San Diego Union-Tribune

NEWSOM NAMES ENERGY ADVISER AS CPUC PRESIDENT

Reynolds has been engaged in utilities and wildfire safety

- BY KATHLEEN RONAYNE

Gov. Gavin Newsom has named his senior adviser on energy policy as the next president of the state body that regulates utilities.

Alice Reynolds is set to lead the five-member California Public Utilities Commission beginning Dec. 31, taking over a job that includes oversight of Pacific Gas & Electric and other electric utilities as they grapple with wildfire safety and the use of intentiona­l power shutoffs to prevent blazes in the nation’s most populous state. Her appointmen­t requires confirmati­on from the state Senate, but that’s often a formality that comes after the person is already in the job.

The commission also has control over telecommun­ications, rail, water and transporta­tion companies such as Uber and Lyft.

Reynolds replaces Marybel Batjer, who is retiring. Batjer came to the position with experience leading government agencies but did not have a background in energy policy.

Reynolds, in contrast, has been deeply engaged on key issues before the California Public Utilities Commission, including 2019 legislatio­n that required major utilities to spend billions on safety improvemen­ts and created a $21 billion fund those utilities could tap to pay claims from catastroph­ic fires. The legislatio­n came as PG&E was in the midst of bankruptcy proceeding­s following its role in sparking a deadly 2018 wildfire.

“Alice has been indispensa­ble in our work to move California toward a cleaner, affordable and reliable energy future, navigate the bankruptcy of the state’s largest investor-owned utility and accelerate the state’s progress toward meeting our clean energy goals,” Newsom said in a statement.

Before serving as Newsom’s senior adviser on energy, Reynolds held a similar role for former Gov. Jerry

Brown. She served as deputy secretary for law enforcemen­t and general counsel for the state’s Environmen­tal Protection Agency from 2011 to 2017.

“She’s highly qualified to sit in the seat. The question is how she’s going to deal with the utilities and whether she’ll be really tough on them,” said Jamie Court, president of Consumer Watchdog, which often spars with the commission.

Court and Mark Toney, executive director of The Utility Reform Network, another group that regularly interacts with the commission, noted the CPUC is supposed to operate independen­tly of the governor’s office. But its commission­ers, like Reynolds, often have close ties to the executive branch.

“We want to remind her that the CPUC commission­ers have to make decisions for the public interest independen­tly of what the governor may want,” Toney said.

On Monday, the commission issued $7.5 million in fines to PG&E for safety code violations. It found the utility failed to properly inspect and repair a transmissi­on line in Sausalito between 2009 and 2018 and failed to inspect all of its distributi­on poles in 2019.

Beyond monitoring safety inspection­s, the commission has a hand in regulating when utilities can shut off power during high-risk wildfire weather, as well as their transition to clean energy.

Reynolds, in her role in the Newsom administra­tion, has been actively engaged on most policies related to the energy sector. That includes the closure of the Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant, efforts to decarboniz­e California buildings and the state’s broader transition to clean energy.

“She has unmatched expertise on California energy issues,” Victoria Rome, director of California Government Affairs at the Natural Resources Defense Council.

Spokespeop­le for Newsom’s office and the CPUC did not respond to requests for an interview with Reynolds. The job pays nearly $230,000 a year.

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