Los Angeles Times

Reform bid: A campaign for change at the Public Utilities Commission collapses.

Final negotiatio­ns on measure to reform the oft-criticized utility agency crumble on Legislatur­e’s last day.

- By Liam Dillon liam.dillon@latimes.com

SACRAMENTO — A major effort to overhaul the state’s energy regulator surprising­ly collapsed after late legislativ­e maneuverin­gs led to the unraveling of the broad coalition that had pushed for changes at the scandal-ridden agency.

The measure would have boosted transparen­cy, strengthen­ed safety rules and shrunk the responsibi­lities of the California Public Utilities Commission, the agency in charge of regulating the state’s electric and gas utilities as well as telecommun­ications and other major industries.

The PUC has been under scrutiny since an investigat­ion of the 2010 natural gas pipeline explosion in San Bruno revealed dinner dates, shared talking points and other signs of a close relationsh­ip between regulators and utility executives. The furor grew after the 2013 closure of the San Onofre nuclear power plant in Southern California, and the recent fourmonth-long Aliso Canyon gas leak encouraged further criticism of regulators’ oversight of utilities and safety standards.

In June, Gov. Jerry Brown and a trio of lawmakers announced they had agreed on a plan to overhaul the agency, what was supposed to be the culminatio­n of years of bipartisan effort. Brown and the legislator­s released bullet points detailing the changes, and the resulting legislatio­n was expected to pass easily.

Although two bills in the package made it to Brown’s desk, the legislatio­n that included the majority of the changes from Assemblyma­n Mike Gatto (D-Glendale) and a companion measure from Sen. Jerry Hill (D-San Mateo) never came up for a vote before the Legislatur­e adjourned for the year Thursday morning.

“We ran out of time and we ran out of consensus,” Hill said.

Under the two measures that failed, the PUC would have been required to increase internal auditing and whistleblo­wing procedures and spin off control of transporta­tion services such as Uber and Lyft to other agencies — a decision based on concerns the PUC was spread too thin. Similarly, the public would have gained easier access to agency records.

But as the Legislatur­e’s final hours dwindled, details had yet to be nailed down, and the bills remained stuck in policy committees.

One major problem emerged last weekend when PUC President Michael Picker objected to a part of the bill that would have made it a misdemeano­r for agency employees to knowingly release confidenti­al informatio­n, arguing it would have opened up employees to criminal prosecutio­n when responding to public records requests.

“Frankly the PUC wouldn’t support it, and would ask for a veto of the bill if it had that language in it,” Hill said.

But Hill worried that if he took out that provision, telecommun­ication and cable companies would have tried to kill the measure.

PUC spokeswoma­n Terri Prosper confirmed Picker’s stance, but said that the agency had worked diligently with lawmakers on the bills and was “stunned at the collapse of the reform legislatio­n.”

Negotiatio­ns were still continuing through Wednesday morning with cable company representa­tives meeting in Hill’s office. By that point, the legislatio­n had long missed key deadlines for the end of the session and could only advance if it received a waiver from normal Senate rules through a bipartisan supermajor­ity vote.

As the clock ticked toward a midnight Thursday deadline, that support wasn’t there.

About 11 p.m., state Senate GOP leader Jean Fuller (R-Bakersfiel­d) wouldn’t allow Gatto’s bill to come to the floor. Gatto gave up at midnight, blaming Fuller in an interview immediatel­y afterward .

“It just seems like one of those things when somebody got tired and grouchy and they decided to kill the biggest utility reform bill of the year — arguably the decade,” said Gatto, who is leaving office due to term limits.

Fuller declined to comment. But Assembly GOP leader Chad Mayes of Yucca Valley, who rebuffed lastsecond maneuverin­g to have the bill go through his chamber, said the measure was too rushed.

“We recognize the need for changes at the PUC,” Mayes said in a statement. “However, those changes should be crafted in the light of day, not 15 minutes before the end of a two-year legislativ­e session.”

A spokesman for the governor said Brown was disappoint­ed that Gatto and Hill’s measures didn’t pass, but said Brown still intends to sign the two bills that did reach his desk. Those measures will increase public access to PUC proceeding­s and boost disclosure of private meetings between utility executives and regulators.

The failure of the largest bill frustrated those who have long advocated for changes at the agency, some of whom already believed the package didn’t go far enough to break up the coziness between the PUC and industry.

Former San Diego City Atty. Mike Aguirre, who sued the PUC in the aftermath of the San Onofre case and had praised the overhaul when it was announced in June, said it wasn’t fair to blame Republican­s for its demise. Brown and Gatto didn’t make the deal enough of a priority to push it through the Democrat-controlled Legislatur­e, he said.

“It was a tremendous charade put on the public of California for them to stand up and say they had a deal and then not even have Gatto’s bill pass,” Aguirre said.

Aguirre lost a state appellate court case on Wednesday asking for the release of any emails between Brown and the PUC over the San Onofre shutdown. The bill that failed the same day in Sacramento would have allowed a Superior Court, not an appeals court, to make such decisions. (The substance of Aguirre’s case has yet to be decided.)

Wednesday’s court ruling emphasized the need for further PUC changes, Hill said. But he believed it might be more difficult in the future.

The June agreement between the governor and lawmakers on the PUC overhaul came after Gatto had secured a bipartisan vote in the Assembly on a constituti­onal amendment that would have given voters the opportunit­y to break up the PUC and allow the Legislatur­e to then assign all of its responsibi­lities to other agencies.

That vote provided the kind of leverage for changes at the PUC, Hill said, that’s unlikely to be there next year.

“I hope we’ll still see the potential for reform,” he said.

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ?? A S S E M B LY M A N Bill Dodd, left, with Mike Gatto, whose changes to Public Utilities Commission legislatio­n failed to get a vote. Some say the package didn’t do enough to halt the coziness between the PUC and industry.
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press A S S E M B LY M A N Bill Dodd, left, with Mike Gatto, whose changes to Public Utilities Commission legislatio­n failed to get a vote. Some say the package didn’t do enough to halt the coziness between the PUC and industry.
 ?? Pete Dronkers Associated Press ?? THE PUC has been under scrutiny over its oversight of utilities and safety standards relating to the fourmonth gas leak at the Aliso Canyon facility, left, and the 2013 closure of the San Onofre nuclear power plant.
Pete Dronkers Associated Press THE PUC has been under scrutiny over its oversight of utilities and safety standards relating to the fourmonth gas leak at the Aliso Canyon facility, left, and the 2013 closure of the San Onofre nuclear power plant.
 ?? Don Bartletti Los Angeles Times ??
Don Bartletti Los Angeles Times

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