PG&E Beginning 48-Hour Advance Notifications of Possible Power Shutoffs

PG&EPress release from PG&E:

Since yesterday, Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E)’s emergency operations center has been open and teams have been monitoring a dry, offshore wind event. This afternoon, the company began its 48-hour advance notifications to customers that it may be proactively turning power off for safety and conducting a Public Safety Power Shutoff (PSPS) on late Wednesday evening.

The potential safety shutoff is planned for varying start times depending on location beginning Wednesday evening and is expected to affect approximately 209,000 customers and may impact portions of 15 counties in the Sierra Foothills and the North Bay, including Amador, Butte, Calaveras, El Dorado, Lake, Mendocino, Napa, Nevada, Placer, Plumas, San Mateo, Sierra, Sonoma, Sutter, and Yuba.

Customer notifications via text, email and automated phone call began this afternoon, approximately 48 hours prior to the potential de-energization. Customers enrolled in the company’s Medical Baseline program who do not verify that they have received these important safety communications will be individually visited by a PG&E employee with a knock on their door when possible. A primary focus will be given to those customers who rely on electricity for critical life-sustaining equipment.

Reason for PSPS

 

The sole purpose of a PSPS event is to reduce the risk of catastrophic wildfire ignitions. Windy conditions, like those being forecast later in the week, increase the potential for damage and hazards to the electric infrastructure, which could cause sparks if lines are energized. These conditions also increase the potential for rapid fire spread.

PG&E’s meteorological and operations teams continue to monitor weather models that show potential strong and dry offshore wind gusts that may exceed 55 mph late Wednesday evening through Thursday afternoon for portions of the Sierra Foothills. Gusts of 35-45 mph have been forecast for some North Bay counties, with some localized areas expected to experience 55 mph gusts.

State officials classify more than half of PG&E’s 70,000-square-mile service area in Northern and Central California as having a high fire threat, given dry grasses and the high volume of dead and dying trees. The state’s high-risk areas have tripled in size in seven years.

“The sole purpose of PSPS is to significantly reduce catastrophic wildfire risk to our customers and communities. We know that sustained winds above 45 mph are known to cause damage to the lower-voltage distribution system and winds above 50 mph are known to cause damage to higher-voltage transmission equipment. As we saw in the last PSPS event, we had more than 100 instances of serious damage and hazard on our distribution and transmission lines from wind gusts of this strength,” said Michael Lewis, Senior Vice President, PG&E Electric Operations.

Counties Potentially Impacted

County Customers Cities
Amador Total: 13,131

Medical Baseline: 661

Amador City, Fiddletown, Jackson, Martell, Pine Grove, Pioneer, Plymouth, River Pines, Sutter Creek, Volcano
Butte Total: 23,452

Medical Baseline: 1,762

Bangor, Berry Creek, Brush Creek, Butte Meadows, Butte Valley, Chico, Clipper Mills, Cohasset, Feather Falls, Forbestown, Forest Ranch, Hurleton, Magalia, Oroville, Palermo, Paradise, Paradise Pines, Rackerby, Stirling City, Yankee Hill
Calaveras Total: 14,586

Medical Baseline: 449

Angels Camp, Arnold, Avery, Camp Connell, Dorrington, Douglas Flat, Glencoe, Hathaway Pines, Mokelumne Hill, Mountain Ranch, Murphys, Rail Road Flat, San Andreas, Sheep Ranch, Vallecito, Valley Springs, West Point, White Pines, Wilseyville
El Dorado Total: 39,786

Medical Baseline: 1,917

Aukum, Cameron Park, Canyon, Camino, Coloma, Cool, Diamond Springs, El Dorado, Fair Play, Garden Valley, Georgetown, Greenwood, Grizzly Flats, Kelsey, Kyburz, Lotus, Mount Aukum, Omo Ranch, Pacific House, Pilot Hill, Placerville, Pollock Pines, Rescue, Shingle Springs, Silver Fork, Somerset, Twin Bridges
Lake Total: 1,895

Medical Baseline: 65

Cobb, Kelseyville, Loch Lomond, Middletown, Upper Lake
Mendocino Total: 862

Medical Baseline: 30

Fort Bragg, Hopland, Potter Valley, Redwood Valley, Ukiah, Yorkville
Napa Total: 9,623

Medical Baseline: 206

Angwin, Calistoga, Deer Park, Lake Berryessa, Napa, Oakville, Pope Valley, Rutherford, St Helena, Yountville
Nevada Total: 37,098

Medical Baseline: 1,630

Chicago Park, Grass Valley, Nevada City, North San Juan, Penn Valley, Rough And Ready, Soda Springs, Washington
Placer Total: 18,773

