Published
4 years agoon
SAN FRANCISCO — Pacific Gas & Electric Corp.’s top financial executives said during a bankruptcy meeting Monday they still haven’t determined when the utility can start compensating victims of recent wildfires started by the utility’s equipment.
Victims’ lawyers questioned PG&E executives during the meeting in San Francisco between the utility in bankruptcy court and its creditors.
The victims’ lawyers wanted to know when the utility would file its plan to emerge from bankruptcy and pay the billions of dollars in claims pending against it. PG&E filed for bankruptcy in January, saying it faced at least $13 billion in legal claims from wildfire victims.
Wells said PG&E needs lawmakers to lessen the utility’s wildfire liability to attract investors and financing to help pay the pending claims. California requires utilities to pay for wildfire damages if their equipment is the cause even if the companies acted responsibly and took proper care of their equipment.
“It’s frustrating,” victims’ attorney Jerry Singleton said of waiting for PG&E’s plan. Singleton represented hundreds of wine country residents who lost their homes in an October 2017 wildfire. State fire officials say a homeowner’s private electrical system caused that fire, not PG&E. Nevertheless, Singleton and several other attorneys intend to argue in court that the state fire officials were wrong and PG&E is to blame.
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