Nina Kravinsky
News ReporterNina was a temporary news reporter at KYUK. She comes to Bethel from NPR, where she's a producer at Morning Edition. Prior to moving back to the East Coast to work at NPR, Nina was the assistant news director at a community radio station called WORT in Madison, WI. She's originally from the Washington, DC area.
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Representatives from the U.S. Departments of Interior and Commerce, along with NOAA, will meet with tribal leaders at ONC on Oct. 5 to hear about how they can help subsistence users in an era of historically low salmon runs.
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Patrick Snow wants to learn about the council and find ways to improve roads and fill jobs in Bethel with locals. He's one of four candidates running for four open seats in the Oct. 4 election.
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You can get a booster at the clinic through the end of October. These shots are designed to protect against more recent variants of the virus.
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Father and son Tomi and Thomas Isenschmid spent several weeks kayaking down the river. Along the way they met bears, wrong turns, and kind people willing to help.
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Henderson is running for a second term in the Oct. 4 Bethel City Council race. She's the only incumbent running.
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The new "pay-what-you-can" model aims to make the gym more accessible to lower income people. The Bethel city council also introduced a new proposal to create a sales tax amnesty program.
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The National Transportation Safety Board found that "inadequate operational control procedures" were the reason a new pilot was allowed to fly in bad weather. The crash killed five people.
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Dozens of soldiers will be based at the armory as they make their way out to harder-hit communities. They landed in Bethel on Sept. 21.
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American Red Cross volunteers and Alaska National Guard troops are making the Bethel National Guard armory their base before flying out to harder-hit, coastal communities.
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The final remnants of Typhoon Merbok are passing over the state of Alaska. Residents of hard-hit communities are assessing damage as they await outside aid.