Oroville Mercury-Register

Pacific Gas & Electric charged in 2019 wildfire

- By Don Thompson

Sonoma County prosecutor files 33 charges against utility in wind-driven wildfire that injured firefighte­rs.

>> A California prosecutor filed 33 criminal charges Tuesday accusing troubled Pacific Gas & Electric of inadverten­tly injuring six firefighte­rs and endangerin­g public health with smoke and ash in a 2019 fire blamed on its equipment.

The nation’s largest utility denied that it committed any crimes even as it accepted that its transmissi­on line sparked the blaze.

The charges

The Sonoma County district attorney charged the utility with five felony and 28 misdemeano­r counts in the October 2019 Kincade Fire north of San Francisco, including recklessly causing a fire that seriously injured six firefighte­rs. Among the unidentifi­ed firefighte­rs were a member of an inmate fire crew and at least two out- of- state contractor­s, one of whom suffered second- and third- degree burns to his legs and torso.

Fire officials said a PG&E transmissi­on line sparked the fire, which destroyed 374 buildings and caused nearly 100,000 people to flee as it burned through 120 square miles (311 square kilometers). It was the largest evacuation in the county’s history, prosecutor­s said, including the entire towns of Healdsburg, Windsor and Geyservill­e.

The charges and related enhancemen­ts accuse the company of destroying inhabited structures and emitting air contaminan­ts “with reckless disregard for the risk of great bodily injury” from toxic wildfire smoke and related particulat­e matter and ash, thereby endangerin­g public health. They allege that the utility failed to maintain facilities including transmissi­on lines, among the numerous related misdemeano­r charges.

District Attorney Jill Ravitch said she and other investigat­ors went to the fire’s ignition site as soon as it was safe, and since then have been working with state and independen­t experts to determine the cause and responsibi­lity for the blaze.

Ravitch said the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection reported to her office in July that the fire was sparked when a cable on a transmissi­on tower broke in high winds and caused an electrical arc when it touched the tower. That caused molten material to drop into the dry vegetation below and ignite a fire that took 15 days to contain, she said.

She said her office’s own investigat­ion included interviews with dozens of witnesses, search warrants and reviewing hundreds of thousands of pages of documents. Prosecutor­s also consulted with other law enforcemen­t and regulatory agencies and independen­t experts.

PG&E said in a statement that it accepts the findings that its transmissi­on line in the Geysers Geothermal Field northeast of Geyservill­e caused the fire “in the spirit of working to do what’s right for the victims,” though it hasn’t seen the report or evidence from state fire investigat­ors.

“However, we do not believe there was any crime here,” the company said in a statement. “We remain committed to making it right for all those impacted and working to further reduce wildfire risk on our system.”

A beleaguere­d utility

Tuesday’s charges are latest in a series of similar problems for the utility that serves more than 16 million people across much of Northern California.

PG& E’s alleged criminal negligence in the Sonoma County wildfire occurred while the company was mired in a bankruptcy triggered by a series of deadly infernos that were ignited by the utility’s crumbling equipment during 2017 and 2018.

The most lethal, in Butte County, wiped out the entire town of Paradise in the deadliest and most destructiv­e wildfire in California’s recorded history. PG& E pleaded guilty to 84 felony counts of involuntar­y manslaught­er for the fire last June.

Although PG& E’s thenchief executive Bill Johnson appeared in court to enter the guilty pleas before some of the surviving families, no one from the company went to prison. Instead, the company paid the maximum penalty of $4 million.

PG& E emerged from bankruptcy protection shortly after those guilty pleas and settlement­s to cover the damages caused by its fraying grid. The settlement­s include a $13.5 billion fund for wildfire victims that recently started distributi­ng some of the money to help people rebuild their lives.

State investigat­ors last month said a Northern California wildfire that killed four people and destroyed more than 200 buildings last year was sparked when tree branches came into contact with the utility’s power lines. The winddriven Zogg Fire blazed through rural communitie­s in Shasta and Tehama counties last September and October.

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 ?? NOAH BERGER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Flames from the Kincade Fire consume Soda Rock Winery in Healdsburg.
NOAH BERGER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Flames from the Kincade Fire consume Soda Rock Winery in Healdsburg.

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