Charles, Kodak have made plenty of official announcement indicating the winding down of production of Kodachrome, this started some time ago first with the loss of K25 & K200, the closure of the UK, Japanese & finally Lausanne processing lines, put these alongside Kodak closing it's own processing facilities and the closure of all the private K-14 lines except Dwaynes. The import of K64 ceased in most markets approx 6 months before the processing lines closed. Those are all irreversible steps, processing lines have been scrapped. All that is a very clear indication that Kodak have been winding down production of Kodachrome for about 8 years in line with declining sales.
Even PMK-25 accepts that it's highly probable that Kodachrome will disappear, it's only the question of how soon that's conjecture. His Kodachrome Project is a great way to make the most of the film while it's still around.
Kodachrome isn't that readily available any longer, that's the only point I disagree on, it's now only distributed in North America and the UK. Not all UK photographic shops and professional dealers stock it but as Tim Wallis points out it is available, and I saw odd rolls on the shelf myself when I was last in the UK. However only one of my 4 main suppliers still sells it, & that's B&H in the US.
Only Kodak know what decisions have been made about Kodachrome's future, no-one outside the company knows how much is left in storage or whether they'll ever produce another master roll. But I've said it before and I'll say it again - it is worth trying Kodachrome before it disappears, it's unique and quite different to all E6 films.
I have no axe to grind about Kodachrome, or sour grapes, but there has to be some realism about the film and its future.
Ian