Fresnolandia

Fresnoland

Fresnolandia is a weekly news podcast hosted by Danielle Bergstrom and Jordan Mattox brought to you by Fresnoland.

  1. JAN 27

    Tom Steyer in Fresno: Housing, Energy, and Affordability

    In this episode of Fresnolandia, hosts Danielle Bergstrom and Jordan Mattox sit down with investor, philanthropist, environmental advocate, and California gubernatorial candidate Tom Steyer for a conversation about what the state’s biggest policy challenges mean specifically for Fresno and the Central Valley. Steyer shares his perspective on the growing “abundance” discourse and why California must refocus on actually building things in the physical world—from housing and infrastructure to clean energy systems. He argues that the state’s housing crisis is fundamentally a supply problem, driven by high construction costs, slow permitting, zoning constraints, and outdated building technologies, and outlines how new construction methods and regulatory reforms could help make housing more affordable for working families in places like Fresno. The conversation then turns to one of the most pressing issues for Central Valley residents: electricity costs. Steyer critiques PG&E as a monopoly with misaligned incentives and points out that Fresno residents are paying some of the highest electricity rates in the country—more than double the national average. He makes the case for reforming the Public Utilities Commission, introducing competition through local energy generation and microgrids, and leveraging the rapid advances in solar and battery technology to dramatically lower energy bills. Throughout the episode, Steyer emphasizes that these problems are structural, not technical—and that solving them will require political courage to challenge entrenched interests, rethink regulatory systems, and prioritize affordability for everyday Californians. For Fresno, he argues, the combination of abundant sun, emerging battery technology, and local energy production represents a major opportunity to lead the next phase of California’s clean energy transition.

    23 min
  2. JAN 13

    Unpacking the Fresno City Contracts Investigation

    In this episode of Fresnolandia, hosts Danielle Bergstrom and Jordan Mattox sit down with investigative reporter and assistant editor Omar Rashad to unpack a major two-part investigation into Fresno’s “under-threshold” contracts—city contracts under $100,000 that can be executed without City Council approval. Rashad walks listeners through months of reporting that revealed how millions of dollars in taxpayer-funded contracts have been distributed with little public visibility, including repeated contracts awarded to the same consultants and vendors. The conversation explores how Fresno quietly doubled its under-threshold limit in 2024, why tracking these contracts is so difficult for the public, and how Fresno compares to cities like San Diego and Oakland that offer far greater transparency. The episode digs into the mechanics of how these contracts are approved, billed, and paid—raising thorny questions about oversight, pass-through expenses, public records delays, and the use of taxpayer dollars for services like Facebook advertising during election seasons. Bergstrom and Mattox also examine the policy trade-offs between government efficiency and democratic accountability, and what reforms could restore public trust. Finally, Rashad reflects on the reaction to the investigation at City Hall, including a rapid and controversial press conference by councilmembers and the broader implications for how Fresno governs itself.

    28 min
  3. 12/16/2025

    Who Decides Your Power Bill? Inside PG&E, the CPUC, and Fresno's Energy Costs with Martha Guzman

    PG&E bills are rising fast—and in the Central Valley, the pain is especially acute. On this episode of Fresnolandia, hosts Danielle Bergstrom and Jordan Mattox sit down with Martha Guzman, one of the most influential policy leaders to come out of the Central Valley, to unpack why energy affordability has become such a crisis—and what can realistically be done about it. Martha brings rare, inside perspective from her decades-long career in state and federal government, including her time as a California Public Utilities Commissioner and most recently as the Biden administration’s EPA Region 9 administrator. Together, they break down how investor-owned utilities like PG&E actually set rates, why wildfire mitigation and infrastructure costs are driving historic increases, and how fragmented decision-making at the CPUC makes affordability harder to control. The conversation zeroes in on Fresno and the Valley’s unique burdens: extreme heat, aging housing stock, lower wildfire risk but higher electricity usage, and the frustration of hosting massive solar development without seeing direct local bill relief. Martha also explores the limits—and possibilities—of tools like the climate credit, debates around utility profits, and whether public power is a realistic option for cities like Fresno. It’s a candid, wonky, and deeply human conversation about power—who pays for it, who profits from it, and what fairness should look like in a hotter, more unequal California.

    52 min
4.8
out of 5
20 Ratings

About

Fresnolandia is a weekly news podcast hosted by Danielle Bergstrom and Jordan Mattox brought to you by Fresnoland.

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