Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility

US Strikes Destroyed Only One of Three Iranian Nuclear Sites, NBC News Reports

4 hours ago

US Seeks One-Day Sentence for Police Officer Convicted in Breonna Taylor Case

4 hours ago

US House Poised to Send Stablecoin Bill to Trump After ‘Crypto Week’ Drama

5 hours ago

Manhattan Prosecutor Who Handled Epstein Cases Is Fired

6 hours ago

Why California Ag Is at Odds Over Converting Land to Solar Farms

6 hours ago

7.3 Magnitude Earthquake Strikes Off Alaska Coast. No Danger to California

22 hours ago

Federal Immigration Crackdown Threatens California’s Historic Housing Reforms

1 day ago
Walters: Another Dicey Utility Overhaul
dan_walters
By Dan Walters, CalMatters Commentary
Published 6 years ago on
July 11, 2019

Share

Californians should always be skeptical when their politicians overhaul the state’s electrical utility system while promising more efficient, less polluting, and reasonably priced service.


Dan Walters
CALmatters

Californians get their juice from a mélange of “investor-owned” and municipally operated utilities. Inevitably, micromanagement of such a complex system via legislation and regulatory agencies becomes an exercise in political horsetrading.
To reach a conclusion, politicians need consensus among special interest “stakeholders” and to get to that point, each must get something tangible. The resulting mish-mash thus becomes politically feasible, but may not result in any net benefit to the larger ratepaying public.
The classic example of the genre is the 1996 utility “deregulation” legislation that promised something for everyone but soon resulted in blatant manipulation by some energy producers, the bankruptcy of one major utility (Pacific Gas & Electric), the near-insolvency of others, and – inevitably – higher consumer bills.
Later decrees on shifting power to “renewable” sources such as wind and solar, and an abortive effort to fold California’s electric grid into a Western regional entity continued the string of political meddling – all with the best of intentions, we were assured. But the net result has been that Californians pay the nation’s highest, or nearly highest, rates for their electrical power – a major component in the state’s very high cost of living.

Here We Are Again

So here we are again.
PG&E is once again bankrupt, this time because of $30 billion in claims for damages from horrendous wildfires that its downed electric lines appear to have caused. Bankers are threatening to downgrade all California utilities’ credit ratings, and shareholders, particularly large hedge funds, are clamoring for financial relief.
For the state’s new governor, Gavin Newsom, it’s a crisis reminiscent of what happened when PG&E went bankrupt the first time during Gov. Gray Davis’ first term.
Davis mishandled that 2001 crisis and it contributed to his recall by voters two years later, a reminder of the high political stakes.
However Newsom, unlike Davis, didn’t freeze. He promised to deal with the twin problems of utility solvency and wildfire safety and the result is legislation that once again overhauls utility operations.
To bolster utilities’ solvency, Assembly Bill 1054 makes a huge change in their liability for wildfire damages under the doctrine of “inverse condemnation.”
If utilities have proven that they are operating as safely as reasonably possible under new standards, they will be presumed to be at least partially faultless for fires. As a state Senate analysis puts it, “In this respect, the burden of proof would switch to other parties … to raise ‘serious doubt’ as to the (utility’s) reasonableness.”

We Won’t Know the Consequences

To offset that lessened liability, the legislation creates a fund, as much as $48 billion, from contributions by utilities’ shareholders and consumers, to pay for wildfire damages, and allows utilities to tap ratepayers for extraordinary damages if they have operated safely.

Newsom aides promise that the effect on power bills will be minimal. However, to help fill the wildfire damage fund, the legislation extends a utility bill surcharge that was imposed during the Davis era to pay for power purchases.
True to form, the legislation takes care of some influential interests, such as utility unions and renewable power suppliers. It would make it very difficult for portions of utilities to be sold off and protects supply contracts.
So what’s the bottom line for consumers? No one knows.
Newsom aides promise that the effect on power bills will be minimal. However, to help fill the wildfire damage fund, the legislation extends a utility bill surcharge that was imposed during the Davis era to pay for power purchases. There’s also no real limit on ratepayer burdens for future catastrophic wildfires.
As with previous “reforms,” we won’t know the consequences, both real and political, until they happen.
CALmatters is a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how California’s state Capitol works and why it matters. For more stories by Dan Walters, go to calmatters.org/commentary.
[activecampaign form=19]

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

Homeowners With Solar Rise Up to Defang Bill Authored by Former Utility Executive

