CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, 2023, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“WILL PUC ALLOW ANOTHER
CONSUMER RIPOFF?”
Almost any way you look at it,
the current request by California’s largest utility company for $1.36 billion
over the next three years in subsides for its wildfire prevention program can
only be described as yet another attempt to rip off its 16 million customers.
It will be up to the
five-member California Public Utilities Commission (PUC) to decide whether the
company gets away with this latest attempt at highway robbery.
Plus, it’s a virtual certainty
that if PG&E gets the money it now seeks, the state’s other big
privately-owned electric companies – Southern California Edison and San Diego
Gas & Electric – will shortly beg for a similar handout.
These
companies, are never bashful about asking for handouts. This was evident when
Edison tried to get consumers to foot almost the entire bill of about $5
billion for shutting down its disabled San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station,
destroyed in 2012 by a company blunder.
Also when
the utilities in 2020 gladly accepted a $13 billion state-mandated subsidy from
their customers to pay for damages from future wildfires they might cause. And
now, as PG&E gladly takes more than $2.5 billion from consumers and federal
taxpayer subsidies to keep its Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant open five
years beyond the previous retirement date.
What
makes the newest PG&E request for a big consumer subsidy (an average of
about $7.50 per month per customer for the next three years) especially
outrageous is that the big utilities collected maintenance money from their customers
every month between 1955 and 2005, a total of about $65 billion over 50 years.
Most of
that money was never used for maintenance. Rather, it went to executive
bonuses, salary increases and other goodies until the PUC finally stopped the
practice.
But none
of the state’s three large private electric companies was ever fined for misuse
of this money, nor were any executives punished, or any funds repaid.
Meanwhile,
vegetation near power lines grew nearly unchecked for decades, trees began encroaching
on those same lines and both gas pipes and power lines deteriorated, mostly
without being replaced or repaired. Bingo: major fires and a huge explosion
resulted.
That was
one reason PG&E was convicted of criminal negligence after its massive 30-inch-wide
gas pipeline beneath the suburb of San Bruno exploded, causing multiple deaths
and extensive damage. Negligence was also likely one reason for the
unprecented, almost four-month natural gas leak from Southern California Gas
Co.’s Aliso Canyon storage facility just above the Porter Ranch subdivision in
the San Fernando Valley section of Los Angeles in 2015 and 2016. Not to mention
the 2018 incineration of Paradise and dozens of its people.
No
executive has ever been criminally punished for misuse of the maintenance
money, despite these consequences and many more.
Even now,
utility company maintenance is demonstrably inadequate. For example, an
independent safety monitor overseeing recent PG&E anti-wildfire work found
the company during one recent three-month period missed issues like damaged
poles in about 30 percent of all inspections.
For sure,
this type of history and performance demonstrates that utility companies, their
executives and shareholders – not customers who have no voice in corporate
policy – should pay for current maintenance work and repairs.
Yet, the
PUC, long a utility company lapdog, appears likely to give the consumer subsidy
at least temporary approval this winter, with refunds possible if a more
thorough consideration set to follow should cause the charge to be disapproved.
That’s a
procedure playing into PG&E’s hands. For once it has money in hand, it’s
very rare for customers to get it back.
Far
better would be for the commission instead to have PG&E use some of the
maintenance money it collected over those previous decades. And if some statute
of limitations on punishment for earlier misuse of funds has expired (the PUC’s
code requires only “prompt” hearings on suspected wrongdoing), then the PUC
ought at least to force PG&E to advance whatever money is needed for the
anti-wildfire work while it considers whether to reduce or fully disapprove the
subsidy PG&E now seeks.
But this
would require the commission to give consumers equal treatment with the big
corporations it supervises. And that would be almost unprecedented.
-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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