Rural blog

The Village is a Daily News blog about life and politics in rural Alaska. Its main author is ADN reporter Kyle Hopkins. Come here for breaking news on village issues, plus interviews, videos and photos. But that's just part of the story. We want to feature your pictures, videos and stories, too. Think of The Village as your bulletin board. E-mail us anything you’d like to share with the rest of Alaska -- your letters to the editor, the photos of your latest hunt or video of your latest potlatch. (We love video.)


Kyle Hopkins

I was born in Sitka, have lived in Kake, Skagway and Fairbanks and joined the ADN in 2005 after writing for the Anchorage Press and Fairbanks Daily News-Miner. I started blogging for the paper in 2006 with The Trail, our blog about the governor's race. Then came the Alaska Politics blog. Now I'm covering government and rural affairs and live in Anchorage with my wife, Rebecca. (Update: Our daughter Alice was born May 31. Thanks everyone for the suggestions.) E-mail me at khopkins@adn.com and find me on Twitter at twitter.com/ADNVillage.

 

READER-SUBMITTED PHOTOS

Life in Rural Alaska

Post your photos from the Bush and check out what others are sending in.

STORY

Fourth-grade whale hunter

A nine-year-old delivered the killing blow to a 32-foot bowhead whale in Barrow.

AUDIO SLIDE SHOW

Relocating Newtok

Residents of the Yup'ik Eskimo village and military reservists on site discuss Newtock's relocation.

VIDEO

Coping with suicide

Willie Ballot, of Selawik, describes life after his daughter's suicide.

PHOTOS

Kotzebue in April

While Southcentral Alaska enjoyed warm and sunny April days, in Kotzebue snow and winter-weather maintained.

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Naneng knocks Parnell for no-show at Obama event - 11/18/2009 11:10 am

(UPDATE) Democrats confirm Neal Foster as the new Nome rep - 11/15/2009 1:47 pm

On the road - 11/15/2009 12:29 pm

Stormfront: Blizzard photos from Norton Sound - 11/12/2009 7:25 pm

Film company will pay $22K for using fake news stories to sell alien-abduction movie - 11/11/2009 7:11 pm

Baby, it's cold outside - 11/11/2009 4:46 pm

Storm hits western, northern Alaska; weather service warns of flooding - 11/11/2009 12:32 pm

Journalism class puts focus on rural AK - 11/9/2009 9:27 am

(UPDATED) Seattle Times: Bethel connection to accused cop shooter - 11/8/2009 3:31 pm

Sitka man collapses, dies during apparent seal hunt - 11/8/2009 1:05 pm

Howling tribute to Haber - 11/7/2009 7:16 pm

Blotter: Caller reports stolen marijuana to troopers; credit fraud investigation in Akutan - 11/7/2009 5:31 pm

State: Medical team delivered vaccine past midnight in isolated Diomede - 11/6/2009 12:09 pm

Marshall: More on the feds' dismissal of subsistence fishing charges - 11/6/2009 10:23 am

Army National Guard flies two from Diomede for possible swine flu - 11/5/2009 3:58 pm

(UPDATED) Obama: 'No shouting now. But I would love to come to Alaska' - 11/5/2009 7:25 am

Stranded in Anchorage? - 11/4/2009 7:21 pm

Watch Obama's meeting with tribes online tomorrow - 11/4/2009 6:02 pm

Kotlik: Father saves son, drowns in snowmachine accident - 11/4/2009 9:50 am

(UPDATED) Capsized fishing boat belongs to Moller, sister - 10/31/2009 8:42 pm

State: Medical team delivered vaccine past midnight in isolated Diomede

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Diomede, circa 1999: A Little Diomede Island resident pulls a polar bear hide from the frozen Bering Sea to check if the sea lice have cleaned the hide enough for drying, in this file photo, date unknown. (AP Photo/Al Grillo, File)Diomede, circa 1999: A Little Diomede Island resident pulls a polar bear hide from the frozen Bering Sea to check if the sea lice have cleaned the hide enough for drying, in this file photo, date unknown. (AP Photo/Al Grillo, File)

A doctor and nurse were distributing swine flu vaccine past 2 a.m. last night in Diomede in an effort to keep the disease from spreading in the hard-to-reach Bering Strait village, state officials said today.

“We’ve got everybody on the island vaccinated except for four people," said Health Department spokesman Greg Wilkinson.

A 1-year-old girl in the village was showing signs of respiratory problems, but when the Alaska Army National Guard flew her and her mother to Nome yesterday the child tested negative for swine flu, said Jeremy Zidek, spokesman for the Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management.

Diomede is 135 miles northwest of Nome, on Little Diomede Island. It’s about 2.5 miles across the Bering Strait from Russia and is one of the most remote communities in Alaska. You can only get there this time of year by helicopter and sometimes boat. The village lost passenger air service months ago. (Though food and mail still arrive on a regular basis.)

Responding to a request from the Diomede mayor, the state teamed up with the Guard and the regional health corporation this week, taking the unusual step of sending a civilian medical team and swine flu vaccines to protect the village.

“There were some sick people (there) and I think that these were just prudent actions to take to make sure that the disease wouldn’t spread through the isolated community where we wouldn’t be able to, perhaps, reach people at a later date,” Zidek said.

Some villagers are showing flu-like symptoms, but only people who are medivaced to Nome are actually tested for swine flu.

So far, at least three people from the village have been tested. One, a woman the Guard flew from the community on Wednesday, tested positive, the state says.

The doctor and nurse are expected to fly out of Little Diomede tonight, Zidek said. Two medics deployed to the village left last night with the 1-year-old girl.


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