Newsom corruption? Spent $6.7mil to craft protections for PG&E following wildfire manslaughter convictions

People in Northern California have lost hundreds of homes, dozens of lives, tens of billions in property, your Governor has been working hard, using you tax dollars, to prevent PG&E officials from being held responsible for the damage they have done.

“The behind-the-scenes work to craft legal protections for Pacific Gas & Electric Company in the wake of California’s deadliest fire is beginning to come to light – exposing the great lengths, and cost, it took Gov. Gavin Newsom and his administration to develop them.

An investigation by Sacramento’s ABC10 revealed white-shoe law firm O’Melveny & Myers billed California taxpayers $3 million to develop and draft Assembly Bill 1054.

The Newsom administration also tapped investment bank Guggenheim Securities to assist in the drafting of the law, at $3.7 million in taxpayer expense.

O’Melveny & Myers also “donated” $305,000 to defend Newsom for his illegal moratorium on the death penalty.  So, the question has to be raised, did the law firm give away services in order to get the $3 million contract—oh, was that contract out for bid?  Or did Newsom do as he has done before, taken care of his friends and donors.  Why aren’t the media investigating this soft core corruption?

Newsom spent $6.7mil to craft protections for PG&E following wildfire manslaughter convictions

Reid Stone, The Sun,  8/13/21  

The behind-the-scenes work to craft legal protections for Pacific Gas & Electric Company in the wake of California’s deadliest fire is beginning to come to light – exposing the great lengths, and cost, it took Gov. Gavin Newsom and his administration to develop them.

An investigation by Sacramento’s ABC10 revealed white-shoe law firm O’Melveny & Myers billed California taxpayers $3 million to develop and draft Assembly Bill 1054.

The Newsom administration also tapped investment bank Guggenheim Securities to assist in the drafting of the law, at $3.7 million in taxpayer expense.

The television station’s report found that the Newsom administration also blurred the lines of independence of the PUC by enlisting its staff to assist in the drafting of the law it would ultimately vote to codify after approval from the legislature.

The law instituted a $21 billion wildfire insurance fund, available to utilities who obtained a safety certification from California’s Public Utilities Commission (PUC).

For PG&E to earn certification, AB 1054 required the utility demonstrate four things in a report: a wildfire plan, an agreement that PG&E would work on “company safety culture,” institute a company safety committee, and agree to reporting safety issues to the CPUC board.

A late draft of the bill, which was ultimately nixed, included a fifth requirement: that PG&E receive a positive safety determination from state regulatory officials.

Stripping the safety review element from the bill led legislative staffers to derisively refer to the bill as ““the governor’s bill on utility stability,” the station reported.

“I did not want to sign this,” said former PUC director Alice Stebbins, the official who signed off on PG&E’s first certificate two years ago. “The bottom line is I was told to sign it. You will sign this. Period.”

Stebbins says she signed it because AB 1054 automatically generated PG&E’s certificate, not because she or the PUC made a finding that the company had become safe.

“I trusted my Governor. I trusted my commissioners. And that was a mistake,” Stebbins told the Sacramento station.

Equally of importance, the law shifted the burden of proof on liability from the utilities, demonstrating they acted responsibly, to the victims of wildfires demonstrating the utilities acted negligently.

And it capped the wildfire damages that can be taken away from the profits taken in by utilities’ shareholders at $4 billion.

“If this had been in place during the 2017, 2018 and 2019 fires, PG&E shareholders would have been on the hook for about $4 billion dollars, not for the tens of billions that they’ve ultimately ended up paying out,” Nat Skinner of the PUC’s Public Advocate Office said.