After a series of low-profile meetings with
Salem power brokers and utility officials, state Rep. Pam Marsh (D-Ashland)
confirms to the Oregon Journalism Project that she has crafted legislation to
create a $1 billion fund to help utilities pay damages to customers hurt by
utility-caused wildfires.
It is the second bombshell utility bill the
moderate Democrat has unveiled in a week. On Tuesday, she introduced House Bill
3666, which would create a wildfire certification program. Critics charge that
the bill is an attempt by utilities to shield themselves from wildfire-related
lawsuits by pointing to their state certification as evidence they did all they
could to prevent conflagration.
One of those utilities is PacifiCorp, which is
locked in a debilitating and, so far, losing legal battle with hundreds of its
customers for its principal role in the massive Labor Day fires of 2020.
Marsh confirmed that the concepts for the fund
and the certification program came out of the series of meetings from September
to January with PacifiCorp, Portland General Electric and senior state
officials. Attending at least some of the meetings were Karin Power, then a
senior adviser to Gov. Tina Kotek; Andrew Stolfi, head of the Oregon Department
of Consumer and Business Services; officials from the Oregon Public Utility
Commission; and at least six representatives from two of the stateโs largest investor-owned
utilities, PacifiCorp and Portland General Electric.
A summary of the issues circulated among the
invitees in September made clear where its sympathies lay. โWildfire-related
civil lawsuits also pose enormous litigation costs to utilities,โ the memo
read. โIn these suits, utilities face an unclear and rapidly changing
negligence standard set by juries. The duty of care to which juries may hold
utilities responsible may be higher than even industry-leading utilities can
meet in practice. This uncertainty, combined with the scale of potential
damages and the potential number of litigants, creates a virtually uncapped
liability that can outstrip the value of the companyโs assets.โ
The document, obtained by the Oregon
Journalism Project, was authored by Power and Michael Grant, a longtime
employee at the PUC.
At the time, Power was a senior adviser to
Kotek. In January, the governor appointed Power to the Public Utility
Commission.
Itโs been four years since the cataclysmic
Labor Day fires. Strong winds from the east knocked down trees and branches,
which in turn knocked down live power lines onto tinder-dry forests.
As OJP
previously reported, PacifiCorp rejected pleas from senior state officials
that it shut off the flow of electricity โ to effectively deenergize its power
lines โ given the dangerous weather. Hours later, fire engulfed parts of the
Santiam, Umpqua, Clackamas and Salmon river basins.
In 2023, an Oregon jury found that PacifiCorp was reckless and
acted with โgross negligenceโ in the lead-up to the 2020 Labor Day fires. The
jury awarded damages that could eventually mean a $6 million payday for each of
the approximately 1,500 plaintiffs, which would make it the most costly
litigation in Oregon history.
In December, the U.S. Department of Justice added to PacifiCorpโs
legal woes. The feds filed a $900 million civil lawsuit, claiming the utilityโs
negligence caused a different 2020 fire in Southern Oregonโs Umpqua River
Basin.
PacifiCorp says it faces legal claims in
excess of $45 billion. Its debt has been downgraded by ratings agencies and its
liquidity badly eroded.
In the document circulated at this fallโs
meetings, Power and Grant argue wildfires endanger the entire stateโs economic
health.
โThis risk is especially acute for utilities,
threatening affordability for customers and utilitiesโ ability to meet
customersโ needs for growth, reliability and clean energy,โ they write. โAs a
result, the state economy is at risk if action is not taken to stabilize the
situation โ both for victims of wildfire and for utilities providing an
essential service.โ
The same document floats the plan for a
catastrophic wildfire fund to provide โpayouts to property owners impacted by
wildfire.โ The fund could be modeled after SAIF Corp., the stateโs semi-private
workersโ compensation insurance operation.
As to funding such a vehicle, the document is
vague. It states only that a fund could be capitalized with contributions from
โthe state, electric utilities and others (tbd).โ
Marsh says the document was an early draft and
is no longer entirely accurate. Taxpayer dollars, for example, would not be
used in the formation of a victimsโ fund.
Ratepayer advocates hate the idea. Customers
are already struggling as utility
bills continue to escalate. Disconnects due to nonpayment have soared at
both PacifiCorp and PGE.
PacifiCorp, for example, disconnected 20,662
customers through the first 10 months of 2024, according to the Oregon
Citizensโ Utility Board. In all of 2023, it disconnected 7,935. In the year
before, 5,355.
Bob Jenks, head of the CUB, says the surging
disconnect numbers are strictly a matter of money. In the 28 months that ended
in January 2024, PacifiCorp rates jumped 35% and PGEโs increased 43%.
What exactly the utilities would get in return
for creating a victimsโ fund is not yet clear. Talk is rife in green energy and
public power circles that PacifiCorp and PGE want some sort of statutory limit
on their legal liability in the case of wildfire.
Jenks says he has not seen the bill. He walked away from the
meetings thinking that the utility liability caps were part of the final
version of the proposal. After he was quoted to that effect in an earlier
version of this story, he said he was informed by group members that the
liability caps had been removed from the final version.
For the hundreds of people who have spent the past four years
fighting PacifiCorp in court, the idea of having to contribute to a PacifiCorp
victimsโ fund is almost beyond comprehension. That was the message from the
Oregon Trial Lawyers Association. The powerful attorneysโ group said it was not
invited to attend the meetings. But it demanded access after getting tipped off
that lawmakers and PUC members were meeting with utility officials.
Rep. Marsh has already unveiled one bill
coming out of those invitation-only meetings. Her HB 3666 would create a
certification program in which the state Public Utility Commission would grant
utilities a wildfire mitigation certificate if they were deemed in compliance. Oregon Capital Chronicle first reported on HB 3666 earlier this week.
The measure was widely pilloried by
plaintiffsโ lawyers and renewable energy advocates as a thinly veiled effort to
shield the utilities from customer lawsuits.
โThe long and short of it is, if the utility
gets the gold badge from the PUC, their behavior is deemed reasonable and then
they are effectively insulated from legal action,โ says Derek Johnson, a Eugene
lawyer.
Others wonder how vigorously the certificate program would
be enforced. โI just donโt think the PUC will ever reject
one of these applications,โ says Carra Sahler, a professor at Lewis & Clark
Law School and director of the Green Energy Institute. โSo what is this doing,
really? At some level, it is protection against litigation. It appears to be a
piece of evidence that a utility could use in the courtroom.โ
The utilities disagree.
โThe safety certificate legislation is about setting a
safety standard, checking the work of utilities with respect to wildfire
prevention and keeping customers and communities safe,โ says PacifiCorp
spokesman Simon Gutierrez. โThis legislation is not about immunity from future
litigation.โ
A work session on the bill is scheduled Monday at 8am
before the House Committee on Climate, Energy and Environment.
โThis story was produced by the Oregon Journalism Project, a nonprofit investigative newsroom for the state of Oregon. Learn more at oregonjournalismproject.org.
This article appears in The Source Weekly February 27, 2025.










If the state is going to do that, the utilities need to cut rates back to 2015 levels and be restricted from raising them again for 20 years–2045!!!