
KZYX News
KZYX reporters and independent journalists cover local news for Mendocino County, California, Monday through Friday in six and a half minute reports.
KZYX News Department · Mendocino County Public Broadcasting
Show overview
KZYX News has been publishing since 2020, and across the 5 years since has built a catalogue of 1,162 episodes. That works out to roughly 150 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a near-daily cadence.
Episodes typically run under ten minutes — most land between 6 min and 7 min — and the run-time is fairly consistent across the catalogue. None of the episodes are flagged explicit by the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-US-language News show.
There hasn’t been a new episode in the last ninety days; the most recent episode landed 11 months ago. Published by Mendocino County Public Broadcasting.
From the publisher
KZYX reporters and independent journalists cover local news for Mendocino County, California, Monday through Friday in six and a half minute reports. The KZYX News podcast is available for redistribution under CC BY 4.0, or the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license.
Latest Episodes
View all 1,162 episodesEp 1160Mendo Food Network Completes Major Food Security Project
A food security project years in the making has come to fruition. The Mendo Food Network is opening a new warehouse in Willits on Saturday, June 29th. The new facility promises to revolutionize food distribution in the county.
Ep 1163Fort Bragg's Flockworks Shows Art Can Be an Economic Engine
Flockworks, a non-profit art edcuation organization focused on fostering creativity and community connection, has grown to be the third-largest employer in Fort Bragg.
Ep 1162Board Supervisors Considers Grand Jury Report on Rural Dwelling Violations and Opposition to Ukiah Annexation
The Mendocino County Board of Supervisors met on Tuesday and discussed a grand jury report that found the county department of planning and building services was not adhering for state law or local ordinances with regard to permits for limited density rural dwellings. The supervisors also discussed withdrawing from a master tax sharing agreement in response to Ukiah’s proposed annexation of county land.
Ep 1161Fort Bragg City Council Rezones Mill Site, Sets Broadband Fees, Passes Budget
The Fort Bragg City Council on Monday unanimously agreed to allocate $58,000 in emergency funding to the Fort Bragg Food Bank after hearing testimony about the ripple effects federal cuts to food programs are having on the community. In other action, the city council agreed to rezone the mill site. The council adopted a new fee schedule for the new municipal fiber-optic broadband utility, they adopted a city budget, and they approved the next step in deploying an innovative, wave-powered desalinization buoy.
Ep 1159Ukiah Officials Defend Annexation Proposal
In local news Fort Bragg police are investigating a sexual assault on the 400 Block of S. Harrison Street .... in response to Ukiah’s controversial proposal to triple its size by annexing adjacent county land, the Mendocino County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday will consider withdrawing from a tax-sharing agreement The board will meet on Tuesday at 10:15 a.m. at the County Administration Center in Ukiah. Remote access will be available via Zoom.Meanwhile City officials in Ukiah defended annexation at a packed town hall Thursday night.
Ep 1158New CAL FIRE grants fund wildfire resiliency, forest health and jobs
Ep 1157Ukiah Planning Commission Push Annexation to an Undetermined Date, City Council Approves Budget, Demolition, and Fire Truck Purchase
Ep 1156How a New Amazon Delivery Center Could Affect Local Sales Tax
If you’ve been following budget discussions in Ukiah, Willts and Mendocino County you know that declining sales tax is a big problem. In the last five years, Ukiah’s sales tax has not grown a penny. Indeed, after taking into account the roller coaster of the pandemic, the stimulus, followed by the post stimulus slump, Ukiah’s total sales tax has shrunk by 1%. In Willits, sales taxes have shrunk by17% in the last five years. Mendocino County is in better shape, while taxes are down 5% from the pandemic high in 2021, they are up 18 percent in the last five years. However, these numbers don’t take into account a very important missing factor — only a portion of the e-commerce tax that is collected from companies like Amazon is remitted back to the county or local jurisdictions.
Ep 1155Opposition Builds to Ukiah Annexation Proposal
For the city, annexation is a way to bolster its tax base and improve service delivery. But for county residents, it means even less money for road repairs, public safety and fire prevention and suppression. Businesses and farms in the areas targeted for annexation expressed fear that joining the city would threaten their livelihood.
