CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 2016, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“HIGH TIME FOR VOTERS TO MAKE PUC ACCOUNTABLE”
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 2016, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“HIGH TIME FOR VOTERS TO MAKE PUC ACCOUNTABLE”
Travel back in time to the mid-1980s,
when California’s insurance rates for both cars and property were nearly the
highest in America and climbing fast. Back then, the state insurance commissioner,
who could have stopped much of the price acceleration, was appointed by the
governor.
Then, in 1988, a consumer group called
the Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights and its leader, attorney Harvey
Rosenfield, changed all that. The group ran the Proposition 103 ballot initiative
and turned the insurance commissioner into an elected official. Bingo! Since
then, California insurance rates have risen slower than those in any other
state, but coverage remains as good as anywhere.
The corruption and safety scandals of
the last few years demonstrate that it’s high time to regulate utility
companies in this state as firmly as insurance companies, and to make utility
regulators responsible to the public and the voters just like the elected
insurance commissioner.
For today, with California’s electric and
gas utility prices eighth highest in the nation, trailing only the inaccessible
likes of Alaska and Hawaii, plus a few northeastern states like New York and
Connecticut, utility rates are climbing as fast as insurance premiums once did.
No one can doubt anymore that Californians
are beset by flawed utility regulation which even now favors big energy
distributors over their customers. Corruption scandals come thick and fast for
the state’s Public Utilities Commission, with power over both electric and gas
rates and the safety of pipelines and power plants.
So this commission has failed abysmally,
especially in recent years when lax regulation allowed disasters like the
recent months-long methane gas leak at Porter Ranch in Los Angeles, the 2012 failure
of the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station and the fatal 2010 gas pipeline
explosion in San Bruno. In each case decided so far, consumers have had to foot
most of the bills for the shortcomings and blunders of their energy suppliers.
But Gov. Jerry Brown, who appointed
all five present utility commissioners, says not a negative word about his
appointees past for present, nor has he tried to rein them in, even after some
admitted conflicts of interest. In the last two years, about the only thing
he’s had to say about the PUC came when former commission President Michael Peevey
left office in disgrace at the end of 2014,
just after his collusion with Southern California Edison Co. on who would pay
for the San Onofre closure was proven. “At least he got things done,” Brown
observed.
Yes, and Benito Mussolini made the
trains run on time.
The PUC’s most recent pro-utility
move: It refused even to read a request from the Consumer Watchdog advocacy
group for a public investigation into the Porter Ranch gas leak, which forced a
months-long evacuation of about 4,000 families. This was a blatant violation of
the California constitution, which guarantees the right to petition public
officials.
In a sane world, all this would lead
to taking the PUC down a peg or three from its exalted position, where members
cannot be dismissed even by the governor who appointed them and their decisions
can’t be questioned in ordinary courts.
“This is as bad or worse than things
were with insurance rates,” says Rosenfield, who still often represents
Consumer Watchdog (new name of the outfit he started). “We need to make the PUC
accountable to the public and not a puppet of the governor. Commissioners need
to understand they work for consumers, not the utilities.”
Added Jamie Court, now head of
Consumer Watchdog, “I would like to recall the current commissioners, but that
can’t be done. There’s no doubt the corruption at the PUC would not exist if
commissioners were elected, or if there were just one elected commissioner.”
So Court says he would support a 2018
initiative making the state’s utility regulator(s) elected, and would run the
campaign for it “if we can raise enough money.” He says any such measure, like
Proposition 103, would also need to impose other rules to open all records to
the public and to make rate-case hearings more accessible.
With a governor unwilling to say, let
alone do, anything about the corrupt commissioners he’s appointed, the time has
arrived for voters to take things into their own hands.
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Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. Elias is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It,” now available in an updated third edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net.
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. Elias is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It,” now available in an updated third edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net.
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