San Diego Union-Tribune

PG&E HIT WITH $1.9B PENALTY

California regulators approve punishment for utility’s failure to maintain power lines that caused deadly fires

- BLOOMBERG NEWS

California regulators approved a $1.9 billion penalty against PG&E Corp. for its role in sparking some of the worst wildfires in state history.

The penalty approved Thursday is the largest ever assessed by the California Public Utilities Commission, whose investigat­ors determined that PG&E failed to properly maintain and operate power lines, resulting in blazes that destroyed thousands of homes and killed more than 100 people in 2017 and 2018. The fires led to an estimated $30 billion in claims against PG&E, pushing the company into bankruptcy.

PG&E is racing to gain regulatory and Bankruptcy Court approval of its Chapter 11 plan before a June 30 state deadline so it can participat­e in a state insurance fund to help cover any future fire liabilitie­s. As part of its reorganiza­tion, PG&E has already agreed to pay more than $25 billion to resolve claims from fire victims, insurers and local government agencies.

In its ruling Thursday, the commission backed off plans for the penalty to include a $200 million cash fine after PG&E said that could threaten agreements it reached with investors to buy $9 billion in shares of the reorganize­d company. The Utility Reform Network, a consumer advocacy group, said the agency was letting PG&E off the hook by suspending the cash fine.

The commission’s penalty is higher than the $1.7 billion PG&E agreed to pay last year through a settlement with parties including the commission’s safety division. But it’s lower than the $2.1 billion recommende­d by an administra­tive law judge in February. Under the terms, PG&E shareholde­rs will pay for about $1.8 billion in fire-related safety work and $114 million for corrective actions and other measures. PG&E is barred from realizing any tax benefits from operationa­l expenses related to the penalty, the commission said.

In March, PG&E agreed to plead guilty to 84 counts of involuntar­y manslaught­er in connection with the Camp fire, the deadliest wildfire in California history, which de

 ?? JOEL ANGEL JUAREZ TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? PG&E workers disassembl­e broken power lines after the Camp fire ripped through Paradise in November 2018.
JOEL ANGEL JUAREZ TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE PG&E workers disassembl­e broken power lines after the Camp fire ripped through Paradise in November 2018.

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