Ep 1154Willits Confronts Precarious Fiscal Reality
The city of Willits is facing a moment of financial reckoning. What began as an effort to complete a series of overdue audits has revealed a municipal budget that is teetering on the brink. According to a report provided by Finance Director Manny Orozco at the city council meeting last week, during the last year the city faced a shortfall of $4.2 million. As of last Wednesday, the general fund has dwindled to just $32,000.
Ep 1153Round Valley Indian Tribes Recount Tough Water Rights Negotiations
For generations, the Yuki people lived by the Eel River. It was a lifeline flowing through their ancestral lands. Then, in 1908, the river's natural course was interrupted by the Potter Valley Project , impacting their way of life, their fish, and their culture. Now, with the impending decommissioning of the dams, a new chapter is unfolding.
Ep 1152Elder Abuse Increases and Violations Abound During Two-Day Salmon Season
June is Elder Abuse Awareness Month. Jesse Vanvoorhis, deputy director of Adult and Aging Services, is using the opportunity to draw attention to some troubling trends. Vanvoorhis has been directly involved with Adult Protective Services for at least the last six years and has worked in social services for 19 years. He points to a significant increase in elder abuse reports.
Ep 1151Fort Bragg City Council Approves Mill Site Development Strategy Over Opposition
The Fort Bragg City Council on Monday narrowly approved a resolution accepting the Millsite Development Strategy Report as a guideline for subsequent planning of what to do with the oceanfront property that was once the site of the Georgia Pacific lumber mill.
Ep 1150Private Developers Eye Albion Headlands, Town Hall on Annexation, An Odd Twist in Cubbison Civil Suit
In local news, private developers are in early talks with the owner of the Albion headlands, Ukiah is planning to hold a town hall on a controversial annexation proposal and Chamise Cubbison’s civil suit against the county is taking an unusual twist as it moves forward.
Ep 1149Ozempic, Range Anxiety, and Other Factors Contributing to the Wine Slump
For the past two years, the wine industry has been going through a tough transition. As older wine lovers drink less, they’re not yet being replaced by younger consumers. The industry also faces new challenges — from diet drugs to range anxiety in electric cars.
Ep 1148Mendocino County Passes a Budget
After weeks of detailed presentations, frank discussion, and grim fiscal forecasts, the Mendocino County Board of Supervisors has adopted a budget for the upcoming fiscal year. “It was a difficult budget, but we made it through it,” said Board Chair John Haschak after the unanimous vote that followed six weeks of budget hearings.
Ep 1147From Tank Operator to Police Chief: Tom Corning Reflects on Service and Community in Ukiah
Tom Corning didn’t grow up dreaming of becoming a police chief. His journey into law enforcement started with a more universal call to arms. He served nearly seven years, including a 13-month deployment in Iraq as a crew member on an M1A1 Abrams main battle tank. After returning stateside, Corning became a recruiter for the Army in Marin and Napa Counties. When his service ended, he faced the realities of transitioning back to civilian life.
Ep 1146Seniors Win Federal Support, Hotel Taxes Rebound, New Heat Tool Debuts, and Burn Safety Reminders from Cal Fire
In local news today, there’s an update on the status of the Older Americans Act, hotel tax receipts may be rebounding after a three-year decline, the governor wants feedback on a new online tool to protect communities from extreme heat and CAL FIRE offers burn pile safety tips.
Ep 1145Who Bombed Judi Bari? Thirty-five Years Later, Supporters Are Still Searching for Answers
Who bombed Judy Bari? Lauren Schmitt of KMUD looks into the thirty-five year old attack on Earth First organizer Judy Bari. The 40-year-old environmentalist was severely injured by a pipe bomb when she was driving in Oakland on May 24, 1990. She died seven years later. Her colleague Darryl Cherney sustained minor injuries and has been seeking justice ever since.
Ep 1144Indian Tribes Hold the Water Rights to Potter Valley Water
Residents of Potter Valley are confronting a difficult choice as they consider the future of farming in their home town: water that costs at least $200 acre feet a year or no water at all.