CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
EDITORS: TO ENSURE TIMELINESS, DISREGARD EMBARGO DATE
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“ANOTHER BIG UTILITY UNDER SUSPICION IN FIRE DISASTERS”
“ANOTHER BIG UTILITY UNDER SUSPICION IN FIRE DISASTERS”
As
disastrous and deadly wildfires raged through once-lovely residential areas in the
Wine Country and other Northern California points this fall, there were signs
that the aftermath could play out similarly to a scene that began almost
exactly 10 years earlier in Southern California.
Loud
claims were heard this time that negligent maintenance of power lines and
poles, together with insufficient brush cutting near them by Pacific Gas &
Electric Co., were among reasons for the fast spread of those flames, which
consumed well over 8,000 homes and buildings and took several dozen lives.
If
that’s ever proven, one state senator demanded, PG&E should be broken up.
Said Democrat Jerry Hill of San Mateo, a persistent thorn in utilities’ sides,
“If we find that in this particular case – and we don’t know the cause yet –
then frankly I don’t think PG&E should do business in California any more,”
he said. “They’ve crossed the line too many times,” he added, referring to the
company’s federal negligence conviction in the multi-fatal 2010 San Bruno gas
pipeline explosion. “They would need to be dissolved in some way, split.”
Suspicions
against PG&E result in part from what happened in October 2007, when winds
up to 100 mph whipped arcing power lines owned by San Diego Gas & Electric
Co., eventually starting a small fire near Ramona, in eastern San Diego County.
Known as the Witch Creek Fire, this blaze grew exponentially and reached the
San Diego city limits. It combined with two other fires, and burned down whole
neighborhoods. More than 1,125 residences were destroyed as at least 197,000
acres burned in some of California’s highest-priced neighborhoods.
Like
this fall, evacuations were ordered over the almost three weeks those fires burned
in cities like Oceanside and Encinitas, Del Mar Heights and Carmel Valley,
Rancho Santa Fe and the heavily afflicted Rancho Bernardo. The evacuations
eventually involved about half a million persons, still the largest ever in
this state.
But
nothing untoward happened to SDG&E afterward. In fact, the state Public
Utilities Commission right now is evaluating a rate case that could have
consumers pay 90 percent of the utility’s $379 million in fire-related costs.
The PUC’s long history of favoring utilities over consumers suggests the
company will get at least a good part of what it’s asking.
Like
PG&E, the San Diego company is obliged to serve fire-prone areas, so it
says having customers pay 90 percent of its costs is consistent with past
PUC rulings involving hazardous wastes
and other problems.
If
PG&E’s equipment is eventually found to be a proximate cause for this
year’s hugely destructive fires, don’t bet on it being punished any more
heavily than it was over San Bruno, even if there proves to be truth to
allegations that PG&E has helped stall a PUC effort to map where power
lines pose the greatest wildfire risks.
One
newspaper’s review of documents from that mapping project showed utilities have
repeatedly asked to slow down the effort, saying some proposed regulations
would “add unnecessary costs to construction and maintenance projects in rural
areas.”
“The sad part,” Hill told one reporter, “is
the (maps) didn’t arrive before these fires…It’s an outrageous example of
negligence by a regulatory agency.”
For
sure, with knowledge from the Witch Creek Fire long in hand, there should have
been no delays in mapping utility line danger points all around California and
forcing power companies to mitigate them. But that didn’t happen, and the
strict new regulations likely to follow completion of the maps do not yet
exist.
Meanwhile,
PG&E officials weren’t saying much about these issues, instead insisting
they’ve focused on restoring power to the hundreds of thousands of residents who
lost electricity and natural gas service during the Northern California
firestorms.
The
bottom line is that the PUC will most likely be exposed again as lax in its
regulation of major utilities in this state. It’s probably too late in Gov. Jerry
Brown’s administration to expect him to suddenly start pressuring the
commission to change course. But the next governor, to be elected in just under
one year, should push major reforms, possibly even press to make PUC members
elected officials and not political appointees.
-30-
Email
Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough,
The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch
It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias
columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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