The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Utility: Weather didn’t warrant power shut-off as fire raged

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Flames already were tearing through a Northern California town earlier this month when Pacific Gas & Electric Co. made the decision that improved weather conditions meant it wouldn’t have to shut off power to the area as a precaution against wildfires, according to documents filed by the utility.

PG&E explained its decision not to follow through on warnings that it might shut off power in a filing late Tuesday with the state Public Utilities Commission.

It came as PG&E faces lawsuits regarding the cause of the fire that killed at least 88 people and destroyed 13,000 homes in the Paradise area.

PG&E has previously reported a power outage occurred on one of its transmissi­on lines around the time the fire began, at 6:30 a.m. on Nov. 8. It also has said a transmissi­on line malfunctio­ned a short time after the fire sparked, another possible source being investigat­ed by officials.

Two days earlier, the utility had warned roughly 70,000 customers across nine counties that it might shut off power due to fire risks from high winds and low humidity.

By 1 p.m. Nov. 8, the utility determined weather conditions no longer warranted a potential shut-off, according to the Tuesday filing .

The decision came even though a National Weather Service red flag warning remained in effect for Northern California involving “extreme fire conditions” from wind gusts up to 55 mph and low humidity.

The fast-moving fire already had destroyed parts of Paradise and surroundin­g towns.

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