Medical Baseline: 820

Alta, Applegate, Auburn, Baxter, Colfax, Dutch Flat, Emigrant Gap, Foresthill, Gold Run, Lincoln, Loomis, Meadow Vista, Newcastle, Rocklin, Sheridan, Weimar, Christian Valley
Plumas Total: 785

Medical Baseline: 6

Belden, Bucks Lake, La Porte, Quincy, Storrie, Tobin, Twain
San Mateo Total: 6,462

Medical Baseline: 104

Emerald Hills, Half Moon Bay, La Honda, Loma Mar, Pescadero, Portola Valley, Rackerby, Redwood City, San Gregorio, Woodside
Sierra Total: 1,160

Medical Baseline: 14

Alleghany, Downieville, Goodyears Bar, Pike, Sierra City
Sonoma Total: 33,613

Medical Baseline: 1,082

Annapolis, Boyes Hot Springs, Cloverdale, Fulton, Geyserville, Glen Ellen, Guerneville, Healdsburg, Kenwood, Larkfield, Santa Rosa, Sonoma, Windsor
Sutter Total: 229

Medical Baseline: 4

Pleasant Grove, Rio Oso
Yuba Total: 7,474

Medical Baseline: 447

Browns Valley, Brownsville, Camptonville, Challenge, Dobbins, Loma Rica, Marysville, Oregon House, Smartsville, Strawberry Valley, Wheatland

 

Improvements Since the Last PSPS

 

A number of improvements have been implemented since the the last PSPS event on October 9-12. For example:

  • For this event, customers visiting the pge.com website are being redirected to a special, strength-tested site that can accommodate high volumes of traffic. The temporary site provides address lookup for affected customers, Community Resource Center locations as they become available, and other PSPS event-related information. During this time, online services such as energy bill payment, will be unavailable until after power has been restored.
  • In addition, the company’s contact center will be better able to manage increased call volume due to the event and is prioritizing emergency, outage and PSPS-related inquiries. All other normal business inquiries for topics such as bill payment, account balances, appointments, and starting or stopping service will be able to use the self-service option or will be asked to call after the PSPS period.
  • On Wednesday, Community Resource Centers will be opened across the affected areas to provide restrooms, bottled water, electronic-device charging and air-conditioned seating. The centers will be accessible to customers with functional needs and will be staffed from 8 a.m. until 6 p.m. until the areas are fully restored to power. Locations will be posted on the event website, accessible via pge.com.
  • The company is working to strengthen coordination with government agencies, in particular the counties, cities, and tribal governments in its service area. It has established a single point of contact for each county and now has a dedicated agency helpline monitored 24/7 for special requests from counties and tribes.

Public Safety Power Shutoff Criteria

No single factor drives a Public Safety Power Shutoff, as each situation is unique. PG&E carefully reviews a combination of many criteria when determining if power should be

turned off for safety. These factors generally include, but are not limited to:

  • A Red Flag Warning declared by the National Weather Service
  • Low humidity levels, generally 20 percent and below
  • Forecasted sustained winds generally above 25 mph and wind gusts in excess of approximately 45 mph, depending on location and site-specific conditions such as temperature, terrain and local climate
  • Condition of dry fuel on the ground and live vegetation (moisture content)
  • On-the-ground, real-time observations from PG&E’s Wildfire Safety Operations Center and observations from PG&E field crews

How Customers Can Prepare

As part of PSPS preparedness efforts, PG&E is asking customers to:

  • Plan for medical needs like medications that require refrigeration or devices that need power.
  • Identify backup charging methods for phones and keep hard copies of emergency numbers.
  • Build or restock your emergency kit with flashlights, fresh batteries, first aid supplies and cash.
  • Keep in mind family members who are elderly, younger children and pets.
  • Learn more about wildfire risk and what to do before, during and after an emergency to keep your family safe at PG&E’s Safety Action Center.

While customers in high fire-threat areas are more likely to be affected by a Public Safety Power Shutoff event, any of PG&E’s more than 5 million electric customers could have their power shut off because the energy system relies on power lines working together to provide electricity across cities, counties and regions. This PSPS event is expected to be smaller in scope than the Oct. 9-12 PSPS.

About PG&E

Pacific Gas and Electric Company, a subsidiary of PG&E Corporation (NYSE:PCG), is one of the largest combined natural gas and electric energy companies in the United States. Based in San Francisco, with more than 20,000 employees, the company delivers some of the nation’s cleanest energy to 16 million people in Northern and Central California. For more information, visit www.pge.com and www.pge.com/news.

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37 Please improve the conversation by disagreeing thoughtfully and backing your claims with facts
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Booooo hissss
Guest
Booooo hissss
6 years ago

Centers open til 6pm??
Gee thanks.

You spent 4 billion dollars paying off your shareholders instead of investing the TAXPAYER BAILOUT MONEY to the structural thimgs you were supposed to do.
Youve already murdered hundreds of folks over the last 30 years.
Cant wait to see you go pge you will never ever ever ever be a good company.
Just wait til we start the protests on the lawns of ceo&board members. Youll hear us then.

