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There are roughly 3,400 people spread across 6,800 square miles of volcanic archipelago in the Aleutians East Borough. That's a population density of 0.49 people per square mile — less than one person for every two square miles of wind-lashed, fog-shrouded island terrain. To put that in perspective, you could fit the entire population of this borough into a single city block in Manhattan and still have parking space. What's extraordinary is that a functioning economy — a real one, with homeowners and renters and commuters — exists here at all.
And it does, anchored almost entirely by one industry: seafood processing. The borough's communities, including King Cove, Sand Point, False Pass, and Akutan, are working ports built around Bering Sea fishing operations. Akutan in particular hosts one of the largest seafood processing facilities in North America. This is what explains the borough's surprisingly robust labor force participation rate of 78.5% — well above the national average — and a median household income of $72,692 that nearly matches the U.S. benchmark of $75,149, despite the geographic isolation.
The labor story here is real, but it comes with a striking asterisk. The uninsured rate sits at 35% — nearly triple the national average. Private insurance coverage registers at a remarkable 0.4%, which is not a typo. This is almost certainly a consequence of the seasonal and contract nature of seafood processing work, where workers cycle in and out of employer benefits eligibility. For a workforce that operates heavy machinery, handles industrial equipment, and works on docks in sub-Arctic conditions, this is a serious public health vulnerability hiding inside otherwise solid employment numbers.
The child poverty rate of 24.6% also stands in sharp tension with the adult income figures — suggesting that households with children are structurally different from the workforce households driving median income upward.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Value | $144,300 | Less than half the national median of $320,000 |
| Uninsured Rate | 35.0% | Nearly 3x the national average |
| Walk-to-Work Rate | 55.6% | One of the highest rates in the U.S. |
| No Internet Access | 36.0% | vs. ~10% nationally; severe connectivity gap |
One data point stands out as almost singular in the American context: 55.6% of workers walk to work. In most of the country, this figure hovers in low single digits even in dense urban centers. Here, it reflects something entirely different — not walkable urbanism, but compact, isolated island communities where you live, work, and eat within a few hundred feet of each other. There are no traffic jams on Akutan Island. There are barely roads.
The flip side: 36% of households have no internet access, and only 58% have broadband. In an era when healthcare, education, and economic opportunity increasingly flow through a fiber connection, this is a profound structural disadvantage — especially for the 24.6% of children growing up here.
What makes Aleutians East Borough unique? It is one of the most sparsely populated and geographically remote counties in the United States, yet sustains a near-national-average household income almost entirely through commercial fishing and seafood processing. The combination of high labor force participation, extreme geographic isolation, and near-total absence of private health insurance makes it unlike virtually any other county in America.
Why are home values so low in Aleutians East Borough? Remoteness suppresses demand almost completely. There is no speculative or lifestyle buyer market — no vacation homes, no tech workers relocating for scenery. Housing here serves a functional, workforce purpose, and prices reflect that. The $144,300 median is less than half the national figure, yet the price-to-income ratio is actually quite reasonable by American standards, making homeownership more accessible here than in most coastal communities.
Is Aleutians East Borough growing or shrinking? The borough has historically fluctuated with the fortunes of the fishing industry. The relatively low share of residents under 18 (12%) and a 15% housing vacancy rate suggest demographic pressure rather than growth — a pattern common to remote resource-extraction economies where young adults often leave for education and opportunities unavailable locally.
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