DON'T MISS

Man Admits to Killing Missing Bass Lake Resident, Madera County Authorities Say

DON'T MISS

Trump Diagnosed With Vein Condition Causing Leg Swelling, White House Says

DON'T MISS

Connie Francis, Whose Ballads Dominated ’60s Pop Music, Dies at 87

DON'T MISS

Fresno Fire’s Rescue of 2-Year-Old in Locked Car Is a Reminder of Deadly Heat Risks

DON'T MISS

Trump Will Not Recommend Special Prosecutor in Epstein Case

DON'T MISS

US Attorney General Bondi Visits Alcatraz After Trump Call to Reopen Notorious Prison

DON'T MISS

US Transport Chief on California High-Speed Rail: ‘We Have to Pull the Plug’

DON'T MISS

Appeal Court Rejects Fresno County Challenge. DA and Sheriff Races Set for 2028

DON'T MISS

FDA Approves Juul’s Tobacco and Menthol E-Cigarettes

UP NEXT

Federal Immigration Crackdown Threatens California’s Historic Housing Reforms

UP NEXT

Governors Should Be the Face of the Democratic Party

UP NEXT

MAGA Is Tearing Itself Apart Over Jeffrey Epstein

UP NEXT

Valadao, Other California GOP Members of Congress Might Regret Backing Trump’s Megabill

UP NEXT

Diplomacy or Submission? The Zionist Grip on US Political Power and Trump’s Uneasy Alliance With Netanyahu

UP NEXT

Why Measure C Is Not Measured

UP NEXT

Nathan Magsig: Why Our Second Amendment Resolution Matters to the People of the Central Valley

UP NEXT

Lawrence Summers: This Law Made Me Ashamed of My Country

UP NEXT

Israeli Guilt Over Gaza Lurks Beneath Silence and Denial

UP NEXT

California’s Politics Drifts Right While New York’s Leans Left

Connie Francis, Whose Ballads Dominated ’60s Pop Music, Dies at 87

1 hour ago

Fresno Fire’s Rescue of 2-Year-Old in Locked Car Is a Reminder of Deadly Heat Risks

2 hours ago

Trump Will Not Recommend Special Prosecutor in Epstein Case

2 hours ago

US Attorney General Bondi Visits Alcatraz After Trump Call to Reopen Notorious Prison

2 hours ago

US Transport Chief on California High-Speed Rail: ‘We Have to Pull the Plug’

3 hours ago

Appeal Court Rejects Fresno County Challenge. DA and Sheriff Races Set for 2028

3 hours ago

FDA Approves Juul’s Tobacco and Menthol E-Cigarettes

3 hours ago

Israeli Strikes Kill 27 in Gaza, Three Die in Church Late Pope Often Spoke To

3 hours ago

Trump Cuts Decimate Hanford’s National Weather Service Office

3 hours ago

Russia Says Trump’s New Weapons Pledge a Signal for Ukraine to Abandon Peace Efforts

4 hours ago

Homeowners With Solar Rise Up to Defang Bill Authored by Former Utility Executive

Vocal opposition to a California bill canceling rooftop solar contracts for people who sell their homes resulted in major amendments to the ...

6 minutes ago

6 minutes ago

Homeowners With Solar Rise Up to Defang Bill Authored by Former Utility Executive

37 minutes ago

Man Admits to Killing Missing Bass Lake Resident, Madera County Authorities Say

President Donald Trump holds the key to the FIFA Club World Cup trophy in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., March 7, 2025. (Reuters File)
1 hour ago

Trump Diagnosed With Vein Condition Causing Leg Swelling, White House Says

1 hour ago

Connie Francis, Whose Ballads Dominated ’60s Pop Music, Dies at 87

2 hours ago

Fresno Fire’s Rescue of 2-Year-Old in Locked Car Is a Reminder of Deadly Heat Risks

U.S. financier Jeffrey Epstein appears in a photograph taken for the New York State Division of Criminal Justice Services' sex offender registry March 28, 2017 and obtained by Reuters July 10, 2019. New York State Division of Criminal Justice Services/Handout via REUTERS/File Photo
2 hours ago

Trump Will Not Recommend Special Prosecutor in Epstein Case

A view of Alcatraz prison complex located on Alcatraz Island in San Francisco Bay near San Francisco, California, U.S. July 17, 2025. (Reuters/Carlos Barria)
2 hours ago

US Attorney General Bondi Visits Alcatraz After Trump Call to Reopen Notorious Prison

U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy testifies before a House Appropriations Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies Subcommittee hearing on the Department of Transportation budget, on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S., May 14, 2025. (Reuters File)
3 hours ago

US Transport Chief on California High-Speed Rail: ‘We Have to Pull the Plug’

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend