted the morning show on top rated Youngstown radio station, WKBN, in 2008.
Romigh’s career came full circle when he landed at his hometown radio stations in
Beaver Falls at WBVP and WMBA, again from 2014 to 2017. He brought back the popular “Teleforum” talk show name, and served as Program Director.
Mike Romigh now works for the Beaver County Humane Society.
“70th Anniversary Moments” is presented by Albert’s Heating, Cooling and Plumbing, Aliquippa Giant Eagle, The Beaver Falls Municipal Authority, Beaver Valley Auto Mall, Beaver Valley Sheet Metal, Castlebrook Development, Freedom United Federal Credit Union, Hank’s Frozen Custard and Mexican Food, Laughlin Insurance Agency and Rochester Manor and Villa.