KAWC is the NPR News source for Yuma and La Paz Counties. We are dedicated to informing, entertaining, and inspiring our audiences with high-quality, non-commerical content.
KAWC Colorado River Public Media is licensed by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) as a non-commercial, educational radio station. KAWC's licensee is the Arizona Western College District Governing Board.
2025年1月22日 · Tourism leaders hope to lure the next "3:10 To Yuma" and other films to the Grand Canyon State. A new lawsuit charges that allowing the state to give away $125 million a year in tax credits is an unconstitutional gift to private companies that agree to produce their films and commercials in Arizona.
1 天前 · Michele Norris talks with Debbie Fisher and Maya Lee. In January 2005, Fisher participated in the StoryCorps oral-history project. She remembered her late father, a Holocaust survivor, and described the tattoo on her arm: a remembrance of another survivor of Auschwitz whose story moved her when she visited the Holocaust museum in Washington.
1 天前 · Trump trying to dramatically reshape federal government, RFK Jr. faces Senate confirmation hearings for HHS secretary, national assessment on reading and math shows students struggling post-pandemic.
Hosted by Lou Gum, Arizona Edition, KAWC's news program, is our focus on the issues facing Arizona. Through interviews with local newsmakers, KAWC keeps you informed on issues in the region.
2024年12月9日 · Hosted by Lou Gum, Arizona Edition, KAWC's news program, is our focus on the issues facing Arizona. Through interviews with local newsmakers, KAWC keeps you informed on issues in the region.
2025年1月17日 · The KAWC Student newsroom is supported by the Local News Initiative at the Community Foundation for Southern Arizona. Since 1980 the Community Foundation for Southern Arizona has been a trusted philanthropic partner helping individuals, families, businesses, and non-profits work together to create a stronger community.
2024年12月26日 · Mexico waits for more water. Uncertainty over the river’s future doesn’t stop at America’s border. In the Colorado River Delta, where the river once reached the sea, environmental groups have created islands of green in the middle of an otherwise barren, dusty landscape.. The future of those oases depends on negotiations between the U.S. and Mexico.