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What first looked like a porcupine against the snow ahead grew larger by the minute, until the 38-year-old adventurer realized in a flash of horror what it really was: a brown bear. His friends must have passed right over its den and woken it up - and it wasn't happy

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The Guardian
3 hours ago
- The Guardian
‘Rural America costs a lot of money': Trump cuts are decimating a radio station at the edge of the world
In Sand Point, Alaska, the radio dial is mostly empty. For a commercial broadcaster, running a station in this Aleutian Island fishing town of about 600 people just is not worth the cost of doing business. But KSDP, the local public radio station for Sand Point, is a community anchor, bringing listeners music, emergency alerts, live color commentary of high school sports, state and local news. Without a newspaper specifically serving the town, the station is residents' resource for all things local. On 1 August, for example, KSDP hosted an interview with local fish biologist Matthew Keyes. Asking the questions was Austin Roof, general manager of the station. Over fuzzy microphones, the two volleyed stats back and forth about the escapement rates of 'pinks' and 'kings' (colloquialisms for two of the most fished species of salmon). Roof served as a stand-in for the laborers listening at home or aboard their ships, asking about the noticeably low catches early that summer; Keyes told listeners that while June was among the lowest harvests on record, July had been much better. He then announced the fishing schedule for early August: there would be no fishing allowed for 60 hours straight as officials monitored fish populations, after that, anglers could tune to the radio daily for specific opening and closing times. In a region where livelihoods are tied to this turbulent and highly regulated industry, this information gave residents a chance to plan their summer of labor. In just the past few summer months KSDP has brought listeners not only crucial information about local fisheries, but also delivered updates and orders to get to high ground in the wake of two tsunamis. All the while, legislators 4,000 miles away in Washington DC were solidifying a decision that will fundamentally alter the media available to millions of Americans, especially in rural areas: on 17 July, Congress voted to rescind all funding for public broadcasting. Within hours of Roof's fishery interview, the hammer dropped: the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB), through which federal funding is disbursed to public radio and television stations, announced it will close down at the end of September. The average public radio station in the US gets less than 13% of its budget from the federal government. For many coastal and big-city stations, it is an even smaller portion. But at smalltown and rural stations, where donor bases are less robust, that number can climb above 50%. KSDP, which operates a far-reaching AM signal, a web stream and four small FM repeater signals placed in villages across a several hundred mile stretch of islands, gets 70% of its operating budget from CPB – among the highest shares of federal support for any station in the country. 'The rural communities are definitely gonna be hit the hardest,' Roof says. 'How do you prepare for the end of the world? The loss of federal funding is truly that seismic for us.' Chairs in KSDP's broadcasting studio and office are stacked high with jackets. Shoes overflow from a cardboard box in the small meeting room, and haphazardly folded garments fill any unused tables or shelf space. Crammed in Sand Point's city hall, the station doubles as a donation center and hosts clothing swaps a few times a year. If you attend a community barbecue in town, a public back-to-school party, or holiday celebration, there's a good chance the radio station put it on. Power tools are a permanent fixture in the studio, and there is always a neighbor ready to do the simple fixes for free or cheap. Roof has personally ascended the station's 200ft AM tower in climbing gear many times to save money on repairs. Until a few years ago, KSDP and the Sand Point area did not have a reporter dedicated to their stretch of the Aleutian Islands: a remote archipelago extending south and west from mainland Alaska, and home to roughly a dozen communities ranging in size from about 20 to a few thousand residents. For years, KSDP relied on coverage from the radio station KUCB in the larger Aleutian town of Unalaska, nearly 400 miles (644km) south-west, as well as statewide and national programs. Now the station finally has its own reporter: Theo Greenly, who splits his time between KSDP and two other radio stations, KUCB and KUHB, each hundreds of miles apart across the Pribilof and Aleutian Islands. Together with his colleagues Sofia Stuart-Rasi and Maggie Nelson at KUCB in the larger 4,400-person town of Unalaska, Greenly is one of just three journalists covering the 1,000-mile archipelago, and the only one assigned to cover Sand Point. Greenly's reporting regularly brings him to isolated communities for weeks at a time, as ferries between towns in his coverage area sometimes run only monthly, and flights are often delayed or cancelled. 'There are many, many places to get news from Washington or New York,' says Greenly. 'But there are zero alternatives for news from this region.' Greenly has covered dangerous sea algae blooms, Indigenous language revitalization efforts, and a cargo ship carrying lithium batteries that caught on fire in a local port. He was on the ground when the Aleutian town of King Cove's main employer, the Peter Pan fishing cannery, closed down, leaving many residents without jobs and many anglers unpaid for the hauls they had already delivered. In July, a resident of the 400-person town St Paul, located about 400 miles north-west of Sand Point, informed Greenly that the town was running out of food; the sole grocery store, owned by the local tribal government, had been waiting over a month to receive a large shipment of stock that it had paid for, but was stuck at the Anchorage airport. Ace Air Cargo had not flown to St Paul in all that time, citing weather issues. Not long after Greenly reported the story, the company got its cargo planes in the air, delivering more than 10,000lb of food and two tons of mail to St Paul. It costs money to report these stories but there is not a lot of money to be made in sharing them – especially in the far-flung, sparsely populated Aleutian Islands. Commercial radio stations are exceedingly rare here; there's simply not enough listeners. Public media, by design, fills the market gap. 'Rural America costs a lot of money,' says Roof. Alaska is one of the most heavily federally subsidized states in the US in terms of public services such as education, internet connection and media. Nevertheless, Nick Begich, Alaska's sole congressperson, voted with all but two of his fellow Republicans to take back federal funds that had been allocated for broadcasting. Greenly followed debate on the cuts closely. 'I mean, there is nobody covering this stuff,' he says, noting that he and his two colleagues in the Aleutians essentially double as the region's only newspaper reporters, as the paper serving the archipelago runs print versions of the public radio pieces alongside stories reported out of Anchorage or by national newsrooms. And he says it is not just locals who will suffer if public journalism in Alaska takes a hit, mentioning that his colleagues were key in covering the 2023 story of the possible Chinese surveillance balloons over Alaska. 'When Shell was doing exploratory drilling in the Arctic, this was their home port. When Chinese and Russian military ships cross into the Exclusive Economic Zone, we are the closest reporters,' he says. 'If you don't have reporters here, the nation is missing out on vital information.' Roof, the general manager, says KSDP has enough to 'keep the lights on for a while'. And while he doesn't have imminent plans to close, he knows that losing more than two-thirds of the station's operating budget will fundamentally change what they can do. He says they will have to rely increasingly on volunteers rather than paid staff if they want to survive. And he can't imagine how he will be able to continue hosting things like big public events. 'Those are the kinds of things that really make our community a fun place to live,' Roof says. 'And so I just don't see that coming back.' Roof is already planning one major change due to the cuts: he expects to have to shut down KSDP's far-reaching but costly AM signal by the end of the year. While AM listenership may be declining nationwide, it still plays an essential role here: AM signals reach much farther than FM, penetrate terrain, and carry extraordinarily far – sometimes hundreds of miles – over water, making it easy to be heard on distant islands or on ships. Roof is planning to shutter the AM signal rather than sell it, as he does not expect to have any interested buyers. The tower, he assumes, will be torn down and sold for scrap. For now, Roof plans to keep operating KSDP on a handful of very small, localized FM signals located in four villages across the Aleutians, and online via web stream, since many people in this region have internet connection for the first time thanks to new fiber optic lines and satellite systems such as Starlink. But not everyone lives in the villages with FM coverage, and the web is not always reliable, says Greenly. A ship's anchor once ripped apart the fiber cable bringing internet to the Aleutian Islands. Ultimately, says Greenly, cuts to public radio will have an impact on residents regardless of how they tune in. 'The word 'radio' is kind of a misnomer in a way,' he says. He tells me that people always ask him if people can't just get this information online. 'Yes,' he tells them, 'because we, the radio station, did the work, investigated it, and put it on the internet.' Without the newsrooms and stations supported by CPB, he says, 'they can't get that information.' Greenly says he doesn't know what will happen to his position. His role as the shared reporter for KSDP and two other local stations is funded by a grant from CPB. But his livelihood, he says, is the least of his concerns. 'I'm more saddened for the nation than for myself. I'm worried about the community. I'm worried about Sand Point,' he says. As for him, the intrepid local reporter braving the elements to cover stories from fishing to fracking? He says: 'I mean, I go back to bartending.'


