Wowy Radio | radioNOVO News WV News Roundup for June 01, 2026

Good Morning, A high-stakes clash over government efficiency and local representation is brewing at the State Capitol. Governor Patrick Morrisey officially launched the "America 250 Task Force" to spearhead upcoming celebrations and statewide bell-ringing initiatives for the nation's semiquincentennial anniversary. However, members of the pre-existing, legislature-backed Semiquincentennial Commission are publicizing strong concerns. They argue the governor's new executive task force creates unnecessary government duplication and completely bypasses years of collaborative local planning that was specifically meant to include historians, educators, and veterans' groups from every single region of the state.The debate over state oversight comes as workplace safety advocates raise red flags over newly proposed federal budget cuts. Under a new federal funding proposal, the Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board faces total elimination. The independent agency is currently leading the active "root cause" investigation into last month’s tragic chemical leak in Kanawha County that claimed two worker lives and injured dozens more. Safety advocates warn that dismantling the board would leave states like West Virginia—which has a long history of industrial chemical incidents—highly vulnerable to future workplace disasters.Meanwhile, emergency medical infrastructure is seeing a major shakeup. The Executive Director of the Kanawha County Emergency Ambulance Authority has officially stepped down following intense public scrutiny over a fatal April accident involving an agency vehicle.Closer to home, the state Infrastructure and Jobs Development Council has officially approved a massive one-point-one-five-million-dollar funding package for critical water and sewer upgrades across rural communities. The infrastructure push aligns with major upcoming travel adjustments for local commuters, as the state Division of Highways prepares to completely shut down the Pond Creek Bridge on Route sixty-eight this Thursday for a two-month, four-point-eight-million-dollar replacement project to permanently remove heavy transport weight restrictions.