Times-Herald (Vallejo)

PG&E connection delays add to housing concerns

- By Ethan Varian evarian@bayareanew­sgroup. com

Add waiting for the lights to turn on to the laundry list of delays holding up urgently needed housing in California.

Newly constructe­d apartment buildings across the northern half of the state are sitting empty for months as Pacific Gas & Electric Co. drags its feet connecting them to the power grid, according to developers and housing advocates. They say they utility's increasing­ly slow pace is also driving up building costs, creating yet another challenge to solving the state's worsening housing crisis.

This month, state Sen. Scott Wiener, D-San Francisco, crafted a bill to force PG&E and other utilities to install power hookups at residentia­l and commercial constructi­on sites no more than eight weeks after projects receive the necessary permits. Otherwise, utilities would be required to pay developers to compensate for the wait.

“We want to send a strong message that the lights need to go on fast,” Wiener said at a news conference announcing the bill. “And no more delays by PG&E.”

Power connection­s historical­ly have taken about six to eight weeks. In recent years, however, it's been taking as many as 28 weeks, to get power, said the Constructi­on Employers Associatio­n, one of the labor unions behind the new bill. PG&E says its average wait time for multifamil­y projects is just over eight weeks, but acknowledg­ed there have been delays.

In a written statement, the utility acknowledg­ed the “real-world impacts that delays have on our customers” and said it is working with the constructi­on industry on improving and streamlini­ng its process and “accelerati­ng timelines” for energizing new buildings.

But passage of Wiener's bill would leave it no choice but to increase customer's utility rates, PG&E said. Customers' bills soared this winter as natural gas prices skyrockete­d.

In an interview, Wiener said PG&E officials have blamed the delays on staffing shortages and the increased resources diverted to upgrading the utility's aging equipment.

But Wiener was hardly convinced by that explanatio­n.

Like other politician­s across the state, he has taken a hard line with PG&E since its electrical lines have sparked deadly wildfires and triggered power shutoffs over the past decade.

“You can't decide we're going to become a dominant corporate goliath with a huge monopoly and then make excuses for why you can't provide service,” he said. “They need to figure it out. Period.”

Last month, 134 constructi­on-ready projects — compromisi­ng hundreds of new housing units and other types of developmen­t — had been waiting on PG&E power hookups for longer than eight weeks, according to state data compiled by Wiener's office.

Of those, 95 had been delayed for over 12 weeks.

San Francisco-based Mission Housing was one developer left waiting on PG&E to provide power to recently completed accessory dwelling units for seniors in the city.

“There are high quality, 100% affordable housing units for families and seniors sitting vacant right now because PG&E won't turn on the lights,” Sam Moss, Mission Housing's executive director, said at the news conference.

In some rural parts of the state, meanwhile, PG&E has effectivel­y paused new power hookups because of limits on transmissi­on capacity.

The utility blamed the cannabis industry in Humboldt County for boosting electricit­y demand there and overloadin­g the local grid.

 ?? JANE TYSKA — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? A PG&E worker repairs a power line Nov. 1 after a branch fell on Sunkist Drive in Oakland.
JANE TYSKA — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP A PG&E worker repairs a power line Nov. 1 after a branch fell on Sunkist Drive in Oakland.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States