An Alaska station connects communities across hundreds of miles. Now it’s fighting to survive.
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This article was originally published by Northwestern University’s Medill Local News Initiative and is republished here with permission.


In the remote Arctic town of Kotzebue, Alaska, some residents still talk about the Dairy Queen that closed several years ago. They also talk about what’s at risk of closing next: the region’s lone radio station.

Since 1973, KOTZ has delivered the news to Kotzebue, population 3,102, and several other small, sparse villages that collectively are home to about the same number of people. Some 30 miles north of the Arctic Circle, KOTZ is the only source of local news for a region larger than Indiana, but with just 0.1…

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