Lodi News-Sentinel

PG&E settles with FEMA over billions in wildfire claims

- By Dale Kasler

Pacific Gas and Electric Corp. settled a major dispute that could have jeopardize­d its bankruptcy reorganiza­tion plan, agreeing to pay $1 billion to FEMA for costs of responding to disastrous wildfires caused by the California utility.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency was demanding $3.9 billion from PG&E, dollars that would have been carved out of a $13.5 billion fund PG&E has establishe­d for victims of the 2017 and 2018 fires.

Instead, FEMA accepted $1 billion and agreed that it wouldn’t get paid until fire victims are compensate­d in full. Instead, FEMA accepted $1 billion and agreed that it wouldn’t get paid until fire victims are compensate­d in full. FEMA spokesman Robert Barker said the deal is “subject to final approval” by the Justice Department.

In addition, California’s Office of Emergency Services reportedly dropped its claim for $290 million.

The approximat­ely 80,000 fire victims are preparing to vote on whether to accept the $13.5 billion fund. Carving out billions for the government could have tilted the vote against the PG&E plan.

Eric Goodman, a lawyer representi­ng wildfire victims, had called the FEMA claim “a cloud over the entire case.” PG&E has to exit bankruptcy by June 30 in order to be eligible for a state-created insurance pool designed to buffer utilities against liabilitie­s from future wildfires.

PG&E had tried to knock out the claims altogether, arguing that federal law prohibits FEMA from seeking reimbursem­ent unless it could prove that the utility had deliberate­ly lit the Camp Fire and other fires.

“We didn’t intend to cause the fire,” utility lawyer Paul Zumbro said at a hearing in U.S. Bankruptcy Court last month.

While the multibilli­ondollar claims have been resolved, PG&E still has to make peace with California officials over the basic outline of its reorganiza­tion plan.

Gov. Gavin Newsom has been insisting that PG&E emerge from bankruptcy as a “utility transforme­d,” with more emphasis placed on public safety. He rejected the company’s first bankruptcy plan, saying it didn’t overhaul PG&E’s corporate culture.

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