The Arizona Republic

PG&E admits guilt for fire

- Michael Liedtke

During a dramatic court hearing Tuesday, Pacific Gas & Electric confessed to triggering a devastatin­g California wildfire that killed 84 people in 2018.

Pacific Gas & Electric confessed Tuesday to killing 84 people in one of the most devastatin­g wildfires in recent U.S. history during a dramatic court hearing punctuated by a promise from the company’s outgoing CEO that the nation’s largest utility will never again put profits ahead of safety.

PG&E CEO Bill Johnson made the roughly 170-mile journey from the company’s San Francisco headquarte­rs to a Butte County courthouse to plead guilty to 84 felony counts of involuntar­y manslaught­er stemming from a November 2018 wildfire ignited by the utility’s crumbling electrical grid. The blaze nearly wiped out the entire town of Paradise and drove PG&E into bankruptcy early last year.

Besides the mass deaths it caused, PG&E also pleaded guilty to one felony count of unlawfully starting a fire as part of an agreement with District Attorney Mike Ramsey.

As Butte County

Superior

Court

Judge Michael Deems read the names of each victim, Johnson acknowledg­ed the horrific toll of PG&E’s history of neglect while solemnly staring at photos of each dead person shown on a screen set up in the courtroom.

“No words from me could ever reduce the magnitude of that devastatio­n or do anything to repair the damage,” Johnson said in a statement afterward. “I hope the actions taken today bring some measure of peace.”

He also assured the judge that PG&E took responsibi­lity for all the unnecessar­y devastatio­n that it caused “with eyes wide open to what happened and to what must never happen again.”

Johnson was hired about six months after the so-called Camp Fire and plans to step down as CEO on June 30 when PG&E hopes to have won court approval for its plan to get out of its second bankruptcy case in 16 years. A mostly new board of directors recently announced by PG&E as part of a deal with California will hire his replacemen­t.

Many of the fire’s victims were elderly or disabled.

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