Longtime Legislator, Banjo Player Chuck Romine Remembered 

Flags at the Capitol and in Cabell County are at half-staff Thursday, honoring the life of longtime legislator Chuck Romine who passed away this week at age 87. Romine’s life combined politics and music – tied together with a passion for service.

Flags at the Capitol and in Cabell County are at half-staff Thursday, honoring the life of longtime legislator Chuck Romine who passed away this week at age 87. Romine’s life combined politics and music – tied together with a passion for service. 

Family and friends from near and far are listening to CDs (maybe a cassette tape as well), enjoying Chuck Romine’s Dixieland, ragtime, jug band banjo and vocals. They are remembering a popular musician and a devoted public servant. Former Cabell County Del. Chad Lovejoy said his mentor in politics and life would sometimes turn the House Chamber into a concert hall. 

“He played on the floor,” Lovejoy said. “He and Shirley Love, who’s also passed, did a song together on the floor, and he would bring that banjo out to different legislative events.”

Shortly after being selected as Huntington Young Man of the Year in 1968, Romine was elected to the House of Delegates, then re-elected twice over the next 50 years – again in 1998 for one term – then one more in 2016. He retired in 2018 at the age of 83. That same year, Gov. Jim Justice awarded Romine one of the state’s great honors, a Distinguished West Virginian Award, after his life of dedicated service in public and private sectors.

Lovejoy said the Cabell County Republican, known for seeking consensus early, didn’t yearn for sound bites or the cause of the day, but conducted himself as politics “used to be.” 

He always fought for home. It wasn’t about Democrat, Republican, it was like, this is good for Huntington, this would be good for Cabell,” Lovejoy said.

Banjo pickin’ Chuck Romine with The 1937 Flood band.

Courtesy of The 1937 Flood

In the 1960s and ’70s, Romine and his banjo led the Lucky Jazz Band. In 2001, he took a break from politics and joined the eclectic string group, The 1937 Flood (the band, not the disaster). 

Flood bandleader Charlie Bowen said Romine carried the best of music and politics wherever he went. 

Chuck was a born politician in every good sense of that word,” Bowen said. “He just naturally gravitated to people he didn’t know so he could get to know them. Governors and statesmen would have copies of 1937 Flood CDs, because Chuck would make sure they’d have one. He had a natural promoter’s instinct when it came to music because of his political background.”

Romine’s wife of 66 years, Phyllis, passed away less than three weeks ago. Lovejoy said the devoted couple seemed meant to stay together.

“He went to be with her, which is 110 percent the way he would want it to be,” Lovejoy said. 

A Marshall University graduate and 40 year State Farm insurance agent, Chuck Romine lived an active life. Besides decades as a musician and bandmate, he gravitated to the water in his younger years as a boater, water skier, fisherman, lifeguard, swim instructor and competitive diver. He had a passion for golf, shooting pool and getting together with his Thursday night poker club.  

Lovejoy said Romine taught him the skills of considering all sides of an issue, how to hand-tie a bow tie, coming from a time when manners and etiquette mattered. He said this father and grandfather figure was a friend and mentor to him, and so many others. 

“As a citizen, a friend, husband, father, he was a consummate gentleman,” Lovejoy said. ”He’s a giant to me. You get role models that you love and say that’s the kind of guy I’d like to be as a husband, a father and as a legislator.” 

First ‘Dolly Day’ To Be Held Statewide

West Virginia is preparing to celebrate its first “Dolly Day” on Aug. 9 after Gov. Jim Justice declared the holiday last year.

Last year, Dolly Parton visited Charleston to celebrate the statewide expansion of her Imagination Library Program. During the event, Gov. Jim Justice declared Aug. 9 as “Dolly Day.”

The Imagination Library program offers free books to children in the state from birth to age five, regardless of family income. 

This year, Marshall University’s June Harless Center, which is a partner with the Imagination Library program, will host a read aloud event with popular books from the program.

The event will be on Wednesday, Aug. 9 at 9:30 a.m. on the Memorial Student Center Plaza on Marshall’s campus.

Partners in various locations across the state have invited families to join them for read-aloud events to celebrate the program and help spread a love of reading.

For a complete list of read-aloud events occurring across the state, please visit the program website. Please note that some events may require pre-registration or are reserved for specific age groups. You may reach out to the contact listed for each event for more information.

Rural Residency Program For Internal Medicine Coming To Marshall

A new federal grant is expected to support a three-year, rural internal medicine residency program aimed at improving the needs of rural communities in Appalachia.

