Lodi News-Sentinel

How should PG&E be overhauled?

- CalMatters is a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how California’s state Capitol works and why it matters. For more stories by Dan Walters, go to calmatters.org/ commentary

and restructur­e the utility,” Newsom wrote in an Internet posting. The “parties” to which Newsom refers are dueling factions of hedge funds that either own large blocs of PG&E stock or hold the utility’s bonds, plus the current company management and wildfire victims.

Newsom appointed Ana Matosantos, a top aide and a former state finance director, to explore restructur­ing alternativ­es. Her working group will, as he put it, “Game out every option and prepare a plan should the state need to intervene. All options are on the table.”

PG&E’s future would seem to be one of several scenarios, or some combinatio­n thereof, to wit:

• Maintain the ownership and managerial status quo with a bankruptcy workout plan that settles outstandin­g claims from wildfire victims, perhaps with a dedicated corporate bond issue.

• Concentrat­e ownership, now mostly in the hands of large institutio­nal investors and hedge funds, in a single owner.

Newsom more or less invited

Warren Buffet, the multi-billionair­e who already owns Pacificorp, the utility serving much of the Northwest, to take over PG&E, but Buffet has not responded publicly.

• End PG&E as an investorow­ned utility by transformi­ng it into some sort of public entity. California already has a number of publicly owned power providers, although none that also supplies natural gas. They fall into three categories — rural irrigation districts that own power-generating dams such as Modesto Irrigation District, cityowned systems such as the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, and independen­t entities such as Sacramento Municipal Utility District.

A government­al successor to PG&E might eliminate the profit factor, but would have the same problem of maintainin­g a power grid in fire-prone regions. It would have to raise tens of billions of dollars to buy out shareholde­rs, settle claims from fire victims and make the heavy investment­s in vital system upgrades.Placing the system in public ownership might mean more political accountabi­lity, but also could mean political manipulati­on.

Matosantos, who serves on the federal board overseeing Puerto Rico’s debt crisis, should be well-versed in how politics can undermine good public utility operations, since the Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority has been a model of mismanagem­ent. In fact, Puerto Rico now wants to sell major portions to private investors. There’s another example closer to home, the aforementi­oned Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, which became an arrogant fiefdom controlled by its unions as they flexed their political muscle.

PG&E clearly needs an overhaul of some kind — and the state, by the way, is complicit in its fall from grace, since its Public Utilities Commission oversees operations. However, it should be the right kind of overhaul, not something that’s politicall­y expedient. And whatever happens, good or ill, will be laid at Newsom’s feet.

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