California 2019-2020 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill ACR184 Compare Versions

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11 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Concurrent Resolution No. 184Introduced by Assembly Member Low(Coauthors: Assembly Members Aguiar-Curry, Kalra, Ting, and Wood)(Coauthor: Senator McGuire)March 09, 2020 Relative to public utilities. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTACR 184, as introduced, Low. Public utilities: Pacific Gas and Electric Company: board of directors. This measure would call on the board of directors of both the Pacific Gas and Electric Company and the Pacific Gas and Electric Corporation to resign their positions to make way for a board of directors that will support the reformation of the practices and culture of the utility. The measure would also call on the shareholders of the Pacific Gas and Electric Corporation to select a board of directors that will prioritize the utilitys duty to provide safe and affordable electricity over its requirement to enrich its shareholders.Digest Key Fiscal Committee: NO Bill TextWHEREAS, An explosion of a gas pipeline in San Bruno, California, in 2010 that killed eight people was linked to Pacific Gas and Electrics (PG&E) willful failure to address recordkeeping deficiencies concerning its larger natural gas pipelines; and WHEREAS, In 2016, a federal jury found PG&E guilty of six felony countsfive violations of the Natural Gas Safety Pipeline Act of 1968, and one count of corruptly obstructing a federal investigation in relation to the San Bruno gas line explosion; andWHEREAS, The 2015 Butte Fire, which burned 70,868 acres and killed two people, was linked to poor PG&E equipment maintenance; andWHEREAS, PG&Es faulty equipment is still under suspicion as the cause for the 2017 Tubbs Fire, which killed 22 people, destroyed 5,643 structures, and burned 36,807 acres; andWHEREAS, The 2018 Camp Fire killed 85 people, destroyed 18,804 buildings, and obliterated over 95 percent of the towns of Paradise and Concow, making it the most disastrous wildfire in California history; andWHEREAS, An investigation by the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CalFire) concluded that the Camp Fire was the result of lack of maintenance for transmission lines owned and operated by PG&E; andWHEREAS, Tower 27/222, a 99-year-old transmission tower suspected of being the source of the Camp Fire, had not been inspected during the decade leading up to the Camp Fire, and was still in use despite PG&Es own estimate in forms filed with federal regulators that such towers have about a 75-year life expectancy; andWHEREAS, PG&E admitted that its equipment malfunctioned near the starting point of the 2019 Kincade Fire, which destroyed 374 buildings and burned 77,758 acres; andWHEREAS, Internal PG&E documents obtained through the Freedom of Information Act illustrated PG&Es neglect to update high-voltage lines, as well as the companys awareness that neglect was increasing the risk of starting wildfires; andWHEREAS, An internal PG&E presentation in 2017 detailed that the life expectancy of its transmission towers was 65 years, and the average age of its towers was 68 years; andWHEREAS, Electrical utilities employ deenergization events during certain weather conditions to avoid starting fires with live, downed lines; andWHEREAS, Of 2,300,000 customers of the three major California utilities who lost electrical service in 2019 due to planned deenergization events, 2,000,000 were PG&E customers; andWHEREAS, Many customers were without power for multiple days, including customers on life support and others with medical need; andWHEREAS, In November 2019, the Public Utilities Commission launched an investigation into the shutoffs to ensure that the shutoffs were only occurring when absolutely necessary and are based on actual and substantiated conditions; andWHEREAS, PG&E announced that it would likely take 10 years before planned deenergization events will not be a regular part of its wildfire mitigation plan; andWHEREAS, In the midst of filing for bankruptcy in 2019, citing $30,000,000 in liabilities, PG&E proposed to pay $16,000,000 in bonuses to top groups of executives; andWHEREAS, During the last decade, PG&E rates have regularly increased while the Corporation of PG&E has reported hundreds of millions of dollars in profits; andWHEREAS, Most of the current PG&E board of directors represent Wall Street and have no ties to California; andWHEREAS, Under the tenure of leadership that placed shareholder profits before public safety, PG&E instigated an estimated 1,500 fires from 2014 to 2017, and 6 of Californias 20 worst wildfires, all of which have been associated to failures of equipment owned and maintained by PG&E; andWHEREAS, It is no longer sufficient to allow the same leadership that has overseen this gross negligence to continue directing the operations of PG&E; now, therefore, be itResolved by the Assembly of the State of California, the Senate thereof concurring, That the Legislature calls on the board of directors of both the Company and Corporation of PG&E to resign their positions to make way for a board of directors that will support the reformation of the practices and culture of the utility; and be it furtherResolved, That the Legislature calls on the shareholders of the Corporation of PG&E to select a board of directors that will prioritize the utilitys duty to provide safe and affordable electricity over its requirement to enrich its shareholders; and be it furtherResolved, That the Chief Clerk of the Assembly transmit copies of this resolution to the author for appropriate distribution.
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33 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Concurrent Resolution No. 184Introduced by Assembly Member Low(Coauthors: Assembly Members Aguiar-Curry, Kalra, Ting, and Wood)(Coauthor: Senator McGuire)March 09, 2020 Relative to public utilities. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTACR 184, as introduced, Low. Public utilities: Pacific Gas and Electric Company: board of directors. This measure would call on the board of directors of both the Pacific Gas and Electric Company and the Pacific Gas and Electric Corporation to resign their positions to make way for a board of directors that will support the reformation of the practices and culture of the utility. The measure would also call on the shareholders of the Pacific Gas and Electric Corporation to select a board of directors that will prioritize the utilitys duty to provide safe and affordable electricity over its requirement to enrich its shareholders.Digest Key Fiscal Committee: NO
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99 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION
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1111 Assembly Concurrent Resolution
1212
1313 No. 184
1414
1515 Introduced by Assembly Member Low(Coauthors: Assembly Members Aguiar-Curry, Kalra, Ting, and Wood)(Coauthor: Senator McGuire)March 09, 2020
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1717 Introduced by Assembly Member Low(Coauthors: Assembly Members Aguiar-Curry, Kalra, Ting, and Wood)(Coauthor: Senator McGuire)
1818 March 09, 2020
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2020 Relative to public utilities.
