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KDHX files for bankruptcy

KDHX, an independent and listener-supported radio station, is photographed on Thursday, Sept. 21, 2023, in Midtown St. Louis.
Tristen Rouse
/
St. Louis Public Radio
KDHX, an independent and listener-supported radio station, is photographed on Thursday, Sept. 21, 2023, in Midtown St. Louis.

KDHX filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in court Monday, after years of financial uncertainty and community pressure on its leaders.

KDHX has filed for bankruptcy.

Board members of Double Helix Corp., the nonprofit that runs the community radio station, announced Monday evening that lawyers filed petitions for bankruptcy protection earlier in the day in St. Louis bankruptcy court.

"This process allows us to honor our financial obligations, protect our long-standing relationships and explore ways to redesign community media in service to our whole community," board President Gary Pierson said in a statement.

If granted, protection under Chapter 11 of the federal bankruptcy code would allow KDHX to continue operating as it seeks to satisfy creditors under court supervision.

KDHX leaders declined an interview request on Monday through a private PR firm. No one representing KDHX has spoken on the record with St. Louis Public Radio journalists directly since late 2023, though Pierson has sent some text messages.

The station is operating in skeleton form since its leaders fired almost all of the organization's volunteers on Jan. 31 and began broadcasting prerecorded content. A KDHX lawyer later said volunteers cannot enter the building because the organization’s insurance expired that day.

KDHX leaders blamed “long-standing financial pressures (including pending litigation) and industry-wide challenges” for forcing the station into bankruptcy. St. Louis business leaders, musicians and former station donors have criticized station leadership for years. KDHX weathered accusations of racism and workplace harassment in 2019, which its leaders denied.

LOVE for KDHX, a group of station supporters — many of whom have criticized station leadership – offered last month to contribute $100,000 to the station and collect another $100,000 in pledged donations if KDHX would agree to change leadership. The KDHX board declined the offer.

Copyright 2025 St. Louis Public Radio

Jeremy D. Goodwin
Jeremy D. Goodwin joined St. Louis Public Radio in spring of 2018 as a reporter covering arts & culture and co-host of the Cut & Paste podcast. He came to us from Boston and the Berkshires of western Massachusetts, where he covered the same beat as a full-time freelancer, contributing to The Boston Globe, WBUR 90.9 FM, The New York Times, NPR and lots of places that you probably haven’t heard of. He’s also worked in publicity for the theater troupe Shakespeare & Company and Berkshire Museum. For a decade he joined some fellow Phish fans on the board of The Mockingbird Foundation, a charity that has raised over $1.5 million for music education causes and collectively written three books about the band. He’s also written an as-yet-unpublished novel about the physical power of language, haunted open mic nights with his experimental poetry and written and performed a comedic one-man-show that’s essentially a historical lecture about an event that never happened. He makes it a habit to take a major road trip of National Parks every couple of years.