Los Angeles Times

PUC, PG& E emails investigat­ed

Federal prosecutor­s are looking at the relationsh­ip between utility and regulators.

- By Marc Lifsher marc.lifsher@latimes.com

SACRAMENTO — Federal prosecutor­s in San Francisco have opened an investigat­ion into controvers­ial emails and other contacts between state regulators and Pacific Gas& Electric Co.

California’s largest utility said Monday that it was informed by the U. S. attorney’s office that an investigat­ion was underway into emails between the utility and the Public Utilities Commission that have come under fire in recent months.

At issue are hundreds of emails detailing conversati­ons and even a dinner attended by a regulator and a utility official. Many of these contacts involved a major rate- setting case and the 2010 explosion of a natural gas pipeline that killed eight people, injured 66 and destroyed 38 houses in the Bay Area city of San Bruno.

Meanwhile, new campaign finance reports show that Gov. Jerry Brown also has sought to distance himself from the utility and the growing scandal.

The governor’s reelection committee returned $ 9,000 in contributi­ons from the utility’s executives out of “prudence due to inquiry,” Brown campaign spokesman Dan Newman said Monday.

The emails at the heart of the new investigat­ion were first called into question by the mayor of San Bruno. He accused PG & Eand the commission of having “too cozy” a relationsh­ip and that it led to lax regulation and unsafe conditions that resulted in a firestorm that leveled a neighborho­od in his city.

The contacts between the utility and the regulator, said Mayor Jim Ruane, were a major violation of PUC rules and flaunted legal principles by allowing one- sided private communicat­ions between the regulator and utility— a party in many pending cases before the commission.

The utility, after reviewing its emails last month, fired three top executives. The chief of staff to PUC President Michael Peevey resigned.

The federal investigat­ion, disclosed Monday, follows a federal criminal indictment concerning San Bruno.

The indictment charged PG& E with negligence and obstructio­n of justice in connection with the San Bruno blast. The company pleaded not guilty in August. The U. S. attorney’s office in San Francisco did not respond to a request for comment.

The latest batch of emails disclosed Monday offer a more detailed look at the deep connection between the utility and regulators.

They provide a glimpse into wide- ranging discussion­s that also include power plant projects, global warming, renewable energy, ballot measure campaign contributi­ons and the 2010 explosion— as commission­ers discussed sensitive political and regulatory matters with utility officials.

One involved exchanges between Commission­er Michael Florio and former PG& E Vice President Brian Cherry about gas pipeline pressure in the city of San Carlos. Another provided a synopsis of dinner conversati­ons between Cherry and Peevey in which the commission president dispenses public relations advice to the company and seeks contributi­ons for a political campaign opposing an initiative to weaken the state’s efforts to curb globalwarm­ing.

Cherry was one of the executives fired last month.

PG& E said in a statement that it planned to cooperate with federal authoritie­s in compliance with an internal code of conduct and a “no excuses” policy.

Company spokesman Keith Stephens said both the previous emails and the latest batch were improper. “We fully expect a fine to come out of this,” he said.

All the emails submitted by PG& E are expected to be reviewed during a hearing set for Tuesday before a Public Utilities Commission administra­tive law judge.

Both San Bruno officials and ratepayer advocates scheduled news conference­s outside PUC headquarte­rs in San Francisco to demand that regulators and law enforcemen­t agencies conduct in- depth investigat­ions of about 65,000 emails covering five years that PG& E said it had reviewed recently.

“The city is outraged that PG& E’s malfeasanc­e extended to an attempt to manipulate decision making,” San Bruno City Manager Connie Jackson said.

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