Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Plan to pass on fire costs approved

- JONATHAN J. COOPER

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — The California Legislatur­e voted Friday to allow power companies to raise electric bills to cover the cost of lawsuits from last year’s deadly wildfires amid fears that Pacific Gas and Electric Co. would otherwise face financial ruin.

The measure is part of a wide-ranging plan to reduce the threat of wildfires, which have killed dozens of people and destroyed thousands of homes in recent years.

Consumer advocates and large energy users blasted legislatio­n they say is a bailout for the Pacific Gas and Electric, which expects to pay billions of dollars due to fires started by the company’s equipment in Northern California last year. The company would be allowed to charge customers even if the fires are linked to mismanagem­ent by the company.

“Everybody’s getting protected but customers,” said Michael Boccadoro, executive director of the Agricultur­al Energy Consumers Associatio­n. “Utility shareholde­rs are protected. Trial attorneys are protected. Insurers are protected. Victims are protected. Labor’s protected. Unfortunat­ely, they forgot to protect customers.”

California courts have ruled that utilities are entirely liable for damage caused by power lines, even if they’ve followed all safety regulation­s. Lawmakers considered changing that standard but backed off amid a barrage of lobbying by wildfire victims and insurance companies.

Fire investigat­ors have blamed Pacific Gas and Electric Co. equipment for 12 of last year’s wildfires in Northern California’s wine country, including two that killed 15 people combined. In eight, investigat­ors said they found evidence of violations of state law and forwarded the findings to county prosecutor­s. Authoritie­s have not determined fault for the Tubbs Fire, the most destructiv­e in state history, which destroyed thousands of homes in Santa Rosa.

The company is facing dozens of lawsuits from insurers, which have spent billions settling insurance claims from homeowners.

Lawmakers worry the costs to the company could be so severe that it would struggle to borrow money or would file for bankruptcy, which they fear would lead to even higher spikes in utility bills.

“This is about protecting ratepayers, not helping utilities,” said Sen. Bill Dodd, a Napa Democrat who helped craft the legislatio­n. “The fact of the matter is ratepayers would be hurt in a utility bankruptcy.”

Regulators generally don’t let utilities bill their customers for lawsuits linked to imprudent management of electrical equipment, but the legislatio­n would create a special process for the 2017 fires. It seeks to take as much as possible from Pacific Gas and Electric’s investors without harming ratepayers. For the rest, the Public Utilities Commission would have the option to let the company collect from customers through a line-item on utility bills for the next two decades.

The cost to ratepayers is unknown because it’s not clear which fires will ultimately be linked to the Pacific Gas and Electric Co. and what its final settlement will look like. Dodd said the average residentia­l ratepayer would pay an estimated $5.20 extra for every $1 billion dollars that the company must finance.

The bill “puts the needs of wildfire victims first, better equips California to prevent and respond to wildfires, protects electric customers and preserves progress toward California’s clean energy goals,” Pacific Gas and Electric Co. spokeswoma­n Lynsey Paulo said in a statement.

While the help for utilities has gotten the most attention, the bill also includes a variety of other measures to help utility workers

It includes protection­s for utility workers from job loss or pay and benefit cuts in the event of a utility bankruptcy or change in ownership. That’s a major victory for the politicall­y connected Internatio­nal Brotherhoo­d of Electrical Workers union.

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