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By Associated Press
Published 5 years ago on
January 23, 2020

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SACRAMENTO — Californians left in the dark by electric companies that shut off their power to prevent wildfires could get paid for things like lost wages or spoiled food under a bill being considered in the state Legislature.
In a state plagued by catastrophic blazes started by strong winds knocking down power lines, large investor-owned utilities in California have been aggressively shutting off power for millions of customers ahead of windstorms to stop wildfires before they start.

The blackouts caused major disruptions throughout the region, closing schools and businesses and making it more difficult for people who rely on medical devices powered by electricity.
Utility companies do this for public safety, but they also do it to protect their bottom line. Pacific Gas & Electric Co., the nation’s largest electric utility, filed for bankruptcy last year after facing an estimated $30 billion in damages from a 2018 northern California wildfire that was sparked by its equipment and destroyed 19,000 buildings.
The largest blackouts hit last fall, when PG&E shut off power for more than 2 million customers in October. The blackouts caused major disruptions throughout the region, closing schools and businesses and making it more difficult for people who rely on medical devices powered by electricity.
State Sen. Scott Wiener, a Democrat from San Francisco, says the liability acts as a financial incentive for electric companies to err on the side of large blackouts covering more people for longer periods of time. Wiener said he designed his bill to act as an incentive for utility companies to have smaller, more targeted blackouts.
The bill would require investor-owned utilities to reimburse customers and local governments for some costs associated with the blackouts. It would require an electric company’s shareholders — not its customers — put money into a fund to reimburse customers within two weeks of a blackout. It would also ban electric companies from raising rates to cover losses from a blackout.
The California Public Utilities Commission would oversee the fund and decide how big it should be. It would also let the commission fine power companies up to $250,000 per hour for every 50,000 customers impacted by a power shutoff if regulators determine the utility “failed to act in a reasonable and prudent manner.”
Photo of Carlos Lama using an LED lamp and his phone in his restaurant
Carlos Lama of Bayside Cafe, which was among businesses to lose power due to PG&E’s public safety power shutoff, uses an LED lamp and light from his phone at the counter of the restaurant in Sausalito, Calif., Wednesday, Oct. 9, 2019. More than a million people in California were without electricity Wednesday as the state’s largest utility pulled the plug to prevent a repeat of the past two years when windblown power lines sparked deadly wildfires that destroyed thousands of homes. (Alan Dep/Marin Independent Journal via AP)

The Bill Must Pass the State Senate by Jan. 31 to Have a Chance at Becoming Law

If those penalties had been in effect last fall, PG&E could have faced fines of more than $1 billion, according to a legislative analysis of the proposal.
“It’s about giving utilities an incentive to use planned blackouts as a scalpel and not as a sledgehammer,” Wiener said.

“Those costs are real. For a lot of people, if you lose your refrigerator contents, that’s your food for the month.” — Sen. Scott Wiener 
But others worry the bill would spook electric companies into being too cautious with planned blackouts, thus increasing the risk for deadly wildfires.
“I believe it gives perverse incentives that could harm people,” said state Sen. Bill Dodd, a Democrat from Napa.
The bill must pass the state Senate by Jan. 31 to have a chance at becoming law this year. But first, it would have to pass the Senate Appropriations Committee on Thursday.
In a letter to committee members on Wednesday, PG&E Chief of State Government Relations DaVina Flemings said the company proactively turns off power “for one reason only and that is keeping customers and communities safe.”
However, Flemings said the bill “would put customers and communities in a very dangerous position by penalizing the utilities for deploying a public safety power shutoff.”
Wiener said the bill will not ban planned blackouts, saying “they can save lives and property.” Instead, he said it is to “incentivize the right behavior.”
“Those costs are real,” Wiener said. “For a lot of people, if you lose your refrigerator contents, that’s your food for the month.”

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