The Sentinel-Record

Editorial roundup

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Oct. 15 The Los Angeles Times Preemptive power outages

Last year, state officials changed the law to allow power companies to be more aggressive shutting down electrical lines in areas where strong, dry winds were predicted so that even if they were downed, they wouldn’t spark a fire. The idea was that the outages would be used only as a last resort and that, ultimately, a little bit of pain and inconvenie­nce was worth avoiding another deadly wildfire. Nearly all the deadliest fires over the last 20 years have been blamed on electrical lines and equipment.

The state’s two largest utilities — Pacific Gas & Electric and Southern California Edison — employed that preventive move in a big way last week, plunging millions of people into the dark from Humboldt to Ventura counties, bungling communicat­ions with the public and prompting questions about whether the weather in the end had justified such an extreme reaction. The PG&E shutdowns were staggering­ly broad in scope, affecting hundreds of hospitals, thousands of homebound ill and infirm California­ns, and hundreds of thousands of students whose schools were temporaril­y closed. All this by a company that has lagged badly on its tree-trimming efforts and other fire safety programs.

Now that the winds have died down, state officials should hold utilities executives to account for answers. Gov. Gavin Newsom on Monday asked the Public Utilities Commission to undertake an immediate review of PG&E’s outage of 738,000 customers. And it should do so, ideally, before the Santa Ana and Diablo winds return. …

But the most important question to be answered is whether the outages accomplish­ed anything. PG&E’s equipment didn’t start any fires last week, but that might have been the case even if the lights had stayed on. Meanwhile, thousands of Southern California­ns had their power cut, but the power continued to flow through lines at the ignition point of the Saddleridg­e fire near Sylmar. It’s still too early to say if those live wires caused the fire, but Edison reported that they were malfunctio­ning.

Newsom has called on PG&E to offer a $100 credit to residentia­l customers and $250 to businesses left in the dark last week. That’s a nice gesture, but we think it would be even better if people could feel confident that the preemptive blackouts were actually making people safer.

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