CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JULY 9, 2019, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JULY 9, 2019, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“FIRES
GIVING UTILITIES VAST NEW POWERS”
From
the ashes of last year’s huge fires in Butte, Shasta, Lake and Los Angeles
counties, this state’s utilities have suddenly acquired vast new powers to
control and influence the lives of millions of Californians.
The new
reality is that no one living near a potential fire area – and that includes
wide swaths of this state – now can be sure when the lights will go off and
come back on.
It’s
all because California’s big utility companies have accepted blame for
contributing to the start of several multi-billion-dollar fires and want no
part of anything similar in the future. So anytime they deem wind and weather
sufficiently threatening, they’re shutting down power to prevent arcing and
sparking on their lines, whether or not they’ve been maintained.
This
would be fine if standards existed for what constitutes fire danger from power
lines, which helped start and spread fires from San Diego to Paradise, from
Simi Valley to the Sierra Nevada in 2017 and 2018. There are no such standards.
So when
Pacific Gas & Electric Co. announced it would undertake the year’s first
power shutdown in early June because of possible record-setting temperatures
and high winds in Napa, Solano and Yolo counties, anyone without immediate
access to newspapers and electronic media had no way to know their lights, TVs
and appliances would go dead for an unpredictable time.
That
exercise, also affecting parts of Butte and Yuba counties, affected “only”
about 21,000 electricity customers. No one knows how many had electric-powered
oxygen supplies, CPAPs for sleep apnea or other medical devices. No one knows
how many had independent power supplies, whether solar or from generators. But
a lot of people and businesses were suddenly imperiled.
PG&E
figured fire risks outweighed all others. “The safety of our customers and the
communities we serve is our most important responsibility,” said one company
vice president. Too bad PG&E hadn’t realized that before last year’s
Paradise Fire, or before the Wine County fires of 2017, both admittedly at
least partly the products of corporate negligence.
One
thing for sure: Before this year’s just-opened fire season is over, PG&E,
Southern California Edison and San Diego Gas & Electric (along with several
municipal utilities) will be doing the same kind of thing to many, many more
people, with the same kind of notice under the same whimsical standard.
The
lack of predictability here is the problem. Certain temperatures, wind
directions and speeds must soon be written into firm standards for when
deliberate power cutoffs can occur. Given sufficient notice via printed inserts
in electricity bills, customers could know what to expect and when. Now they
don’t. Which leaves some folks as vulnerable to power company judgments as they
are to actual fires.
It also
puts great power in the hands of power companies that have repeatedly proven
themselves irresponsible.
The
real question here is why state regulators, principally the Public Utilities
Commission – now many months after the last big wave of fires – still have not yet developed firm guidelines
for utilities to live by.
This
leaves many customers vulnerable to chancy, unreliable weather forecasts and
the will of utility executives.
Last
fall, when PG&E staged its first modern-era fire-prevention power cutoff,
one reader near Nevada City called the move “blatant terrorism,” which was
exacerbated when winds in the area turned out never to exceed a paltry 7 mph.
He called it a form of blackmail, designed to accustom consumers to accepting
the will of the utility.
The PUC
already allows utilities to dun customers steadily for maintenance: they took
in more than $6 billion in such funding over the last four decades without
accounting for most of it. The new charges are for tree-cutting (often done
against the will of tree owners) and other long-neglected fire prevention
tactics.
So far,
it’s all random, chancy stuff. Utilities and the public need rules for the
companies to live by, giving millions of Californians some ability to predict
when their power will be turned off, just in case they can’t or don’t want to
read or listen to the news 24 hours a day.
-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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