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2222 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
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2424 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
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2626 ACR 184, as introduced, Low. Public utilities: Pacific Gas and Electric Company: board of directors.
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2828 This measure would call on the board of directors of both the Pacific Gas and Electric Company and the Pacific Gas and Electric Corporation to resign their positions to make way for a board of directors that will support the reformation of the practices and culture of the utility. The measure would also call on the shareholders of the Pacific Gas and Electric Corporation to select a board of directors that will prioritize the utilitys duty to provide safe and affordable electricity over its requirement to enrich its shareholders.
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3030 This measure would call on the board of directors of both the Pacific Gas and Electric Company and the Pacific Gas and Electric Corporation to resign their positions to make way for a board of directors that will support the reformation of the practices and culture of the utility. The measure would also call on the shareholders of the Pacific Gas and Electric Corporation to select a board of directors that will prioritize the utilitys duty to provide safe and affordable electricity over its requirement to enrich its shareholders.
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3232 ## Digest Key
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3434 ## Bill Text
3535
3636 WHEREAS, An explosion of a gas pipeline in San Bruno, California, in 2010 that killed eight people was linked to Pacific Gas and Electrics (PG&E) willful failure to address recordkeeping deficiencies concerning its larger natural gas pipelines; and
3737
3838 WHEREAS, In 2016, a federal jury found PG&E guilty of six felony countsfive violations of the Natural Gas Safety Pipeline Act of 1968, and one count of corruptly obstructing a federal investigation in relation to the San Bruno gas line explosion; and
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4040 WHEREAS, The 2015 Butte Fire, which burned 70,868 acres and killed two people, was linked to poor PG&E equipment maintenance; and
4141
4242 WHEREAS, PG&Es faulty equipment is still under suspicion as the cause for the 2017 Tubbs Fire, which killed 22 people, destroyed 5,643 structures, and burned 36,807 acres; and
4343
4444 WHEREAS, The 2018 Camp Fire killed 85 people, destroyed 18,804 buildings, and obliterated over 95 percent of the towns of Paradise and Concow, making it the most disastrous wildfire in California history; and
4545
4646 WHEREAS, An investigation by the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CalFire) concluded that the Camp Fire was the result of lack of maintenance for transmission lines owned and operated by PG&E; and
4747
4848 WHEREAS, Tower 27/222, a 99-year-old transmission tower suspected of being the source of the Camp Fire, had not been inspected during the decade leading up to the Camp Fire, and was still in use despite PG&Es own estimate in forms filed with federal regulators that such towers have about a 75-year life expectancy; and
4949
5050 WHEREAS, PG&E admitted that its equipment malfunctioned near the starting point of the 2019 Kincade Fire, which destroyed 374 buildings and burned 77,758 acres; and
5151
5252 WHEREAS, Internal PG&E documents obtained through the Freedom of Information Act illustrated PG&Es neglect to update high-voltage lines, as well as the companys awareness that neglect was increasing the risk of starting wildfires; and
5353
5454 WHEREAS, An internal PG&E presentation in 2017 detailed that the life expectancy of its transmission towers was 65 years, and the average age of its towers was 68 years; and
5555
5656 WHEREAS, Electrical utilities employ deenergization events during certain weather conditions to avoid starting fires with live, downed lines; and
5757
5858 WHEREAS, Of 2,300,000 customers of the three major California utilities who lost electrical service in 2019 due to planned deenergization events, 2,000,000 were PG&E customers; and
5959
6060 WHEREAS, Many customers were without power for multiple days, including customers on life support and others with medical need; and
6161
6262 WHEREAS, In November 2019, the Public Utilities Commission launched an investigation into the shutoffs to ensure that the shutoffs were only occurring when absolutely necessary and are based on actual and substantiated conditions; and
6363
6464 WHEREAS, PG&E announced that it would likely take 10 years before planned deenergization events will not be a regular part of its wildfire mitigation plan; and
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6666 WHEREAS, In the midst of filing for bankruptcy in 2019, citing $30,000,000 in liabilities, PG&E proposed to pay $16,000,000 in bonuses to top groups of executives; and
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6868 WHEREAS, During the last decade, PG&E rates have regularly increased while the Corporation of PG&E has reported hundreds of millions of dollars in profits; and
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7070 WHEREAS, Most of the current PG&E board of directors represent Wall Street and have no ties to California; and
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7272 WHEREAS, Under the tenure of leadership that placed shareholder profits before public safety, PG&E instigated an estimated 1,500 fires from 2014 to 2017, and 6 of Californias 20 worst wildfires, all of which have been associated to failures of equipment owned and maintained by PG&E; and
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7474 WHEREAS, It is no longer sufficient to allow the same leadership that has overseen this gross negligence to continue directing the operations of PG&E; now, therefore, be it
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7676 Resolved by the Assembly of the State of California, the Senate thereof concurring, That the Legislature calls on the board of directors of both the Company and Corporation of PG&E to resign their positions to make way for a board of directors that will support the reformation of the practices and culture of the utility; and be it further
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7878 Resolved, That the Legislature calls on the shareholders of the Corporation of PG&E to select a board of directors that will prioritize the utilitys duty to provide safe and affordable electricity over its requirement to enrich its shareholders; and be it further
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8080 Resolved, That the Chief Clerk of the Assembly transmit copies of this resolution to the author for appropriate distribution.