CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“HIGH TIME FOR PUC TO FIX ITS SAN ONOFRE ‘SETTLEMENT’”
The
California Public Utilities Commission now says it wants closure on its most
contentious, most questionable decision of the last few decades.
This
comes more than four years after a clandestine meeting between the commission’s
then-president Michael Peevey and officials of the Southern California Edison
Co. set parameters for “settling” the division of costs for shutting down the
San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station, on the coast near the Orange-San Diego
county line.
The
so-called settlement among the PUC, Edison, San Onofre part-owner San Diego Gas
& Electric and a so-called consumer group called The Utility Reform Network
(TURN) saddled electricity customers with about 70 per cent of the expense of
the 2012 shutdown, caused by an Edison blunder. That came to $3.3 billion out of
the $4.7 billion total cost.
Edison
tried to recoup some costs of the shutdown by suing the maker of the failed
steam generator that caused the problem, Japan’s Mitsubishi Heavy Industries
for hundreds of millions. But the utility won only a fraction of what it
sought. So a promise in the San Onofre settlement giving half the lawsuit
proceeds to consumers became essentially meaningless.
Even
before that court decision, the commission in May 2016 conceded there may have
been something fishy about the decision spurred by that secret meeting, which
violated even the PUC’s own loose rules.
It’s
taken since then for the commission to schedule a new set of public hearings –
the first ever in the case – at which consumers and others can speak out about
the possibly illegal settlement, which came before any hearings on the issue
could be held.
“This
matter is long overdue for resolution,” wrote current PUC President Michael
Picker and PUC Judge Darcie Houck in the order setting up the hearings.
You
don’t say, Mr. Picker. Picker, then merely one of the five commission members,
voted for the settlement, never saying whether he knew of the irregular meeting
between Edison and Peevey, not coincidentally a former Edison president. He’s
refused ever since to divulge why he voted yes.
Now
ordinary citizens can at last speak out. Between now and the end of January,
opinions and new information can be sent to the PUC public advisor at 505 Van
Ness St., San Francisco, CA 94102. Public hearings start in Los Angeles in
February, with more the next month in San Diego. A supposedly final PUC
decision will come later.
Clearly,
the commission wants this stain on its record to fade away at last, after it
has inflamed public opinion about the agency for years. At the same time,
Edison and SDG&E will fight to keep the settlement as is.
The
PUC also wants closure on the related criminal investigation that’s been
hanging over it since subpoenas and search warrants were issued and carried out
against it and Peevey in early 2014 because of their actions in this case.
The
investigation began under former Attorney General Kamala Harris, now a U.S.
senator, and may have continued under her appointed successor Xavier Becerra.
Becerra’s office has refused to answer questions from this column and others
about the investigation, not even indicating whether it is still ongoing.
“The
Attorney General’s office has sent mixed signals concerning the status of its
investigation,” griped PUC lawyer Pamela Naughton in a court filing.
Naughton
is among the private criminal lawyers hired by the PUC at public expense of
more than $10 million because it was up against the attorney general, who
normally represents the commission. Neither the PUC nor anyone else has ever
cited any law allowing the PUC to hire private lawyers with public money to
defend actions by individual commissioners or staffers. This may be another PUC
scandal waiting to break.
But
Naughton, no matter the legality of her retainer, is correct that the public
deserves to know whether there is still an investigation. After all, no one has
yet been punished, even though the sometimes comedic PUC did absurdly fine Edison
$16 million in 2015 for not reporting meetings with the commission’s own
members.
The
bottom line: Closure is long overdue on San Onofre, but not at the expense of
whitewashing any part of this plainly unjust use of public authority and funds.
-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 third edition. His email address is tdelias@aol.com
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