CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, APRIL 6, 2021, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“UTILITY CUSTOMERS AT LAST GETTING
DAY IN COURT”
The utility bailout plan known as AB 1054 has looked worse
and worse for consumers since California legislators passed it in July 2019
under pressure from Gov. Gavin Newsom and lobbyists for Pacific Gas &
Electric Co., Southern California Edison and San Diego Gas & Electric.
The typical residential electric customer has paid for more
than a year toward an eventual total of $13.5 billion to be used for
reimbursement of costs when utility company equipment sparks fires, something
common over the last five years.
Consumer lawyer Mike Aguirre, the former elected city
attorney of San Diego, from the start fought this shift of responsibility for
illegal conduct by the utilities. But legislators never held hearings on the
bill, concocted by an ad hoc committee that included Marybel Batyer, then a
Newsom aide and now president of the state Public Utilities Commission.
How surprising was it that the PUC with Batyer presiding followed
by quickly rubber-stamping this years-long dunning of the vast majority of California
electric customers?
Aguirre protested SB 1054 at every step. He insisted it
amounts to “unconstitutional taking” of consumers’ money. A federal district
judge refused to hold a trial on Aguirre’s constitutional arguments, claiming
alleged lack of jurisdiction over state laws.
But the customers’ day in court arrives at last on April 12,
when the appeal from that judge’s ruling is due for a hearing before the
federal Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. The wheels of justice have ground
slowly: it’s taken almost two years since the law’s passage for the case against
it to get its first courtroom airing.
That case seems strong. For one thing, there is no doubt the
utility companies desperately wanted this bailout to pass. For it to take
effect, they had to pony up $10 billion to help bankroll the new state new
Wildfire Fund created by the law. They do not casually put up that kind of cash,
but this time found it necessary: Without the Wildfire Fund, the criminally
convicted PG&E could not have emerged from a long bankruptcy it underwent
after causing deadly fires in 2017, 2018 and 2019.
Questions arose at that time over whether PG&E deserved
to survive, especially after it pled guilty to manslaughter in the 2018 Camp
Fire that destroyed the town of Paradise and killed at least 85 persons.
Says Aguirre in his appeal brief, “Instead of reforming its
safety practices, PG&E sought a legislative reprieve. After receiving
millions of dollars in campaign…donations, legislators and even California’s
governor aligned themselves with the company.”
He goes on to detail secret meetings between PG&E and top
Newsom aides, including Batyer “to determine how to ensure PG&E’s
customers, not its shareholders, would pay for PG&E-caused fire damages.”
Aguirre calls those Newsom’s aides “compromised.” He adds
that AB 1054’s “true purpose” is not to ensure good electric service, but
rather “to promote utility company finances.”
In fact, since it passed, there has been no talk of further
utility company bankruptcies, a common subject every fire season for several
previous years.
Aguirre argues that Newsom and his allies “pledged customer
funds…even though utility companies acted unreasonably and imprudently in
causing fires over decades.” He charges that the PUC under Batyer “held a sham
proceeding in which the process was illusory and the decision (to ratify AB
1054) was predetermined.”
Batyer has refused to answer questions about any of this.
Aguirre notes that rather than reforming their practices,
utilities have “caused more fires and killed more people – all while (PG&E
was) on federal probation for the 2010 San Bruno gas explosion that killed
eight persons.”
For sure, AB 1054 amounts to a show of trust for utility
companies that by their own admission behaved irresponsibly for many years. The
district judge’s refusal to hear the case has so far meant no one could cross
examine Newsom or other drafters of the bill about their motives.
One favorable outcome for consumers would be for the appeals
court to throw the case back to the district judge for a full trial.
Another would be for the bill to simply be ruled
unconstitutional. Once the appeals court hears the arguments, it will have to
say something.
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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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