Oroville Mercury-Register

PG&E: Fine money isn’t coming from victims

- Staff reports

The Pacific Gas and Electric Company said on Monday that nearly $4 million in fines and expenses connected to a plea agreement with the Butte County District Attorney Mike Ramsey last week will not impact victim claims.

The company is set to plead guilty on April 24 in a Chico Courthouse. The plea was delayed due to the confirmati­on of two COVID-19 virus cases in the county that forced the courthouse to be closed.

The company will be fined almost $3.49 million for the 84 counts of involuntar­y manslaught­er, one count of unlawfully causing a fire which includes three special allegation­s for PG&E’s causing great bodily injury to a firefighte­r; causing great bodily to more than one surviving victim, and causing about 18,804 structures to burn.

As part of that plea deal, a federally appointed court monitor will send a safety performanc­e report to Ramsey for the next two years and the company has to rewater the Miocene Canal. When Ramsey made his announceme­nt last week he said the fine was separate and apart from the negotiated $25.5 billion set aside for fire victims in PG&E’s bankruptcy proceeding­s ($13.5 billion for private claims; $11 billion for insurance companies’ claims; and $1 billion for government entity claims including $270 million to the Town of Paradise; $253 million to the County of Butte; and $ 47.5 million to the Paradise Recreation and Park District). Ramsey said PG&E’s plea will also include a payment of $500,000 to his office for investigat­ion’s cost.

Paradise Irrigation District and the Paradise Unified School District have yet to announce any settlement deal with the company.

The company’s announceme­nt essentiall­y confirms Ramsey’s statement.

Under its reorganiza­tion plan, the company said the fine money will be given to the Fire Victim Trust from income earned on the distributi­on to be made to the subrogatio­n claimants under the Plan. As a result, there will be no reduction in the amount available for wildfire victims.

The company says that the move allows it to comply with its funding commitment­s it has to ensure a successful emergence from Chapter 11, and expedites the fair and timely payments to victims. The company will still owe $25.5 billion, assuming both the California Public Utilities Commission and the Bankruptcy Court approve its reorganiza­tion plan. A court hear

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States