Los Angeles Times

Who’ll pay for all our fires?

California can’t wait another year to fix its flawed system for handling wildfire damage claims.

- ov. Gavin Newsom

Gis right that California needs a new way to pay for the damage caused when power lines spark massive wildfires that destroy property and kill people and animals. Fires have ravaged the state over the last two years, and experts say this may be California’s “new normal.” And although the governor wants to “de-prioritize” building in high-risk fire areas, a quarter of California­ns live in these dangerous zones now.

So it was appropriat­e for him to call on the Legislatur­e earlier this month to figure how to do that before wildfire season kicks into high gear this summer. Newsom stopped short of endorsing a specific a path forward, noting that Gov. Jerry Brown failed last year when he pushed legislator­s to adopt his prescripti­on. Instead, Newsom offered legislator­s a report from his wildfire “strike force” that outlined three options to more fairly allocate wildfire damage costs, while warning that if the state fails to take action, the “future is not very bright.”

That’s because wildfires have become so devastatin­g, costs traditiona­lly assigned to the state’s utilities are threatenin­g them with insolvency. The state’s largest investorow­ned utility, Pacific Gas & Electric, filed for bankruptcy protection in January in the face of some $30 billion in potential fire-related claims from 2017 and 2018. Yet if utilities aren’t required to cover those losses, insurers could be overwhelme­d with claims and driven out of the market.

It’s fine for the governor to leave it to lawmakers to come up with a specific plan, so long as he doesn’t allow them to duck the task. It’s not fair to ratepayers, the public, the utilities and the California­ns who live in highrisk wildfire areas to put this off. Any true solution must include a change to the unsustaina­ble system in which utilities are required to reimburse damaged property owners if their equipment starts a fire regardless of whether they were negligent.

This strict-liability system — called “inverse condemnati­on” — worked out pretty well in the days when fire damage remained fairly consistent and manageable from year to year. The idea was that utilities can pass

the cost of damages on to a broad base of ratepayers without inflicting too much pain on anyone. But the calculus changed in 2017 when wildfires tore through the state, reducing Santa Rosa neighborho­ods to smoking rubble and setting the scene for deadly Montecito mudslides. It was the costliest fire year on record — until 2018, when the records were shattered again. Fire damage claims for 2018 may reach $20 billion. What’s more, regulators recently started making it harder for utilities to pass on wildfire costs to ratepayers if they are judged not to have been “prudent managers,” a subjective determinat­ion.

Scrapping “inverse condemnati­on” is only one of the options for reallocati­ng fire claims in the strike force’s report. The other two — a “bridge financing” fund to pay wildfire claims quickly and a wildfire fund that would pool capital from the state’s investor-owned utilities to pay claims — are not bad ideas at all. But they’re workable only as complement­s to a fault-based standard.

Inevitably, legislator­s will flinch at being seen as bailing out utilities. But no one is suggesting that utilities get a pass if a fire is started by a known safety threat that they failed to fix. Of course they must be held accountabl­e when they are negligent.

Another important recommenda­tion was to reform the Public Utilities Commission, the state agency that regulates investorow­ned utilities. Even the regulators themselves say they don’t have the resources to inspect utility equipment and force correction­s, and instead act only after something’s gone wrong. Furthermor­e, the PUC has in the past been too cozy with utility executives. Proposals are needed to reform both the authority and the compositio­n of the PUC.

While PG&E is going through the bankruptcy process, the other two large investorow­ned utilities, Southern California Edison and San Diego Gas & Electric, have had their credit ratings downgraded because of uncertaint­y about future claims. That’s not just bad for utility investors, but also for ratepayers who absorb the utilities’ higher cost of doing business. Bankruptci­es also threaten the state’s ability to meet its clean-energy goals.

Will 2019 be another record-breaking year of fires? We hope not, but given the combinatio­n of climate-changed weather, the state’s aridity and the relentless push of humanity into what authoritie­s euphemisti­cally call “wildfire urban interface” zones, it’s possible that catastroph­ic wildfires will become a regular occurrence. We can’t wait another year to fix this flawed system.

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