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Saturday, November 2, 2024

Energy Co. PG&E Takes Blame for Massive Calif. Wildfire That Leftists Helped Fuel

'This tree was one of more than 8 million trees within strike distance to PG&E lines...'

(Headline USA) Pacific Gas & Electric power lines sparked last summer’s Dixie Fire in Northern California that swept through five counties and burned more than 1,300 homes and other buildings, state fire officials said Tuesday.

The blaze was caused by a tree hitting electrical distribution lines west of a dam in the Sierra Nevada, where the blaze began on July 13, according to investigators with the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.

However, at least one major arson case also has been linked to the conflagration.

A radical leftist sociology professor was indicted in November for starting four connected fires while endangering the lives of front-line firefighters who were attempting to quash the initial blaze.

“In addition to the danger of enlarging the Dixie fire and threatening more lives and property, this increased the danger to the first responders,” said the court filings.

In the summer of 2020, amid nationwide race riots, radical leftists linked with the domestic terror group Antifa were implicated in several other arson attempts in the Pacific Northwest, some causing substantial property and ecological damage.

Cal Fire said its investigative report on the Dixie Fire was sent to the Butte County district attorney’s office, which will determine whether additional criminal charges should be filed against PG&E.

The company already had indicated its equipment may have been involved in the Dixie Fire, which burned nearly 1 million acres in Butte, Plumas, Lassen, Shasta, and Tehama counties.

It was the second-largest fire in state history.

“This tree was one of more than 8 million trees within strike distance to PG&E lines,” PG&E said in a statement. “Regardless of today’s finding, we will continue to be tenacious in our efforts to stop fire ignitions from our equipment and to ensure that everyone and everything is always safe.”

The company said it has committed to burying 10,000 miles of power lines and taking other measures to help prevent wildfires.

Those have included shutting off power to thousands—and in one case, millions—of customers during periods of hot, dry weather coupled with high winds that can knock down trees or hurl branches into power lines.

PG&E equipment has been blamed for several of California’s largest and deadliest wildfires in recent years.

Last September, PG&E was charged with involuntary manslaughter and other crimes because its equipment sparked the Zogg Fire in September 2020 that killed four people and burned about 200 homes west of Redding. Investigators blamed a pine tree that fell onto a PG&E distribution line. The company could be heavily fined if convicted.

Shasta and Tehama counties have sued the utility alleging negligence, saying PG&E had failed to remove the tree even though it had been marked for removal two years earlier. The utility said the tree was subsequently cleared to stay.

It was one in a slew of legal actions against the nation’s largest utility, which has an estimated 16 million customers in central and Northern California.

The utility pleaded guilty in 2019 to 84 counts of involuntary manslaughter for a 2018 blaze ignited by its long-neglected electrical grid that nearly destroyed the town of Paradise and became the deadliest U.S. wildfire in a century.

PG&E also filed for bankruptcy protection in 2019 after that blaze and others were blamed on its aging equipment. The utility emerged from bankruptcy in 2020 and negotiated a $13.5 billion settlement with some wildfire victims.

But it still faces both civil and criminal actions from other fires. The company has pleaded not guilty to Sonoma County criminal charges over the 2019 Kincade fire, which injured six firefighters, choked local skies for two weeks and forced nearly 200,000 residents from their homes.

Last fall, PG&E reached a $125 million settlement agreement with the California Public Utilities Commission over that fire.

Adapted from reporting by the Associated Press

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