Stop the Second PG&E Bailout!
Assemblyman David Chiu (CA Assembly District 17)
Sacramento Office: (916) 319-2017
SF Office: (415) 557-3013
Assemblyman Phil Ting (CA Assembly District 19)
Sacramento Office: (916) 319-2019
SF Office: (415) 557-2312
Call Script
My name is __________. I am a constituent, and my zip code is _______. I am a member of Indivisible SF.
I'm calling to ask the Assemblyman to vote NO on AB 1054. This bill is a rushed second bailout of PG&E that gives them permission by default to pass liability costs on to ratepayers, rather than having to bear the costs of mismanagement themselves.
Can I count on the Assemblyman to vote NO on AB 1054 this week?
Context
PG&E is now notorious for poor maintenance contributing to dangerous conditions that have sparked wildfires such as last year’s Camp Fire that razed Paradise, California.
PG&E already received one bailout from the California Legislature in the form of a law that enables them to pass liability costs on to ratepayers (that’s us). Now Gov. Newsom and Asm. Chris Holden (Pasadena) want to give them another bailout—and they’re rushing it through by July 12 so they can get it passed before summer recess, rather than giving such an important bill time to be considered by the ratepaying public.
Background
Gov. Newsom’s proposal is to create a “Wildfire Fund” to cover costs incurred by wildfires sparked by electrical equipment.
The fund is to be seeded by a mix of equity from utility companies, $10.5 billion in bonds from the Department of Water Resources, and a $2.50/month charge on your utility bill that already exists and would be extended.
Currently, when a utility’s equipment is involved in a wildfire, the utility must prove affirmatively that it did not contribute to the disaster.
Under AB 1054, utility companies would receive a “safety certification” every year by meeting some basic, ground-floor requirements. Then, a utility so certified is not liable by default, and victims of a disaster would need to organize to show the utility’s liability.
This means you would pay for wildfires caused by utilities’ malfunctioning or ill-maintained equipment, not the utilities that are supposed to maintain and properly operate that equipment.
We have to stop letting PG&E off the hook for mismanagement. They got one bailout already—no more!
AB 1054: https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billCompareClient.xhtml?bill_id=201920200AB1054
Info and call script from Our City: https://web.archive.org/web/20190708024114/http://our-city.org/events/index.html
Bloomberg article on Gov. Newsom’s proposal: https://finance.yahoo.com/news/california-governor-pitching-wildfire-fund-184311336.html
Utility Dive brief: https://www.utilitydive.com/news/california-tees-up-wildfire-liability-bill-as-utility-consumer-groups-dive/558134/
San Diego Union-Tribune article: https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/business/energy-green/story/2019-07-03/california-lawmakers-race-to-pass-wildfire-legislation-by-july-12
Opinion piece in Sonoma Index-Tribune: https://www.sonomanews.com/opinion/9758960-181/california-focus-is-newsom-plan
Commentary in CALMatters, including background on the origin of this proposal: https://calmatters.org/articles/commentary/pge-hedge-fund/
Commentary from former CPUC President Loretta Lynch: https://www.sfchronicle.com/opinion/openforum/article/Open-Forum-Proposed-wildfire-fund-a-reckless-14080774.php