From News Nation:
“PG&E could face criminal
charges over deadly California fire”
Pacific Gas & Electric will
face criminal charges because its equipment sparked a wildfire last year that
killed four people and destroyed hundreds of homes, a Northern California
prosecutor announced Thursday. It would be the latest action against the
nation’s largest utility, which was forced into bankruptcy over devastating
wildfires ignited by its long-neglected electrical grid. Shasta County District
Attorney Stephanie Bridgett announced on Facebook that her office had
determined that PG&E was “criminally liable” for the Zogg Fire. Prosecutors
hadn’t yet decided which charges to file, but they plan to do so before the
September anniversary of the blaze, Bridgett said.
PG&E said the loss of life
and devastation from the fire was “heartbreaking” but said it has resolved
civil claims with Shasta County and continues to reach settlements with victims
and their families ïn an effort to make it right.” “We do not, however, agree
with the district attorney’s conclusion that criminal charges are warranted
given the facts of this case,” the utility’s statement said. Pushed by strong
winds, the fire that began on Sept. 27 raged through the Sierra Nevada
mountains and local communities, killing four people, burning about 200 homes
and blackening about 87.5 square miles of land. In March, state fire
investigators concluded that the fire was sparked by a gray pine tree that fell
onto a PG&E transmission line. Two counties, Shasta and Tehama, have sued
the utility for negligence, arguing that PG&E had failed to remove the tree
even though it had been marked for removal two years earlier.
PG&E, which has an estimated
16 million customers in central and Northern California, filed for bankruptcy
protection in 2019 after its equipment was blamed for a series of fires,
including the 2018 Camp Fire that killed 85 people and destroyed 10,000 homes. That
blaze largely destroyed the town of Paradise, about 145 miles northeast of San
Francisco. It was the deadliest U.S. wildfire in a century. PG&E pleaded
guilty to more than 80 counts of involuntary manslaughter over that blaze,
which was linked to a badly maintained and aging transmission tower. PG&E
emerged from bankruptcy last summer and negotiated a $13.5 billion settlement
with some wildfire victims. But it still faces both civil and criminal actions.
The Sonoma County District Attorney’s Office filed charges in April over a 2019
blaze that forced nearly 200,000 people to evacuate. PG&E also has been
rebuked by California power regulators and a federal judge overseeing its
criminal probation for breaking promises to reduce the dangers posed by trees
near its power lines. Last week, PG&E announced plans to bury 10,000 miles
of its power lines in an effort to prevent its fraying grid from sparking
wildfires when electrical equipment collides with millions of trees and other
vegetation across the drought-stricken state. The cost was put at $15 billion,
most of which will likely be covered by customers.
The announcement came just days
after PG&E told regulators that its equipment may have ignited the Dixie
Fire northeast of San Francisco. That blaze in Plumas County had burned more
than 346 square miles of timber and head-high chaparral and was only 23%
contained. Currently the largest fire in California, it has destroyed more than
40 homes and other buildings and threatens about 10,700 more, while the end of
the week could see hotter temperatures and lower humidity that could make the
battle harder, fire officials said. A historic drought and recent heat waves
tied to climate change have made wildfires harder to fight in the American
West. Scientists say climate change has made the region much warmer and drier
in the past 30 years and will continue to make weather more extreme and
wildfires more frequent and destructive.
^ Not only should there be
criminal charges, but more Local, State and Federal regulation of them and
other companies like them. ^
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