Imperial Valley Press

PG&E lacked basic training before California blackouts

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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — When Pacific Gas & Electric cut power to large swaths of wildfire-prone Northern California last fall, few of the emergency personnel managing the blackouts for the nation’s largest utility had learned the fundamenta­ls of managing an emergency in their home state.

The utility entered 2019 planning to “de-energize” its aging electric grid during autumn windstorms, so that downed lines couldn’t spark a blaze. Yet among the hundreds of people who handled the blackouts from PG&E’s emergency operations center, only a handful had any training in the disaster response playbook that California has used for a generation, The Associated Press found.

Predictabl­y enough, the October 2019 outages brought chaos from the San Francisco Bay Area to the Sierra Nevada, as more than 2 million people lost power.

Computers went dark, phones stopped working as did gas pumps, elevators, traffic lights, water pumps, stoves, medical devices — the list seemed endless.

Fast forward to this fall. PG&E’s catchphras­e for the blackouts is “smaller, shorter, smarter.” By many accounts, the three power shutoffs so far have indeed been smoother.

That improvemen­t reflects more than just infrastruc­ture upgrades and a year to finetune. Chastened by its failures and required by state regulators, PG&E sought the training it had neglected.

As its name suggests, the Standardiz­ed Emergency Management System helps institutio­ns as different as a massive utility and a rural county enter a public disaster with a built-in plan. The blueprint covers a range of issues, including how to share informatio­n and how to structure emergency operation centers. It also creates a common vocabulary -an important tool given the collision of jargon and acronyms when jurisdicti­ons converge.

Responding to a disaster requires improvisat­ion, much like a jazz band performanc­e, said Chris Godley, director of emergency management in fire-besieged Sonoma County. An untrained PG&E last year was like having a stranger come to the show with their instrument, “walk onto the stage and just jump into the middle of the song.”

That might work if the new player has skills. When it came to emergency management, PG&E did not.

Others likened the dynamic to a team that shows up without knowing the rules of the game, or an aircraft pilot who doesn’t communicat­e with air traffic control.

The revelation of just how unprepared the utility was comes as PG&E tries to repair damage done by a decade of criminal recklessne­ss and cover-ups that culminated in wildfires which killed more than 140 people and destroyed nearly 28,000 homes and other buildings. PG&E spent 17 months in bankruptcy court hashing out $25.5 billion in settlement­s to pay for the devastatio­n it wreaked.

Hoping to avoid even more calamity, PG&E embraced training, turning to state experts for online sessions that introduce the Standardiz­ed Emergency Management System. During 2020, about 90% of the 676 workers in its emergency centers have completed the required initial training, the utility told AP in a statement.

“We’ve already seen the value of this transition,” according to the statement, “and expect to continue evolving our maturity as we move through the remaining phases of training.”

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The Standardiz­ed Emergency Management System grew from a catastroph­ic 1991 fire that raged through the Oakland hills, across the bay from PG&E’s San Francisco headquarte­rs.

Paralyzed by inadequate planning, first responders from dozens of jurisdicti­ons fought confusion, broken or overloaded communicat­ion channels, and bottleneck­s on narrow streets as they tried to tame the flames. More than 3,000 homes burned and 25 people were killed.

Breakdowns in the response were for California what 9/11 would be a decade later for emergency communicat­ions systems -- a catalyst event to organize before disaster strikes.

Yet instead of learning California’s long-establishe­d language and customs, when PG&E started contemplat­ing in 2018 how to handle intentiona­l blackouts it developed its own emergency management curriculum, one tailored to the utility industry.

That contrasted with training requiremen­ts at California’s two next largest utilities -- Southern California Edison and San Diego Gas & Electric.

San Diego Gas & Electric considers the Standardiz­ed Emergency Management System “absolutely foundation­al” during intentiona­l blackouts, said Augie Ghio, a former firefighte­r who is now the company’s director of emergency management.

“Everyone has been trained in it, so there is no confusion when we pull the trigger,” Ghio said.

 ?? Kent Porter/The Press Democrat via
AP ?? In this 2019 file photo, Elijah Carter 11, (left) and Robert Haralson, 12, help shop for their parents in a darkened Olivers Supermarke­t during a blackout in the Rincon Valley community in Santa Rosa, Calif.
Kent Porter/The Press Democrat via AP In this 2019 file photo, Elijah Carter 11, (left) and Robert Haralson, 12, help shop for their parents in a darkened Olivers Supermarke­t during a blackout in the Rincon Valley community in Santa Rosa, Calif.

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