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Sonoma County Prepares to Sue PG&E for Damages From Fire
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By Associated Press
Published 5 years ago on
January 15, 2020

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SONOMA โ€” A county in Northern California wine country is exploring plans to sue a utility over a massive wildfire last fall that caused losses of $725 million when combined with rolling power shutoffs.

โ€œPG&E, not local taxpayers, should pay for costs and damages related to the fire, including harm to infrastructure, open space and disaster response costs.โ€ โ€” county attorney Bruce Goldstein
The Sonoma County Board of Supervisors voted Tuesday to hire two law firms to pursue legal action against Pacific Gas & Electric, the nationโ€™s largest utility. The 121-square-mile blaze destroyed 374 structures in October 2019.
The supervisors also released findings of a report assessing the economic impact of the fire and four PG&E power shutoffs. The report by the Moody Analytics research company found the fire cost the county $620 million in losses and that the shutoffs caused an additional $105 million in losses.
โ€œPG&E, not local taxpayers, should pay for costs and damages related to the fire, including harm to infrastructure, open space and disaster response costs,โ€ county attorney Bruce Goldstein wrote in an email to the Press-Democrat of Santa Rosa.
Almost 195,000 residents, or 39% of the countyโ€™s population, was affected by the shutoffs between Oct 9 and Nov. 20, with the average resident disrupted for 2.5 days by any single outage, the report said.
Photo of charred remains of the Soda Rock Winery
FILE โ€“ This Oct. 30, 2019, file photo, shows the charred remains of the Soda Rock Winery framed by the buildingโ€™s stone facade in the aftermath of the Kincade Fire near Healdsburg, Calif. The Sonoma County Board of Supervisors voted Tuesday, Jan. 14, 2020, to hire two law firms to pursue legal action against Pacific Gas & Electric, the nationโ€™s largest utility. The action comes as PG&E is trying to dig out of a financial hole created by a series of catastrophic fires that have been blamed on the utilityโ€™s outdated electrical system and managerial negligence. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel, File)

The Ongoing Bankruptcy Case Shields PG&E From Other Lawsuits

The countyโ€™s action comes as PG&E tries to dig out of a financial hole created by a series of catastrophic fires from 2015 to 2018 that have been blamed on the utilityโ€™s electrical systems and managerial negligence. Faced with more than $50 billion in claims from fire victims, insurers and government agencies, PG&E has tried to rehabilitate itself in bankruptcy court for the past year. The company has settled most of those claims for a combined $25.5 billion.
The ongoing bankruptcy case shields PG&E from other lawsuits until the company emerges with a reorganization plan approved by the court and California regulators. PG&E needs to emerge from bankruptcy protection by June 30 to take advantage of a new state wildfire fund, meaning Sonoma County may have to wait until later this year before any lawsuit can proceed.
The cause of last fallโ€™s fire is still under investigation. PG&E, however, has told state regulators that it had a problem at a transmission tower near the fireโ€™s ignition point. The utility had shut off power to thousands of people in Northern California that day in a bid to prevent high winds from toppling power lines and igniting wildfires. Power was shut off to distribution lines but not to high-voltage transmission lines.
The countyโ€™s losses from the fire included damages to lands, parks, roads, and costs for emergency services, evacuations, debris removal, labor and watershed restoration, according to the boardโ€™s preliminary report.

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