{"id":171070,"date":"2019-12-20T19:44:30","date_gmt":"2019-12-20T16:44:30","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/whaj24.com\/?p=171070"},"modified":"2019-12-20T19:44:30","modified_gmt":"2019-12-20T16:44:30","slug":"ap-exclusive-early-pge-blackouts-forewarned-later-problems","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/mennews.net\/?p=171070","title":{"rendered":"AP Exclusive: Early PG&#038;E blackouts forewarned later problems"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><span style=\"text-transform: initial;\">Whaj 24 _ SAN FRANCISCO (AP) \u2014 The state senators grilling the CEO of Pacific Gas &amp; Electric Corp. were upset \u2014 like millions of other Californians, some spent days in the dark when the nation\u2019s largest utility shut off power during windstorms this fall.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">The lawmakers demanded that the executive explain why blackouts intended to prevent downed power lines from sparking deadly wildfires caused so much trouble of their own.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">The explanation CEO Bill Johnson offered the Capitol hearing room: Several smaller outages that PG&amp;E triggered in the year before its debacle began in mid-October went well, giving his company misplaced confidence.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">\u201cI think we got a little complacent that we had figured it out,\u201d Johnson testified last month.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">PG&amp;E had not figured it out.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">An Associated Press review shows widespread problems with the four \u201cpublic safety power shutoffs\u201d the utility started rolling out in 2018, a year before massive blackouts paralyzed much of California in recent months. Interviews and documents obtained under public records requests reveal persistent failures and broken promises that in some cases compromised public safety.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">Even as PG&amp;E assured regulators it was fixing the problems, the utility kept making many of the same mistakes, further undermining trust after its outdated equipment and negligence has been\u00a0<a class=\"\" href=\"https:\/\/apnews.com\/8c922adac3bbadd11225aea64cea1a03\">blamed for fires<\/a>\u00a0that killed nearly 130 people during 2017 and 2018.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">Communication, a foundation of emergency management, was poor. PG&amp;E\u2019s notifications of impending outages were haphazard at times, with some sent after the power was already out. Telecommunications companies, water providers and emergency managers did not always receive the early word they needed.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">\u201cWe were surprised that PG&amp;E provided no advanced warning to us,\u201d an official with the city of Oroville\u2019s drinking water provider wrote state regulators about a June outage.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">PG&amp;E made important information hard to get. It was slow to distribute electronic maps showing who would lose power, making it harder for emergency responders to know exactly where to send resources. The utility also balked at providing the addresses of medically needy customers to local officials who planned to check on them in person.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">Breakdowns afflicted even basic technology. In a region that\u2019s home to Silicon Valley and its thousands of computer programmers and engineers, PG&amp;E had not prepared the website where it posted outage updates for a crush of customers, so it crashed. Tech experts from the state had to intervene<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">The sound quality of some calls PG&amp;E hosted during shutoffs was so poor that emergency responders and legislators had a hard time understanding updates. Even then, not everyone was invited.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">\u201cIn the future, AT&amp;T requests that it and other communications providers be included on any conference calls providing real time information,\u201d the telecommunications giant protested to regulators after the June shutoff.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">These and other early failures weren\u2019t widely recognized as harbingers of the issues that would overwhelm PG&amp;E come mid-October, partly because the outages affected rural areas with less political and economic clout.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">While the headline-making shutoffs affected more than 2 million people across much of PG&amp;E\u2019s 70,000-square-mile service territory, the four initial blackouts affected tens of thousands in Northern California\u2019s Sierra Nevada foothills and famed wine valleys. They hit in October 2018 and then in June, September and early October of this year.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">Among those who saw trouble building were regulators at the California Public Utilities Commission.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">The first shutoff was chaotic and the next three were not going according to the guidelines regulators had passed. Commission staff met more frequently with PG&amp;E starting in the spring, using advice and persuasion rather than mandating changes.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">\u201cWe, as the state, never got to the point where we had complete confidence in PG&amp;E\u2019s ability to execute,\u201d said Elizaveta Malashenko, the top California regulator overseeing blackouts.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">Malashenko, deputy executive director of safety and enforcement policy, told the AP that the commission didn\u2019t act more aggressively because it has to balance punitive intervention with giving utilities a chance to self-correct.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">\u201cThere needs to be some basic operational assumption that you can set up a conference call,\u201d Malashenko said.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">Some critics faulted regulators for not doing enough.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">The utilities commission, a sprawling bureaucracy with a complex rule-making process, was \u201cnot aggressive enough early in setting clear requirements and standards,\u201d said Melissa Kasnitz, legal director for the Center for Accessible Technology, which advocates for people with disabilities.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">PG&amp;E promised to fix a range of problems promptly, and an executive said it worked hard to deliver.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">In many ways, that didn\u2019t happen. Not only did the problems continue throughout the smaller shutoffs, but they were replicated on a huge scale starting with the mid-October shutoffs.