CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D.
ELIAS
“PG&E’S UNPRECEDENTED CHUTZPAH
PAYS OFF”
At the very moment when California’s
largest utility company was being assessed a $14 million fine for failing to
report discovery of flawed records on its gas pipelines, that same company in
2014 began asking for well over $1 billion in rate increases to pay for repairs
to the very same pipeline system.
This is Pacific Gas & Electric,
the same huge utility company – California’s largest – that in 2016 was
criminally convicted in federal court of safety violations and obstruction of
justice related to the 2010 San Bruno pipeline explosion that killed eight
persons and destroyed dozens of homes. The fine: a paltry $3 million. No
PG&E executive went to prison for the deaths and not a single firing was
mandated by federal or state authorities.
Meanwhile, PG&E kept right on
pursuing its routine every-three-years-or-so rate increases for natural gas and
electric service, asking initially for more than $4.6 billion in additional
charges to customers. The company ended up getting about $2.37 billion over
three years in the usual “kabuki dance” conducted by the state Public Utilities
Commission – this pattern sees the Big Four of PG&E, Southern California
Edison, Southern California Gas and San Diego Gas & Electric routinely ask
for huge increases, then “settle” for about half their original request, with
the PUC then bragging about how much it has saved consumers.
But PG&E regularly posts profits
approaching $1 billion a year. It’s legitimate to ask whether it should be
entitled to any rate increase when it has misbehaved as egregiously as it has
over the last eight years or more. (PG&E collected more than $60 billion in
gas pipeline maintenance funds from customers in the 60 years preceding San
Bruno, but there has never been an accounting of where that money went.)
So here’s a criminal company demanding
ever more from its customers, and the PUC simply hands it over. No one even
suggests forcing PG&E to divest any of its holdings to publicly-owned
Community Choice Aggregation power suppliers as a consequence of its repeated,
frequent bad behavior and what federal authorities called negligence.
Instead, the company’s customers pay
more than ever. The typical monthly bill has risen from about $137 at the end
of 2015 to more than $150, an increase of about 9 percent. Even when PG&E
was fined by the state last year for violating pipeline safety standards, more
than 53 percent of that money -- $850 million – was earmarked for repairs and
improvements that customers funded years ago and were supposed to have been
made long since. The company saved another
$100 million or so because its entire “fine” was tax deductible.
And yet, in an interview published
this spring, the company’s new chief executive, Geisha Williams, bragged that
PG&E’s rates are lower than the national average of about $190 per month.
Even she concedes this is not because of efficiency, but due to climate: There
are few blizzards in PG&E’s vast service territory except in
sparsely-populated mountain areas.
All of which means that even with a
new CEO and even with a new self-described emphasis on safety, PG&E still
has not deviated from its longtime goal of forcing customers to put up new cash
continually for it to bring its system up to the level of safety it should have
had all along.
As consumers pay their ever-increasing
bills – further increases are upcoming, along with shifts in the rate tiers
under which bills are figured – no one really knows just how much PG&E
actually needs to stay solvent. The same is true for the other big
privately-owned utilities.
But we do know that customers of all three major California gas
utilities have paid scores of billions of dollars in maintenance money over
many years. They have every reason for righteous indignation as they look at
the increases on their monthly bills, which add up to well over $100 yearly for
the average residential customer.
But they will get no solace from
PG&E, despite the new happy and safety-conscious face it is putting on.
Which means the audacity and the chutzpah of PG&E has paid off, bigly.
-30-
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 second
edition. His email address is tdelias@aol.com. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
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