CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, APRIL 14, 2020 OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, APRIL 14, 2020 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“DANGEROUS PRECEDENT IN NEWSOM’S PG&E PLAN”
The
devil, goes the old saying about any complicated deal, is always in the
details. In the ultra-complicated deal between Gov. Gavin Newsom and the
bankrupt Pacific Gas & Electric Co., the potentially perilous devil may lie
in one key detail that could cost electric customers around the state many
billions of dollars over decades to come.
Newsom
bragged the agreement designed to bring the huge utility out of bankruptcy
marks “The end of business as usual for PG&E.” He said this while
preoccupied with imposing more and more rules to fight the coronavirus
pandemic, but said nothing about one tax provision that immediately duns
PG&E’s customers for $1.4 billion.
This
deal certainly could cause big changes for the felonious, twice-convicted
PG&E. There would be no dividend paid to stockholders for at least three
years, depriving share owners of $4 billion. That’s a major blow to the many
small investors who bought PG&E shares for the steady income they once
produced.
The
company will also pay about $7.6 billion at no charge to its customers to repay
or refinance utility debts. A state observer will monitor PG&E’s safety
performance. And the state can buy or break up the company if it doesn’t leave
bankruptcy by July 1, selling off the pieces if Newsom and the state Public
Utilities Commission (PUC) he greatly influences should so choose.
All
this has to be approved by the PUC before the company can escape bankruptcy.
Also, victims of the fires started at least in part by PG&E equipment will
have to vote to accept an alleged $13.5 billion settlement or federal
Bankruptcy Judge Dennis Montali says he won’t okay the deal.
The
July 1 date is vital because PG&E must be on its own by then to be covered
by the state’s new Wildfire Fund, paid for by all electric consumers in the
state. Created by a 2019 law known as AB 1054, the fund will reimburse
privately-owned utilities like PG&E, Southern California Edison and San
Diego Gas & Electric up to $20 billion for fire damage they cause starting
this year.
It’s
an unprecedented bailout for corporate wrongdoing and negligence.
But
the tax provision in the out-of-bankruptcy deal sets an equally dangerous
precedent. Under the plan, all $1.4 billion in tax benefits PG&E will get
from losses during the fires of the last few years will become part of the
funding for the victim settlement.
This
would set a pattern the always utility-friendly PUC could follow whenever
PG&E or the other utilities propose new settlements with their fire
victims, past, present and future.
For
the past 109 years since the PUC began under the Progressive Republican Gov.
Hiram Johnson, all outside financial benefits gained by any utility have gone
toward keeping electric rates down. The huge PG&E tax writeoff is just such
an outside benefit, not resulting directly from gas or electric operations.
Giving
that money to the settlement fund will raise rates for all PG&E customers,
piling atop the $2.50 per month they and other electric consumers will pay for
the next 15 years for the Wildfire Fund. Customers would pay both for that fund
and some of the settlement with victims.
Newsom
has not publicly mentioned this new cost to PG&E’s customers. If anyone
could be sure this is a one-time thing, it might not be such a big deal,
costing each customer about a buck a month for years to come. Not much if you
have money; a problem if you don’t.
But
no so-called consumer advocate except former PUC President Loretta Lynch has
complained about the provision. She rightly notes that it marks “the first time
a(n outside) revenue stream goes anywhere but to the ratepayers.”
This
provision alone ought to be reason for the PUC to reject the deal. But since
current PUC President Marybel Batjer has a history of aiding PG&E,
including helping design both the Wildfire Fund and the latest deal, that won’t
happen. This arrangement appears greased.
Which
leaves electricity users all over California at far more future financial risk
than ever before.
-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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