CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2020, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“WHAT PROPER UTILITY MAINTENANCE COULD HAVE PREVENTED”
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2020, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“WHAT PROPER UTILITY MAINTENANCE COULD HAVE PREVENTED”
Back in
the good old pre-2017 days when many Californians paid little or no attention
to the approximately dollar-a-month maintenance charge on their electric bills,
most customers figured their money was being spent to assure reliable power.
Actually,
much of the maintenance money collected over six decades by big utilities like
Pacific Gas & Electric Co., Southern California Edison and San Diego Gas
& Electric was instead going to executive bonuses and other items never
authorized by state regulators.
That
happened, said the California Public Utilities Commission at the time, because
it had too little manpower to fully inspect the books of those companies, let
along examine their thousands of miles of overhead wires.
Things
changed after the spate of massive wildfires that began in the fall of 2017,
when state inspectors began fingering utility company lines as the ignition
points of more and more blazes. Much of that would likely not have happened if
maintenance money had been spent properly.
Now,
with PG&E in bankruptcy court and Edison only one or two wildfires away
from a similar fate, comes a remarkable report indicating more than anything
before just how much the maintenance money paid by consumers could have
accomplished if it had been property spent.
That
document came from the felonious PG&E, answering questions from U.S.
District Judge William Alsup on its equipment inspections before and during the
multiple “public safety power shutoffs” (PSPS) the big company inflicted on
millions of customers last fall.
Meanwhile,
state legislators on Feb. 19 will consider for the first time investigating
whether the PUC is capable of regulating the utilities’ safety efforts.
“Government incompetence is part of the story,” said Democratic Assemblyman
Adam Gray of Merced.
PG&E, America’s largest
privately-owned utility, intentionally cut off power three times in October
alone when it became concerned that dry and windy conditions might combine with
its flawed equipment to start even more fires. Sure enough, there are strong
indications that despite even those blackouts, a PG&E transmission tower
may have started the massive Kincade Fire in the North Bay region.
On that
revealing PG&E report: Company inspectors found at least 218
maintenance-related problems that could have started fires if equipment
involved had been live at the times of the risky conditions spurring shutoffs.
There were cases of rusted bolts that could have snapped in high winds and many
cases of likely vegetation damage, to name only two.
These
items amount to an admission that even during the worst crisis in its history,
PG&E could not maintain its equipment safely. They also raise major
questions that Alsup – supervising probation of PG&E after its negligence
conviction for damages during the San Bruno gas pipeline disaster of 2010 –
should be asking.
One is
whether proper use of maintenance money that was misspent in the past could
have prevented any of the recent major fires. Another is the matter of who
authorized misuse of that money and what penalties should be assessed against
them. So far, no person has suffered any criminal penalty for any utility
action, not even for PG&E’s role in the deaths of at least eight persons in
San Bruno.
A third
question is whether other California utilities similarly neglected their own
maintenance responsibilities. For sure, Edison equipment likely played major
roles in several big fires that have caused almost as much damage as those at
least partly inflicted by PG&E gear. And what about SDG&E, which
originated the PSPS practice in 2018 to prevent more corporate financial
disasters like the hundreds of millions of dollars in damages it was assessed
after the 2007 Witch Fire in the suburbs of San Diego?
All
these questions must be resolved before the fate of PG&E can possibly be
decided fairly in bankruptcy court, where proposed plans for the company’s
future range from Wall Street or government bailouts to breaking off and
selling portions of the company to simply making it and all the other investor
owned utilities in the state into a single large state-owned firm.
If the
outcome is fair to both customers and shareholders, the PG&E equipment
report might emerge as a historic document reshaping and making safer future
energy supplies in all of California.
-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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