CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2019, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2019, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“NEWSOM
LOOKING SCARED DURING FIRE SEASON”
At
times during this fall’s still simmering fire season, rookie Gov. Gavin Newsom
looked a little like a scared rabbit as he ping-ponged for weeks from blaze to
blaze, from Los Angeles to Santa Rosa and many points in between.
Newsom
has good political reason to be frightened. He lived through the energy crunch in
the first years of this millennium and knows how that debacle destroyed the
popularity of then-Gov. Gray Davis, even though Davis had no say about the
electricity deregulation behind the crisis.
While
allegations of corruption were the proximate cause for Davis being recalled and
thrown out of the governor’s office, there’s at least a chance that election
result would have been different if he hadn’t been so damaged by looking and
acting impotent in the face of rolling blackouts and brownouts during the
crisis.
Newsom
also is not responsible for conditions that created yet another destructive
fire season, but he does bear some responsibility for the widespread so-called
“public safety power shutoffs” (PSPS) that plagued millions of Californians as
winds blew and fires burned.
Most
blame ought to lie with a string of recent governors, including Jerry Brown,
Arnold Schwarzenegger, Davis, Pete Wilson, Ronald Reagan and Pat Brown.
They all appointed Public
Utilities Commission (PUC) majorities that stood by idly as utility companies
diverted tens of billions of dollars in maintenance fees paid monthly by
customers since the 1950s to other uses, including executive bonuses.
Meanwhile, power transmission lines and poles deteriorated for decades.
But
Newsom’s office did host a series of private meetings with officials of Pacific
Gas & Electric Co. all through the spring and early summer, attended by his
top aides and leading PG&E executives. All that while, he pushed hard
publicly for passage of AB 1054, a legislative bill that set up a new state
Wildfire Fund which will cost California electric customers more than $10
billion.
Records
from the meetings remain secret, but it’s highly likely they covered the
prospect of PSPS's and who would design and okay them.
As it
emerged, PG&E made all the decisions that blacked out millions in vast
swaths of Northern California whenever there was a threat of high, dry winds
this fall. Those decisions turned the bankrupt utility into California’s least
popular company.
Newsom knows he has mostly done the
bidding of big utilities like PG&E, which has put almost $300,000 into his
most recent campaigns.
He has
not admitted it, but urgent political need to distance himself from the
utilities may be one reason he became the most vocal critic of PG&E during
the fires, describing the blackouts as “intolerable” and “irresponsible.” He’s
adopted an idea advocated here for several years: break up PG&E and
possibly other utilities. He even parroted a suggestion made here during the
energy crunch: a state takeover of PG&E.
Acting
a little panicked, Newsom launched a $75 million program for state and local
governments to mitigate impacts of power shutoffs without saying just how the
money would be spent. He also called for PG&E – and by extension Southern
California Edison and San Diego Gas & Electric – to compensate customers
whose power was shut off.
So far,
only PG&E has agreed to any form of payments or future discounts, details
not yet specified. But the PUC members Newsom appointed early this year show no
signs of reversing a multi-billion dollar PG&E rate increase scheduled to
raise the average residential electric bill by about $9 per month in January.
So
Newsom acts like PG&E’s leading critic after the blackouts, which caused
some commentators to label California a “third-world state.”
But at
the same time, his regulatory appointees do nothing to penalize that company or
Edison, whose equipment apparently also sparked some fall fires. Not only is
the PUC allowing PG&E's rate increase to continue as if the company
deserved it, but it okayed charging customers monthly for the Wildfire Fund
without so much as a public hearing.
So
while Newsom talks like a PG&E critic, his appointees’ actions say otherwise.
This reality ought to frighten him as he ponders what befell Davis.
-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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