Based in Oakland, Felicia Mello covers the state’s economic divide, including such issues asaffordable housing, labor rights and environmental and social justice. Her recent stories covered the impact of legal representation on eviction cases and unions’ quest to win unemployment benefits for striking workers.
Prior to joining the California Divide team in 2023, Felicia covered higher education for CalMatters and founded the CalMatters College Journalism Network, an Eppy Award-winning fellowship program that trains student journalists to cover education policy from the ground up.
She investigated California’s lax oversight of for-profit colleges and edited student-led projects on Title IX and campus policing. Her reporting earned awards from the national Education Writers Association, the California News Publishers Association and the Society for Professional Journalists Northern California.
Born in the Bay Area, Felicia holds a master’s degree from UC Berkeley’s Graduate School of Journalism and has reported from locations as diverse as Las Vegas and Quito, Ecuador, contributing stories to The Washington Post, The Nation, NPR and CNN’s Parts Unknown, among others.Before coming to CalMatters, she served as digital editor for Las Vegas’ leading alternative weekly, and was Nevada reporter for the Center for Public Integrity’s nationwide investigation of state government transparency, and a regional editor for Patch.com.
Felicia’s work is informed by her family’s immigrant roots and her experience growing up in California’s public schools. She’s interested in how ordinary people survive and thrive in a state that is increasingly unaffordable but remains one of the best places in the world to live.
Languages spoken: English and Spanish (fluent); Italian, Portuguese, French (conversational)
Good morning, Inequality Insights readers. I’m CalMatters housing affordability reporter Felicia Mello. One in five California children comes from a mixed-status family, in which at least one member is undocumented, according to the California Immigrant Data Portal. Concern is growing among housing advocates that those families risk losing access to federal housing assistance once President-elect […]
La política de vivienda del presidente electo Donald Trump es vaga. Pero, según la información disponible, muchos expertos en vivienda de California no son optimistas sobre lo que podría significar para la crisis del estado.
President-elect Donald Trump’s housing policy for his second term is vague at best. But based on available information, many California housing experts are not optimistic about what it could mean for the state’s crisis.
Los californianos rechazaron hoy una medida de control de alquiler que inspiró más de $150 millones en gastos de campaña y expuso visiones contrapuestas de cómo responder a la crisis de vivienda del estado.
California voters are deciding whether or not to repeal a past restriction on what properties could be affected by rent control, and whether the state can dictate local rent control policy.
Votantes sopesan si permitir o no a los gobiernos locales ampliar el control de los alquileres, pero los funcionarios electos de San Francisco y Los Ángeles ya han mostrado interés en hacerlo.
As voters weigh whether to allow local governments to expand rent control, elected officials in San Francisco and Los Angeles have already shown interest in doing so. In other cities, local laws could automatically cap annual rent increases on some single-family homes and newer apartment buildings if Prop. 33 passes.
The Yes and No on 33 campaigns have collectively spent more than $140 million. CalMatters fact checked some of the more pervasive claims made by both sides.
Based in Oakland, Felicia Mello covers the state’s economic divide, including such issues as affordable housing, labor rights and environmental and social justice.
CalMatters
California, explained
Felicia Mello
Felicia Mello covers the state’s economic divide, including such issues as affordable housing, labor rights and environmental and social justice. Prior to joining the California Divide team in 2023, Felicia covered higher education for CalMatters and founded the CalMatters College Journalism Network, an Eppy Award-winning fellowship program that trains student journalists to cover education policy from the ground up. Born in the Bay Area and based in Oakland, Felicia holds a master’s degree from UC Berkeley’s Graduate School of Journalism. She has reported from locations as diverse as Las Vegas and Quito, Ecuador, contributing stories to The Washington Post, The Nation, NPR and CNN’s Parts Unknown, among others. Before coming to CalMatters, she served as digital editor for Las Vegas’ leading alternative weekly, and was Nevada reporter for the Center for Public Integrity’s nationwide investigation of state government transparency, and a regional editor for Patch.com. Felicia’s work is informed by her family’s immigrant roots and her experience growing up in California’s public schools. Languages spoken: English and Spanish (fluent); Italian, Portuguese, French (conversational)