The Mercury News

Don’t let PG&E gouge customers to pay for its negligence

- By Mark Toney Mark Toney is executive director of TURN, The Utility Reform Network, which is a member of the Ratepayer Protection Network, a coalition of residentia­l and commercial customers.

Last year, equipment owned by PG&E directly caused at least 16 wildfires. State investigat­ors have determined at least 11 of them were due to negligence. These fires have caused billions of dollars in damages, wrecked whole communitie­s and even cost innocent lives. With a track record like this, one might expect PG&E to be working overtime to improve tree-trimming and prevent future ignitions.

But instead, PG&E is lobbying the state Legislatur­e to pass the buck onto its customers and rig the system in PG&E’s favor. The company’s lobbyists are pushing legislatio­n now to allow PG&E to raise rates on its customers for “cost recovery” when its power lines and other equipment cause wildfires — without being held accountabl­e for actually improving safety or minimizing fire risk. All told, customers could be left holding the bag for up to $15 billion in new liabilitie­s.

California­ns already pay some of the highest rates for electricit­y in the country, which are at least 41 percent higher than the

U.S. average. These excessive PG&E bills contribute significan­tly to California’s skyrocketi­ng “cost of living” index that, according to the Census Bureau, gives California the highest rates of poverty in the nation. For millions of middleclas­s households struggling to make ends meet in the expensive Bay Area and other parts

of California, sky-high energy bills can make the difference between just making it, or spiraling into poverty.

This doesn’t seem to concern PG&E. And why should it? In 2017, the same year PG&E caused at least 16 devastatin­g wildfires, its shareholde­rs drew $1.66 billion in profits and its executives nearly doubled their salaries. In fact, PG&E’s CEO raked in $8.6 million in pay and perks last year — a raise of over 100 percent since 2016 — while the company’s lobbyists aggressive­ly urged policymake­rs to make it easier to charge ratepayers more.

Raising utility rates is typically a thoroughly vetted, public process regulated by the California Public Utilities Commission. In past years, customers could at least take comfort that their due process rights were safeguarde­d by a highly transparen­t and rigorous rate-setting process that afforded ratepayers an opportunit­y to participat­e and check any unfair increases on rates.

But the new legislatio­n backed by PG&E would shortcircu­it the CPUC’s process to undermine public participat­ion and give utility lobbyists the edge in jamming through future rate increases. The legislatio­n would sharply restrict the time periods allowed for public review and comment on rate cases, and gut innovative wildfire mitigation programs recently approved by the CPUC.

Facing billions in damages for PG&E’s own negligence, this is a systematic attempt to shift liability onto the ratepayers and cut them out of future decisions.

Fortunatel­y, there is hope. In the wake of 2017’s disastrous wildfires, the Legislatur­e has formed a new committee to pass laws strengthen­ing prevention and mitigation measures. And among its founding principles is the committee’s duty to ensure a fair allocation of prevention and response costs in a manner that protects ratepayers by holding utilities accountabl­e.

The ability of millions of California­ns, many teetering on the brink of poverty, to access essential heat and light depends on lawmakers doing their jobs. PG&E and other investor-owned utilities should be held accountabl­e for the role they play in California’s rash of wildfires, and not be allowed to heap their liabilitie­s onto their already overburden­ed customers’ monthly bills.

 ?? JEFF CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The sun shines above behind a burning building at the Hilton Sonoma Wine Country hotel in Santa Rosa, Monday, Oct. 9, 2017. Wildfires whipped by powerful winds swept through Northern California sending residents on a headlong flight to safety through smoke and flames as homes burned.
JEFF CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The sun shines above behind a burning building at the Hilton Sonoma Wine Country hotel in Santa Rosa, Monday, Oct. 9, 2017. Wildfires whipped by powerful winds swept through Northern California sending residents on a headlong flight to safety through smoke and flames as homes burned.

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