The Federal Communications Commission granted Garden Spot Broadcasters, Inc. a construction permit for the station on April 24, 1962 with the WGSA-FMcall sign. On November 9, 1962, the station signed onfor the first time. It was the FM counterpart to AM 1360 WGSA. WGSA-AM-FM were both owned by Garden Spot Broadcasters with the two stations simulcasting part of their day. At the time, WGSA-FM was licensed for only 1,580 watts, a fraction of its current effective radiated power. The station was granted its first license by the FCC on January 23, 1963. On April 4, 1970, Garden Spot Broadcasters was granted a construction permit by the FCC to increase the station's ERP to 50,000 watts while its height above average terrain remained at 500 feet, followed by a new license with the upgraded facilities on October 19, 1970. By 1970, the FM station was running an automatedcountrymusic format, with the new call sign WIOV, using a mix of western and Roman numerals to represent the dial position at 105 MHz. Over time, disc jockeys were added and the automation was scaled back. In 1984, the FM station was acquired by Brill Media. Brill moved the studios to 44 Bethany Road. On April 14, 1999, the FCC granted a construction permit to increase the station's HAAT to while decreasing the station's ERP to 25,000 watts. In 2004, Citadel Broadcasting acquired WIOV-FM. In 2011, the United States Department of Justice approved the purchase of Citadel Broadcasting by Cumulus Media. The sale was completed September 18, 2011. Longtime morning host Jerry Murphy was found dead in his home on February 14, 2018, when he failed to show up for work. Murphy had been the wake up voice on WIOV-FM since 1999. He was 61. Casey Allen, his co-host, is now paired with Program Director Rich Creeger for morning drive time. On March 2, 2018, Cumulus Media announced that two stations in its Harrisburg cluster, country formatted 106.7 WZCY-FM, would trade places with Top 40/CHR formatted 93.5 WWKL effective March 15. WIOV and WZCY had service contours that overlapped in much of South Central Pennsylvania. The move to the lower-powered Class A station on 93.5 MHz would allow WZCY to continue focusing on covering the Harrisburg market, while WWKL, at 106.7 MHz, would get a Class B signal having a larger service contour, covering Lancaster, York and Lebanon in addition to Harrisburg.
Signal note
WIOV-FM is short spaced to three other Class B stations: WDAS-FM105.3 WDAS-FM, WWPR-FMPower 105.1 and WAVA-FM105.1 WAVA. WIOV-FM and WDAS-FM operate on first adjacent channels and the distance between the cities they are licensed to serve is only 56 miles. The minimum distance between two Class B stations operating on first adjacent channels according to current FCC rules is 105 miles. WIOV-FM and WWPR-FM operate on the same channel and the distance between the cities they are licensed to serve is only 120 miles. WAVA-FM also operates on the same channel as WIOV-FM and the distance between the cities they are licensed to serve is only about 101 miles. The minimum distance between two Class B stations operating on the same channel according to current FCC rules is 150 miles.