A new federal grant is expected to support a three-year, rural internal medicine residency program aimed at improving the needs of rural communities in Appalachia.

Marshall University’s Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine and the Holzer Health System in Gallipolis, Ohio, are collaborating on a $750,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Health Resources and Services Administration. 

“Since first partnering with Holzer to establish a family medicine residency in 2017,” said Dr. Paulette S. Wehner, vice dean of graduate medical education at the School of Medicine. “We look forward to using our expertise to build a rural internal medicine residency that will provide a high-caliber training experience and retain graduates to serve as primary care physicians for our area.” 

The new grant, which is going to the Marshall Community Health Consortium — composed of the Edwards School of Medicine, Marshall Health, Cabell Huntington Hospital and Valley Health Systems — will focus on creating a pipeline of primary care physicians trained specifically to care for patients in rural areas. 

Internal medicine residents will conduct their first year of training in Huntington and their final two years at Holzer Health System. 

According to a press release, this model allows trainees to learn firsthand how to address health care barriers in rural areas and treat a wide range of conditions they are likely to experience in practice.

The consortium is expected to work toward achieving initial accreditation in 2025 and welcome its first residents in July 2026.

The Appalachian Regional Commission reports the number of primary care physicians in Appalachia is 21 percent below the national average. That rate jumps to 40 percent below the national average in distressed Appalachian counties. 

For more information, call the Office of Graduate Medical Education at the Edwards School of Medicine at 304-691-1823.

Marshall To Build Workforce Training Center At ACF Site

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Rural Development Program presented a $550,000 check to establish Marshall’s welding and robotics training center near the university’s campus.

State and local officials, as well as representatives from Marshall University, received a federal grant to redevelop an industrial site in Huntington Tuesday.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Rural Development Program presented a $550,000 check to establish Marshall’s welding and robotics training center near the university’s campus.

The center will be built on the site of ACF Industries, which for decades built railcars and was one of the region’s largest employers.

The rails are still embedded in the concrete at the facility, but instead of building trains, it will now train a new workforce.

Brandon Dennison, Marshall’s vice president of economic and workforce development, said to expect more of these efforts. 

“We’re going to see very real, very tangible investments leading to good paying jobs and building the new Appalachian economy of the future,” he said.

Construction is set to begin early next year, with the center in operation in 2025.

CSX To Convert Diesel Locomotives To Hydrogen At Huntington Shop

Like many companies, CSX has committed to reduce its carbon emissions. It set a goal of a 37 percent reduction from 2014 to 2030.

Railroads CSX and Canadian Pacific Kansas City have said they’ll work together to develop hydrogen conversion kits for their existing diesel locomotive fleets.

The initial conversion work in the partnership will be performed at the CSX locomotive shop in Huntington.

““This exciting initiative will greatly benefit from the expertise of CSX’s advanced, large-scale facilities, where the locomotives will be built,” said Joe Hinrichs, CSX president and CEO.

Canadian Pacific has already converted one locomotive, which has undergone 1,000 miles of testing.

Hydrogen produces zero carbon dioxide emissions when burned. However, the production of hydrogen can have a carbon impact if it is made from fossil fuels.

Like many companies, CSX has committed to reduce its carbon emissions. It set a goal of a 37 percent reduction from 2014 to 2030.

NUCOR Plant Development Strengthens Entire Region

Speakers from the city of Huntington, the Cabell County Commission and the Mason County Development Authority briefed members of the Joint Standing Committee on Finance Monday on development they are already seeing for the region from the NUCOR plant.

The NUCOR steel plant in Mason County is expected to be an economic driver for the entire region. 

Speakers from the city of Huntington, the Cabell County Commission and the Mason County Development Authority briefed members of the Joint Standing Committee on Finance Monday on development they are already seeing for the region from the NUCOR plant.

The plant itself is expected to be a $3 billion investment in the region with thousands of jobs as well as ancillary jobs and businesses not directly connected to the plant but supporting employees like grocery stores and restaurants. Millions of dollars are also being spent to upgrade infrastructure for water, sewer, roads and bridges.  

John Musgrave, executive director of the Mason County Development Authority, noted it is nice to collaborate with a company that works with the local community. 

“They not only are active in Point Pleasant and Mason County,” he said. “But down in Huntington and Cabell County, taking advantage of Putnam County and down into Kanawha County.”

A big issue facing the region is housing for the workers with approximately 1,000 contractors coming in to build the plant and nearly that number working there full-time when it is operational. 

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