The Mercury News

State lawmakers eye back-up power for cellphone towers

Bill would require 72 hours of reserve in high-risk areas

- By Adam Bean

SACRAMENTO >> When the nation’s largest electric utility preemptive­ly shut off power last fall to prevent wildfires in California, customers lost more than just their lights — some lost their phones, too.

Data from the Federal Communicat­ions Commission shows 874 cellphone towers were offline during an Oct. 27 power shutoff that affected millions of people. That included more than half of the cell towers in Marin County alone.

On Wednesday, some Democratic lawmakers revealed legislatio­n to force telecommun­ication companies to have at least 72 hours of back-up power for all cellphone towers in high-risk fire areas. Telecom companies would have to pay for it, but the bill would not stop companies from passing along those costs to their customers.

The outages affected more than just cellphones. Data shows traditiona­l landlines and cable phone customers also lost service during the blackout. That means some people couldn’t call 911 or receive emergency notificati­ons, compoundin­g the dangers associated with an unpreceden­ted power outage in an era dominated by the internet and wireless communicat­ions.

“This bill is not about checking your Facebook status,” bill author Sen. Mike

McGuire said. “It’s about life and death.”

The federal government tried to mandate backup power for cellphone towers in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in 2005. The industry successful­ly fought it.

“It is unfair and unreasonab­le for the Legislatur­e and the (state regulators) to allow the electric utilities

to de-energize their networks and expect that the communicat­ions network is going to become a wholesale replacemen­t for power,” said Carolyn McIntyre, president of the California Cable and Telecommun­ications Associatio­n.

Asked if he expects a fight from the industry, McGuire replied: “Hell yes.”

McGuire announced his bill on the same day representa­tives from AT&T and Verizon testified before state lawmakers about

the outages and ways to prevent them. It’s the second time lawmakers have hauled in private companies to account for the effects surroundin­g the widespread blackouts in the fall, the largest planned power outages in state history.

In November, lawmakers questioned executives from the state’s largest investorow­ned utilities, including the leadership of troubled Pacific Gas & Electric, whose equipment has been blamed for sparking the

2018 that killed 85 people in Paradise and destroyed roughly 19,000 buildings. The company filed for bankruptcy last year.

Telecommun­ications outages have worsened as wildfires have become more common and more destructiv­e. A report from the California Public Utilities Commission found 85,000 wireless customers and 160,000 wired customers lost service during the 2017 North Bay Fires.

Most recently, the FCC says up to 27% of Sonoma

County’s wireless cell sites were offline during a fire in October.

In advance comments to the legislativ­e committee, California’s four largest wireless companies — AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile and Verizon — say they generally make sure their major telecommun­ication hubs have at least between 48 hours and 72 hours of onsite backup power. They use mobile generators at other sites, but they said the generators don’t work at every cell tower.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES ?? California’s preemptive power shutoffs to prevent wildfires, such as the one in Santa Paula last year, have affected more than just lights. Some also lost power on their phones.
ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES California’s preemptive power shutoffs to prevent wildfires, such as the one in Santa Paula last year, have affected more than just lights. Some also lost power on their phones.

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