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KNAU 88.7 is operating on impaired low power. APS has shut off power to our tower atop Mormon Mountain to service another radio station's meter. APS estimates full power will be restored around midnight Sunday evening/Monday morning.

KNAG 90.3 FM Grand Canyon is back on-air. Our engineers have repaired transmitter equipment on the ground but suspect the tower-mounted antenna may have sustained damage & are working to locate the problem; further repairs to come... Thanks so very much to our dedicated listeners in the region for their patience & support!

KNAU Arizona Public Radio is integrating new audio software into both news and classical services. We thank you for your patience and support through the transition.

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  • On today's newscast: Gov. Katie Hobbs has joined calls for the U.S. Forest Service to conduct a new environmental impact study on a uranium mine near the Grand Canyon, the boyfriend of a Navajo woman whose killing highlighted the epidemic of missing and slain Indigenous women will spend the rest of his life in prison, Arizona voters will soon decide whether to limit the governor's emergency powers, and more...
  • On today's newscast: The Navajo Nation Council passed a bill aimed at expanding a law that bans the transportation of uranium across the reservation, an 80-year-old man died after his boat flipped on the Colorado River in Grand Canyon National Park, the Yavapai County Sheriff says they can’t afford to implement the “Secure the Border Act” without additional funds, volunteers helped plant pine seedlings in a fire scar east of the San Francisco Peaks, and more...
  • On today's newscast: Hotel stays at the South Rim of the Grand Canyon are canceled ahead of the busy Labor Day weekend after the pipeline that provides water to the park failed, lawyers behind a lawsuit over a $15 million allocation to the Prescott rodeo say the state retroactively developed a grant-processing program for legal cover, Flagstaff’s water and sewer rates will increase Sunday, and more...
  • On today's newscast: Tourists with plans to stay at Grand Canyon National Park over Labor Day weekend were forced to move to accommodations outside the park yesterday, the Apache County attorney and superintendent of schools pleaded not guilty to public corruption charges, the Supai Village campground and lodge will remain closed through September after last week's flash flood, two athletes with connections to NAU will compete at the Paris Paralympic Games, polls show Democrat Ruben Gallego leads Republican Kari Lake in the U.S. Senate race, and more...
  • On today's newscast: The Harris-Walz campaign highlighted reproductive healthcare and abortion access at a Flagstaff event, the Apache trout has been removed from the federal list of endangered and threatened species, Arizona's tourism tax revenue topped $4 billion for the first time in 2023, the Navajo Nation is stepping up efforts to address feral horses on tribal lands, and more...
  • On today's newscast: Arizona voters will weigh in on at least 14 ballot propositions in November, Apache Stronghold delivered an appeal over Oak Flat to the Supreme Court, a lawsuit alleges the Payson Town Council violated the state constitution with the approval of $70 million in bonds, a new Miss Navajo Nation has been crowned, and more... Plus, a conversation with a Flagstaff artist who paints with earth gathered from all over the world — and space dust, too
  • On today's newscast: The body of a 71-year-old man was recovered from the Colorado River in the Grand Canyon, the Biden-Harris administration allocated $236 million to reduce wildfire risk and train firefighters, officials say concerns about high levels of arsenic at the Cottonwood Kids Park are unsubstantiated, Gov. Katie Hobbs and other Western governors want Congress to speed up efforts to address the growing wildfire crisis, and more...
  • On today's newscast: An Ash Fork man was arrested for allegedly making mass shooting threats to various Flagstaff locations, Arizona’s Civil War-era ban on nearly all abortions is officially off the books, crews worked over the weekend to contain two lightning-caused wildfires burning near Payson, Grand Canyon National Park officials are again considering upping backcountry fees, and more...
  • On today's newscast: Flagstaff's school funding stays flat as enrollment drops, Yavapai County officials downgraded an evacuation order in the Yarnell area after crews stopped forward progress of a fast-moving brush fire, authorities plan to repair a little-used set of pipes inside Glen Canyon Dam as Lake Powell's water levels near historic lows, members of the Navajo Nation will rally at the U.S. Capitol to urge Congress to reauthorize the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act, and more...
  • On today's newscast: Native American communities are experiencing an epidemic in syphilis cases, the Cottonwood Police Department has a new chief, officers have been assigned to Navajo Nation schools after two recent incidents, ABOR is urging state leaders to reverse cuts in next year's budget, Lake Powell's Dangling Rope Marina will not reopen due to declining water levels, and more...
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