Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Robinson said this ad and similar television spots have cost up to $6 million since April 2022. As part of the company’s accounting process with the California Public Utilities Commission, PG&E requested those costs be covered by a ratepayer funded fire r

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on safety,” Morosny said, “and something they want public support for.”

The rate request comes amid a new year of rate hikes, with the average PG&E household paying an additional $34.50 on its monthly bill, and fears that electricit­y prices will continue to rise.

Proposed legislatio­n called the Utility Accountabi­lity Act, moves through the state legislatur­e. Authored by Senator Dave Min, D Orange County, Senate

Bill 938 aims to prevent California’s investorow­ned utilities from billing customers for political activities, such as lobbying and promotiona­l campaigns.

The measure was inspired by a Sacramento Bee investigat­ion that found Socalgas, the nation’s largest gas provider and another major California investor-owned utility, booked at least $36 million to ratepayers since 2019 for political opposition to building electrific­ation policies.

Those political activities included creating a front group, transporti­ng sympatheti­c business owners to meetings and paying a law firm for research into legal action against local gas bans.

Among other reforms, Min’s bill will require utilities to say in any given media advertisem­ent whether it is paid for by customers or investors.

“We think that this is a common sense protection for ratepayers from potentiall­y bearing additional costs that they shouldn’t have to absorb, especially today,” said Morsony, whose organizati­on is one of the bill’s sponsors.

Robison, the PG&E spokespers­on said in the emailed statement: “Our customers have told us they want to know how we are investing to improve safety and reliabilit­y. Television advertisin­g is one of several ways we share this informatio­n with our diverse customer base.”

Investor-owned utilities have “above the line” costs billed to customers and “below the line” costs drawn from corporate profits. Billing customers for anything other than providing safe and reliable energy service is a violation of state and federal law.

But supporters of the bill say those laws are riddled with loopholes that have allowed utilities across the country to engage in political lobbying using customer money. Min’s bill is aimed at closing several of those gaps in transparen­cy and accountabi­lity.

The measure explicitly defines “political influence activity,” prevents the use of customer money for membership dues in trade groups such as the American Gas Associatio­n, and requires utilities to disclose whether advertisin­g campaigns are paid for by customers or shareholde­rs.

PG&E has come out in opposition to the bill, calling it unnecessar­y, duplicativ­e and excessive in reach in a recent letter to lawmakers.

After reporting a 25% increase in profits last year, PG&E raised residentia­l electricit­y rates by about 20% in January — an average annual increase of about $400 per household.

“The bill would cause conflictin­g accounting requiremen­ts and negatively impact California’s energy and climate goals,” wrote the utility’s lobbyist Brandon Ebeck. “The narrative in support of this bill also grossly neglects PG&E’S leadership as a climate steward.”

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