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">The problems galled local officials, who vented deep frustration that a utility they often work closely with kept failing them.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">After all, they are the ones dealing with a shutoff\u2019s consequences. They must dispatch ambulances, run jails and water plants, direct traffic through darkened intersections, set up community shelters and much more.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">\u201cIt\u2019s almost as if it\u2019s intentional disregard of all the warnings we gave them,\u201d said Napa County Supervisor Diane Dillon, whose district north of San Francisco has experienced nearly every shutoff.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">___<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">Sixteen million people \u2014 more than the population of nearly any U.S. state \u2014 depend on PG&amp;E for power. The shutoffs were an inconvenience for some and extremely costly for others. For society\u2019s most frail, they brought questions of life and death.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">Those who rely on medical devices in their homes were particularly vulnerable.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">\u201cPG&amp;E did nothing to help us who depend on electricity to run our life support,\u201d recounted Grace Lin, a polio survivor who needs a ventilator to breathe and uses an electric wheelchair. \u201cIt\u2019s not like we could simply grind our teeth and tough it out by holding our breath.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">Lin said she was confused by the notifications PG&amp;E sent ahead of the first shutoff that affected her San Francisco Bay Area home on Oct. 9. The company website they referred to for updates was frozen. Lin considered herself lucky that she had the means to evacuate 20 miles away, to a quadriplegic friend\u2019s house that had electricity.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">PG&amp;E could identify \u201cmedical baseline\u201d customers such as Lin based on billing records. Local officials working to identify everyone who might need help repeatedly asked PG&amp;E to share its list, so no one was overlooked.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">Regulators said PG&amp;E promised it would release medical baseline addresses during a shutoff. Yet when each of the first four hit, PG&amp;E insisted that locals sign a legal agreement not to disclose the addresses, causing delay and uncertainty that regulators said could risk lives.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">On the eve of the first massive power outage, Malashenko of the utilities commission was urgently emailing company officials in frustration.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">\u201cThis issue has been discussed many times over the last several months\u201d yet \u201chas once again become an issue with PG&amp;E,\u201d she wrote on Oct. 8.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">Malashenko said state officials also pushed PG&amp;E to improve in other areas. Starting in April, they met at least weekly with PG&amp;E, pointing out needed improvements and stressing that aspects of the utility\u2019s preparation was inadequate.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">PG&amp;E argued that the commission\u2019s own privacy rules meant it couldn\u2019t share the addresses without a non-disclosure agreement, spokesman Jeff Smith explained. Resolving the problem took an order that the commission\u2019s executive director sent three hours before the first massive blackouts began.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">Other groups of vulnerable Californians endured shutoffs without the help they needed.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">\u201cA lot of them don\u2019t have support, a lot of them don\u2019t have family,\u201d Betty Briggs, 84, said of her elderly neighbors in the well-touristed Napa Valley town of Calistoga. \u201cIt makes it very difficult, and it puts them in danger.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">Briggs can get around without help, but her husband requires 24-hour care due to dementia. He lives nearby at Cedars Care Home, where seven residents in their 80s and 90s experienced three shutoffs before mid-October.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">The outages created anxiety for people reliant on routine, as well as practical problems.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">Beds and wheelchair lifts require electricity. So does the heat and air conditioning. When the freezer got too warm, staff tossed 30 days of backup food.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">Owner Irais Lopez still hasn\u2019t restocked fully.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">\u201cNow, we only buy small quantities,\u201d Lopez said, \u201cbecause we don\u2019t know what will happen.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">___<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">At PG&amp;E\u2019s high-rise headquarters in downtown San Francisco, the emergency operations center springs to life with each shutoff.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">Employees in different colored vests that distinguish their expertise cluster around banks of computer monitors showing real-time updates. Maps track wind speed and direction, as well as which circuits are down. Conversation hums in the background.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">This is where decisions are made and answers can be found \u2014 and local officials said they felt they had little access to either.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">Fed up with communication gaps, one hard-hit county requested a presence at PG&amp;E headquarters during the September shutoff. Regulators required that the utility hold seats in its emergency operations center for local representatives, but a lawyer for Sonoma County instead spent her day in a conference room several locked doors away.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">\u201cThere was just a lack of understanding on behalf of PG&amp;E of why local government needs timely information,\u201d said Petra Bruggisser, a deputy county counsel.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">PG&amp;E already had a shaky reputation in its Northern and central California territory.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">The company spent three years in bankruptcy starting in 2001, after California\u2019s attempt to deregulate its power market went awry.