CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, AUGUST 7, 2018, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, AUGUST 7, 2018, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“BIG UTILITIES WORK TO EVADE
RESPONSIBILITY”
Immediately after firefighters
put out the nearly 9,000 separate blazes that scorched more than 1 million
acres of California last fall and winter, homeowners began filing lawsuits
against the state’s largest electric utilities, Pacific Gas & Electric Co.
and Southern California Edison Co. Now cities like Ventura and Santa Rosa have
joined in.
The
essence of those suits is that utility equipment played a major role in
starting the wildfires, as alleged arcing and sparking flew from transmission
lines to brush that hadn’t been cleared adequately. The claims total about $19
billion against the two regional behemoths.
That’s
one reason stock in both companies has performed poorly over the last few
months.
But not
to worry too much, shareholders. Your companies have a long history of making
hay when times are bad, as when PG&E entered what some called a phony
bankruptcy during the energy crunch of the early 2000s, emerging much stronger
afterward.
Right
now, both companies are demonstrating precisely the same kind of gall (Yiddish
word: chutzpah) they have in other previous tough situations. Just last year,
at the very moment PG&E was being assessed a $14 million fine for failing
to report discovery of flawed records on its gas pipelines, that company began
asking for well over $1 billion in rate increases to pay for repairs to the
very same pipeline system. Those were the same kind of pipelines that exploded
in San Bruno in 2010, killing eight and causing large damage.
The
California Public Utilities Commission, favoring utilities over their customers
as usual, eventually gave PG&E a boost of more than $100 per year from each
average residential customer.
The PUC
also consistently gives favored treatment to Edison, as when it assessed
customers well over half the cost of shuttering the San Onofre Nuclear Generating
Station, closed in large part because of an Edison action.
That
trend continued this spring, when PUC President Michael Picker told a reporter
he attributes the massive fires largely to climate change and not to utility
negligence.
His
remark very likely sets up a future PUC ruling to let utilities recoup much of
their wildfire losses through rate increases imposed on consumers – most of
whom do not live in wildfire-prone areas, but will have to fork over anyhow
just to keep their lights on. Such increases would be authorized by a bill now
advancing through the Legislature.
This is
one clear utility goal as the companies work with similar chutzpah both in the
courts and Sacramento.
As an
example, the state Senate’s Insurance Committee has already advanced a bill
that might make it easier for homeowners to collect on their insurance policies
when utilities cause fires that destroy covered homes. This would lead to less
claims against utilities, which want to fob off part of their responsibility
onto insurance companies.
They
are also in court seeking to avoid paying gigantic sums for firestorms
allegedly spurred by their crews and equipment. California law now lets
homeowners collect from insurance companies when utility equipment causes fire
damage, even when the equipment is well maintained. The companies urgently want
that changed.
One
thing is certain: Both in court and in the Legislature, the deep pockets of the
big electric companies give them huge advantages over less well funded and
staffed consumer lawyers, many of whom won’t get paid unless they win for their
clients.
And the
companies figure to get continued favored treatment by the PUC, which will
determine how much they get in future rate increases. Picker’s climate change
remark came soon after his agency fined PG&E well over $1.6 billion for
actions connected to the San Bruno disaster and its actions before and
afterwards.
Which
means that the commission’s kabuki-like rate-making process will soon resume,
again seeing both the commissioners and the utilities act like Japanese dancers
breathlessly performing a dramatic dance – with the outcome predetermined.
The
utilities will once again ask for astronomical sums, and the commission will
cut those requests down a little. But the net effect on consumers’ wallets will
still be substantial.
So it
appears that no matter what errors or negligence the utilities may have
committed, they’ll still do fine financially, at serious expense to their
customers.
-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, go to www.californiafocus.net
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, go to www.californiafocus.net
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