CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2020, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“SECRET MEETINGS NEXT BIG SCANDAL FOR STATE PUC?”
It doesn’t seem to matter who the commissioners are or
which governor appoints them, constant scandal seems to dog this state’s Public
Utilities Commission.
Despite a criminal investigation that revealed proof of a
secret rate-fixing deal between former PUC President Michael Peevey and
executives of Southern California Edison Co., nothing came of that scandal
except Peevey’s quiet departure when his term ended. Peevey was an appointee of
ex-Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger.
When the PUC’s failure under Jerry Brown appointee Michael
Picker to enforce maintenance rules on Pacific Gas & Electric Co. led to
the Camp Fire and 85 deaths, state legislators nevertheless gave the PUC
authority for supervising the huge utility’s new fire safety program.
And on and on.
So it’s unlikely much will happen to current PUC President
Marybel Batjer, who helped craft a $13.5 billion electric company wildfire bailout
for which customers now pay monthly, over her commission’s latest potential
scandal. Batjer worked for Gov. Gavin Newsom when she helped craft that
corporate rescue; Newsom then made her the commission’s boss.
Commissioners including the agency president get six-year
staggered terms and cannot be fired even by the governor who appointed them.
The PUC now features two Newsom appointees and three Brown leftovers.
Now Batjer, in her second year, stands accused in court
filings and letters of conducting secret commission meetings and of first suspending
and then firing her agency’s executive director, Alice Stebbins, as payback for
Stebbins’ reporting that the PUC has not collected about $200 million in fees
and fines the agency assessed. Batjer says Stebbins was fired over a hiring
matter.
The fees and fines, owed by a variety of utilities, can
sometimes be important political and public relations tools, especially when
imposed as penalties for corporate malfeasance. The PUC invariably reaps
positive publicity when it trumpets penalties, but it allegedly fails to collect
some of them.
That money could be important for an agency which has often
said it can’t enforce all its rules because it has insufficient personnel.
Imagine how many inspectors could be hired with 200 million extra dollars.
No one knows just what decisions have lately been made in
the secret meetings alleged in a filing from consumer attorney Michael Aguirre,
a former elected city attorney of San Diego. The commission legally must
provide public summaries of any closed meetings, but Aguirre’s brief cites a spreadsheet
listing “a staggering number of closed meetings of the commission in the past
three years, most of them on matters which do not justify closed sessions.”
Another report alleges that in Batjer’s first 13 months as
PUC president, she held more than 21 closed meetings, with specific dates
listed.
The Aguirre brief, filed with the state’s First District
Court of Appeals – the main court where reviews of PUC decisions are possible –
charges “the utilities and their supposed regulator, the PUC, systematically
engage in secret government decision-making…”
That description is consistent with evidence gathered in
the Peevey-era investigation into how SoCal Edison customers were dunned for
the Edison-caused 2012 failure of the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station. A
search warrant led to discovery in Peevey’s home of a napkin from a Warsaw
hotel where he met Edison executives during an international conference. Handwritten
on the napkin were the terms of the assessment later charged to electric
customers.
Says the Aguirre brief, “There is a profound public
interest in the PUC keeping meetings open to the public as required by (law).
Under the PUC, the combined revenue authorized to be taken from utility
customers is almost $30 billion (per year)…”
Aguirre asserts the commission is illegally holding closed
sessions without reporting actions agreed to there. Essentially, he’s saying no
one knows how much less customers might pay for power, natural gas and water if
all PUC decisions were made in public, as they’re supposed to be.
Which means almost all Californians have a major stake in
the outcome of this case and the eventual fate of the gutsy Stebbins, who
raised the alarm in a remarkable case akin to a corporate general manager
blowing the whistle on the very CEO who hired her.
-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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