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">Maintenance failures led to a natural gas pipeline blast near San Francisco in 2010 that killed eight people. PG&amp;E was found criminally liable and paid a $1.6 billion fine.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">In late 2017, its equipment was suspected of starting the Tubbs Fire that killed 22 people and destroyed more than 5,600 buildings.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">The utility revealed in spring 2018 that it would start using power shutoffs when fire danger was high and extreme winds blew.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">PG&amp;E then began to explain what to expect, sending millions of emails to update its customer contact files, running advertising in multiple languages and holding hundreds of meetings with community leaders, public safety agencies and residents.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">The California Public Utilities Commission started writing guidelines for how utilities should roll out \u201cde-energization.\u201d The guidelines were published as a 176-page document in June.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">By that point, PG&amp;E had again filed for bankruptcy protection, crushed by liabilities for fires in 2017 and 2018, including the Camp Fire that nearly wiped out the town of Paradise and killed 85 people.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">The utility now has a market value of about $6 billion \u2014 a drop of $30 billion in just over two years \u2014 and is working with the state and a federal judge to emerge from bankruptcy by June 30.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">California Gov. Gavin Newsom said he expects PG&amp;E\u2019s entire 14-member board of directors, including Johnson, its CEO, to step down before the state will approve the utility\u2019s plan to regain its financial footing.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">\u201cPG&amp;E\u2019s recent management of the public safety power shutoffs did not restore public confidence,\u201d the Democratic governor warned the company in a Dec. 13 letter. \u201cInstead, PG&amp;E caused extreme uncertainty and harm for Californians who rely on power for their health care and their livelihood.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">PG&amp;E said Johnson was not available for an interview. The utility\u2019s point man on the shutoffs told AP that he believes Johnson, while testifying before lawmakers last month, was referring to its ability to kill and safely restore power to an extremely complex electrical grid.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">Sumeet Singh, a vice president who oversees PG&amp;E\u2019s community wildfire safety program, listed a litany of ways the utility is investing in fixes that he said will lessen the need for future shutoffs. Those include trimming more vegetation near power lines and burying some lines in areas most at risk of igniting.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">Singh also acknowledged that the utility had some struggles during the early shutoffs but that it strove to improve and disputed any characterization that it did not succeed in some ways. He cited how quickly the utility restored power as one improvement, along with the timeliness and accuracy of customer notifications.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">\u201cDid we hit the mark on every single improvement? No. Do we have more work to do? Yes,\u201d Singh said.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">Power shutoffs are likely to be a feature of life in California for years to come. PG&amp;E must invest billions in infrastructure upgrades, and communities are spreading into lands once populated by trees and brush.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">Regulators promise to be watching closely.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">\u201cIf we have an outcome that doesn\u2019t meet the public expectation and what we need to run as a state,\u201d said Malashenko of the utilities commission, \u201cthat means that we need to rethink our approach and try something different and drive to a better outcome.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">In November, the commission launched an investigation into whether it should sanction PG&amp;E for violating shutoff protocols.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">PG&amp;E said it will need to improve how it reacts after it shuts off the power.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">\u201cI think we thought the big event was turning off the power,\u201d Johnson told lawmakers. \u201cAnd I think we focused on that as the main event instead of the impact of that, right, on the people it affected.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">___<\/p>\n<p class=\"Component-root-0-2-149 Component-p-0-2-142\">Pritchard reported from Los Angeles. Associated Press journalists Terence Chea and Eric Risberg in Calistoga and Adam Beam in Sacramento contributed to this report<\/p>\n<p>APNEWS *<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Whaj 24 _ SAN FRANCISCO (AP) \u2014 The state senators grilling the CEO of Pacific Gas &amp; Electric Corp. were upset \u2014 like millions of other Californians, some spent days in the dark when the nation\u2019s largest utility shut off power during windstorms this fall. The lawmakers demanded that the executive explain why blackouts intended [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":171071,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-171070","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-1"],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"https:\/\/mennews.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/12\/800-1-1.jpeg","jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/mennews.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/171070","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/mennews.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/mennews.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/mennews.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/mennews.net\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=171070"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/mennews.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/171070\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/mennews.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/media\/171071"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/mennews.net\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=171070"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/mennews.net\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=171070"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/mennews.net\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=171070"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}