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Mertarvik Airport Receives Federal Funding, Scheduled To Open In 2022

The road leading to the rock quarry on Nelson Island doubles as an airstrip for non-commercial flights in Mertarvik. The new village may not have a commerical airport until 2022. July 16, 2020 in Mertarvik, Alaska.
Katie Basile
/
KYUK

Newtok residents are one step closer to having an airport in the new community of Mertarvik, which is being built for the relocation of the village. On April 1, the Federal Aviation Administration announced in a press release that the Newtok airport project would receive $21.1 million in funding.

  

Newtok residents first began migrating over to their new village site, called Mertarvik, in 2019. Erosion and flooding are destroying their community, and the new site, located 9 miles away, is built on ground that is more solid. Over 130 people, or about a third of the village, have already moved to the new site. Now a construction company has won the bid to build an airport.

For over a year, residents in Mertarvik have survived without a commercial airport. That has meant spotty access to groceries, and dangerous delays accessing medical care.

In September 2020, the Newtok Native Corporation sold land to the Alaska Department of Transportation to build a new airport after resolving a dispute over the terms of the deal.

DOT spokesperson Shannon McCarthy said in an email that Cruz Construction won the bid for the airport project for $22.7 million. McCarthy said that the DOT and Cruz Construction will meet with the community to discuss the project schedule and potential job opportunities. She said that construction will begin this summer, and that the airport in Mertarvik is expected to open to air traffic in the fall of 2022.

Greg Kim was a news reporter for KYUK from 2019-2022.
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