Los Angeles Times

A reticent ratepayer advocate

- Uspicious of

SLos Angeles Department of Water and Power rate hikes and frustrated that the city-owned utility was treated like a political football, residents in 2011 voted to create a ratepayer advocate. What they’ve gotten is a ratepayer analyst.

That’s because Fred Pickel, the first person picked to serve as the DWP’s watchdog and to lead the Office of Public Accountabi­lity, has adopted a studious, technical, nonconfron­tational style.

His underwhelm­ing approach suited the job, at least at first. For years the utility was often mired in tumultuous politics, including a 2010 fight between then-Mayor Antonio Villaraigo­sa and the City Council over electricit­y rates that threatened to bankrupt the city. All that discord and distrust had a corrosive effect, making it hard to have a rational conversati­on on what the utility needed to do and what ratepayers should have to pay to provide reliable, environmen­tally responsibl­e water and power.

A longtime energy industry consultant, Pickel has helped take some of the politics out of major DWP decisions by providing independen­t and impartial analysis. But now that he is likely to be appointed by the council to a second six-year term, he needs to embrace the “advocate” in his title.

Pickel and his office have laid out needed reforms that would help modernize the utility, but he’s rarely been an outspoken champion for change. His recommenda­tions are buried in technical reports, and he prefers working behind the scenes to nudge the utility toward better business practices.

Critics say Pickel has been a rubber stamp on the DWP because he supported rate hikes and backed a new contract for utility workers that raised salaries. The advocacy group Consumer Watchdog argued it would be better to eliminate the position than to pick Pickel for another term.

Pickel will never be the firebrand activists want, but he also can’t shy from tackling controvers­ial issues head-on. The DWP has to catch up on decades of deferred maintenanc­e while also making the investment­s needed to meet green energy and water conservati­on goals. But the utility is hampered by multiple layers of political and bureaucrat­ic bosses and binding union rules.

Some of Pickel’s reticence may stem from the ambiguity of being neither a regulator nor an independen­t advisor. Ultimately, though, the Office of Public Accountabi­lity’s power and relevance depends on the ratepayer advocate’s ability to persuade. That means grabbing the bully pulpit and putting public pressure on DWP managers and city leaders when they move too slowly. Pickel can’t stay behind the scenes.

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