Call & Times

Another blackout in store for California?

- By JOCELYN GECKER and CHRISTOPHE­R WEBER

SAN FRANCISCO — Hundreds of thousands of Northern California residents braced for another possible power outage as the state’s largest utility warned that a return of dangerous fire weather could prompt shut-offs across 16 counties.

The warning from Pacific Gas & Electric about a possible blackout Wednesday prompted a feeling of resignatio­n among residents and business owners and renewed rushes to stock up on emergency supplies.

“I think it’s not panic per se, just ‘Eh, we gotta do this AGAIN?’” said Kim Schefer, manager of Village True Value Hardware in Santa Rosa.

Schefer was busy Tuesday directing customers to gas cans and batteries as they prepared for what many see as a costly, frustratin­g new routine.

It would be the second blackout in two weeks for much of the state.

PG&E cut power to more than 2 million people across the San Francisco Bay Area in rolling blackouts from Oct. 9-12, paralyzing parts of the region in what was the largest deliberate blackout in state history. Schools and universiti­es canceled classes and many businesses were forced to close.

Earlier this week, PG&E notified 200,000 customers, or roughly a half-million people, that it could begin a new round of precaution­ary shut-offs mostly in the Sierra foothills and north of the San Francisco Bay Area. Blackouts would last at least 48 hours, the utility said.

PG&E says it’s concerned that winds forecast to hit 60 mph could throw branches and debris into power lines or topple them, sparking wildfires.

At Murphy’s Irish Pub in Sonoma, co-owner Dermot Coll groaned at the thought of another power outage. The watering hole kept its doors open during the last 48-hour shut-off, but it wasn’t easy because generator power to the walk-in coolers kept failing. “We made it work, but it was a headache,” Coll said. “We kept saying, ‘Is this even worth it?’”

Coll said he fears that precaution­ary blackouts will become a regular occurrence now that fire season in California is a year-round phenomenon.

“It’s going to be an annual event, I’m afraid. I hate to say it, but I believe it’s probably true,” he said.

PG&E has cast the blackouts as a matter of public safety to prevent the kind of blazes that have killed scores of people in California over the past several years, destroyed thousands of homes, and ran up tens of billions of dollars in claims that drove the company into bankruptcy. California Gov. Gavin sent a sharply worded letter Tuesday to Bill Johnson, CEO of the utility, blaming the unpreceden­ted mass outage earlier this month on the company’s failure to maintain and upgrade its equipment.

“I believe the unacceptab­le scope and duration of the previous outage – deliberate­ly forcing 735,000 customers to endure power outages – was the direct result of decades of PG&E prioritizi­ng profit over public safety,” Newsom wrote, referring to the number of businesses and households affected, not the total number of people.

PG&E says the shutdowns are not about money.

“The sole intent is to prevent a catastroph­ic wildfire,” Johnson said in a Monday briefing.

A huge portion of California is under high fire risk amid unpredicta­ble gusts and soaring temperatur­es.

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