Los Angeles Times

New board and new home for PG&E

- Bloomberg

As a crucial date looms in the PG&E Corp. bankruptcy process, the utility has been busy getting ready for its long-anticipate­d exit from Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection with new leadership and a new home.

The company on Wednesday overhauled its board with 11 new directors. That followed an announceme­nt Monday that the utility giant plans to sell its iconic downtown San Francisco headquarte­rs and relocate to Oakland, a move aimed at lowering costs.

PG&E is seeking bankruptcy court approval of its $59-billion turnaround plan ahead of a state deadline of June 30 so that it can participat­e in the state’s wildfire insurance fund.

The company filed for Chapter 11 more than a year ago after its equipment sparked some of the worst wildfires in California history.

PG&E had agreed to overhaul its board as part of reforms promised to Gov. Gavin Newsom to earn his sign-off on the company’s reorganiza­tion. The company said last month that only three of its current board members would remain after it emerged from bankruptcy, including AT&T executive Bill Smith, who will become interim chief executive after Bill Johnson, the current interim CEO, leaves June 30.

The board will consist of 14 members, according to a statement Wednesday. The new members, six of whom are from California, include Craig Fugate, a former administra­tor of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, and Bob Flexon, a former CEO of power provider Dynegy Inc.

Other new directors have safety, utility, regulatory, cybersecur­ity and customer relations expertise, PG&E said.

“Putting in place a new board is a critical component of PG&E’s plan to emerge from bankruptcy as a reimagined utility,” Nora Mead Brownell, the current chair of PG&E’s board, said in a statement. “This is the right time for a changeover given that the company will soon emerge from bankruptcy and start a new chapter.” Brownell is among the current members stepping down.

The reorganize­d utility will move to its new Oakland headquarte­rs next to Lake Merritt in phases, starting in 2022. PG&E, which has called San Francisco its home since the utility’s founding in 1905, plans to lease its new building, with the option to purchase the property from developer TMG Partners for $892 million, according to a regulatory filing Tuesday.

With the move, PG&E becomes one of the most high-profile companies to leave San Francisco for Oakland.

The sale of its headquarte­rs also allows the utility to profit off one of the tightest and most expensive U.S. office markets.

PG&E said any net gains realized from a sale would be passed on to customers, and a transactio­n wouldn’t occur until it exits bankruptcy.

“Our new Oakland headquarte­rs will be significan­tly more cost-effective, is better suited to the needs of our business, and is a critical part of fulfilling our commitment to operate in a fiscally responsibl­e way that will enable us to achieve our operationa­l and safety goals,” Smith said in the statement.

PG&E said TMG will upgrade its Oakland property at its own cost according to the company’s specificat­ions, which will allow for a flexible office layout and new safety measures in the wake of the coronaviru­s crisis. The location will also make commuting easier for the majority of its employees who already live in the East Bay, PG&E said.

It plans to consolidat­e its two other East Bay offices into the new Oakland headquarte­rs.

The utility’s 1.7-millionsqu­are-foot San Francisco complex was constructe­d between 1923 and 1925, according to its registrati­on form for the National Register of Historic Places. It’s in the South of Market neighborho­od, an area popular with technology companies.

One broker estimate last year implied the property could fetch more than $1 billion. But it’s unclear how the market has changed since then given the COVID-19 pandemic.

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