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Camp Fire Flashpoint Photo Released

State regulators this week released a
telltale photo showing the flashpoint of the Camp Fire, just as a regulatory
judge gave PG&E until Friday to account for the tax benefits it could reap
in the $1.6 billion deal struck with the CPUC’s safety arm over two years of
devastating wildfires.

The photo shows the spot where the
Caribou-Palermo transmission line struck part of Tower :27/222 along a steep
Feather River canyon near the town of Pulga. It was here where a  worn
hook on a nearly 100-year-old transmission tower failed, causing the 115,000
volt line to strike a steel strut, sparking the fire that claimed 85 lives and
leveled the town of Paradise.

Butte county prosecutors who are
leading a criminal investigation into PG&E had sought to keep the photo private,
but relented last week at the request of state regulators, who included it in a
regulatory filing lodged this week. It will no longer be redacted out of the
state CPUC’s final report on the fire, which cited systemic lapses in the
company’s tower inspection program as a key factor in its failing to spot the
worn hook before the fire.

Meanwhile, a regulatory judge wants
PG&E to spell out just how big a tax break the company could expect as part
of the recent $1.6 billion deal the utility struck with the agency as
punishment for violating safety regulations for wildfires in 2017 and 2018.
Administrative Law Judge Sophia Park has given PG&E until Friday to respond
to a long list of questions about various provisions of the settlement.

Critics like former state utilities
commission president Loretta Lynch say the company should not be able to
benefit in any way for making up for past wrongs with new spending. They say
the deal already lets the company escape having to admit responsibility and
lets the utility out of jeopardy for any misconduct that regulators may have
missed. They say any settlement should be amended to prevent the company from
taking advantage of the kind of tax break it reaped for similar post-San Bruno
gas explosion safety spending.

“That’s s the big boondoggle here,”
Lynch said of the Camp Fire deal in a recent interview. “PG&E, on the one
hand, pays money (for safety), but on the other hand, gets money in a tax break
and keeps that money — pockets it.”

Lynch praised the judge, however, for
demanding the company outline the specifics of any tax benefit in light of its
long troubled safety track record, like the two dozen regulatory violations
alleged in the wildfires.

“They  should now not get the
benefit of all of those bad acts — they just shouldn’t,” Lynch said. “And any
benefit that comes back in a tax break should go to the ratepayers. And
frankly, it should go to the victims.”

Park, the regulatory judge overseeing
the case, also called on the utility to be far more specific on the audits and
other promised upgrades included in the deal that are billed as helping to
prevent another disastrous wildfire season.

PG&E does not admit specific
wrongdoing in the settlement. While it would not answer questions about any tax
savings, the utility said it will comply with the judge’s directive to detail
the tax issue by Friday.


Source: NBC Bay Area

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