The Independent
5 hours ago
- The Independent
Passenger films wing flap dangling mid‑flight on Delta plane
Passengers on a Delta Airlines flight from Orlando to Austin observed a broken wing during their journey. Footage captured by a passenger showed the trailing edge flap hanging from the back of the left wing. The incident occurred on Delta flight 1893 on Tuesday, 19 August. Delta confirmed the aircraft landed safely in Austin, noting that a portion of the left wing's flap was not in place upon inspection. Watch the video in full above.


Daily Mail
5 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Delta Airlines Boeing 737 loses part of its wing in mid-air, terrifying photo shows
Passengers on a Delta Air Lines flight were left horrified when part of the plane's wing appeared to break off mid-air - dangling loose as the aircraft made its descent. The mid-flight scare has now prompted a federal investigation, raising fresh concerns about the safety of America's aging fleet and Boeing 737's ongoing troubles after a string of high-profile mechanical failures. From their windows, travelers going to Austin, Texas, could see a jagged flap hanging by its hinges at the back of the wing, with a bright red piece of metal visibly twisting in the slipstream as the plane soared over fields and suburbs below. Video shows the section flapping violently, as if it might snap off entirely. Passenger Shanila Arif, who filmed the incident, said she first thought the shaking was turbulence - until another traveler pointed out the damage. 'We felt it was bad turbulence. The plane was shaking,' she told CNN. 'The lady in front of us opened the window and told us it is broken. I opened the window and got scared.' Arif admitted she feared the broken section might shear off and strike the tail, sparking disaster. Flight 1893, traveling from Orlando International to Austin-Bergstrom International on Tuesday, August 19, landed safely at 2.24pm CT with 62 passengers and six crew members on board. The jet arrived at the gate ten minutes later at 2.34pm. Delta confirmed the damage, saying in a statement to Daily Mail: 'After DL 1893 landed safely and without incident in Austin, it was observed that a portion of the left wing's flap was not in place. 'The aircraft has been taken out of service for maintenance. 'We apologize to our customers for their experience as nothing is more important than the safety of our people and customers.' According to the airline, the aircraft was a Boeing 737 operating its regularly scheduled service between Orlando and Austin when the flap section separated from the wing prior to landing. Flaps are crucial panels on the back of a wing that extend during takeoff and landing to give the aircraft extra lift. The Federal Aviation Administration confirmed it is investigating the incident.