We all know you suck so stop putting money into telling us how great you are&how much you care&put that money into infrastructure. Wheres the back up generators? We know you have them since you had to bring them to hoopa rez when you shut their grid down for weeks.
You waited 5 hours to report the paradise fire. You should all be in jail.

And remember folks they got it written in that during planned power outages their insurance doesnt have to reimburse businesses for losses. So really i think theyre trying to put small shops out of biz.

Jaekelopterus
Guest
Jaekelopterus
6 years ago
Reply to  Booooo hissss

The call centers were worse than useless last shutoff. Long waits and inconsistent, contradictory information.

the misadventures of bunjee
Guest
the misadventures of bunjee
6 years ago
Reply to  Jaekelopterus

OH hell it gets better. During the 1-day PGE-pocalypse if you visited their outage site it was a blank page, with their logo and two words: We’re sorry.

Can their management be anymore condescending?

Jo
Guest
Jo
6 years ago

Your right I suggest you run right outside and cut the lines. Don’t do business with them

Craig
Guest
Craig
6 years ago
Reply to  Jo

Maybe not this person, but interest in self sustaining residential power systems, by other individuals, jumped a notch or two after that last fiasco.

Jp
Guest
Jp
6 years ago
Reply to  Craig

I’m on full solar with propane refrigeration in big bar. I was serious as they come

Gavin Sucks
Guest
Gavin Sucks
6 years ago
Reply to  Booooo hissss

blame Gavin Newsome or whatever his name is. he passed a law that makes PGE shut power off during red flag events.

Guest
Guest
Guest
6 years ago
Reply to  Gavin Sucks

Thanks, heard that.

Jaekelopterus
Guest
Jaekelopterus
6 years ago
Reply to  Gavin Sucks

Did you already forget the fires we had last year?

Jaekelopterus
Guest
Jaekelopterus
6 years ago
Reply to  THC

That picture of Newsom and Trump… If Trump’s claim that he’s 6’3″ is to be believed, Newsom must be at least 6’7″ or 6’8″!

shak
Guest
shak
6 years ago
Reply to  Jaekelopterus

or a foot or two in front of the other.

Jaekelopterus
Guest
Jaekelopterus
6 years ago
Reply to  shak

You can see their feet in the shot, Sherlock.

shak
Guest
shak
6 years ago
Reply to  Jaekelopterus

Dear Watson, you can also see the one’s arm and shoulder is completely in front of the other, not beside.

Jaekelopterus
Guest
Jaekelopterus
6 years ago
Reply to  shak

Unless one of them is hovering above the ground, they are on the same plane of depth in relation to the photographer. 5/10 Trump bootlicking, please try harder.

shak
Guest
shak
6 years ago
Reply to  Jaekelopterus

The exact same plane in your perspective.
But not in mine.
Maybe my new glasses aren’t as keen as I thought they were.
Or maybe…

Have a nice day.

dave
Guest
dave
6 years ago

Hate to see innocent people suffer and for some to have died because of this company’s complete failure to provide proper infrastructure is absolutely criminal.
All the more reason to go ‘off grid’ as much as is humanly possible. Pg&e should be sued out of existence and the people in charge should go to prison after everything they own is taken away.
Anybody who has solar and tied it to the grid wasted their money. In fact, pge should be forced to pay to put offgrid solar in anywhere they believe they can’t now provide power. Screw em

Leo's should start policing themselves
Guest
Leo's should start policing themselves
6 years ago

Man, they need to take that money they took from us (ratepayers) that they gave the ceos as raises and fix this shit( I still don’t understand why the King salmon plant doesn’t work) and cut all the trees and bushes around the power lines. People are starting to get very mad. Solar and deep cell batteries look good to me, but I rent my house and I don’t wanna spend money on something that is that hard to move when I do leave this house. What a load of b.s.

Central HumCo
Guest
6 years ago

~me too. I don’t get “the King Salmon Plant not working”. Natural gas. No more natural gas for you, says the almighty Public Utilities Commission. Cut.

Jo
Guest
Jo
6 years ago

Dam people are not thinkers. Last year you were all on a witch hunt to sue them because of the camp fire. You were all saying they should have shit the power down to save lives. Now you want to sue them for shitting the power down before the storm. Would you bi Polars please take your meds again. Your law suites keep raising prices that’s how that works. If you don’t like pge get off there grid. Solar is not so bad

Willie Caos-mayham
Guest
6 years ago
Reply to  Jo

??Again common sense, BRAVO.

Antichrist
Guest
Antichrist
6 years ago
Reply to  Jo

since the middle of march we have had a open tree case number on a very large tree that is touching the power lines . since then they have come out a total of 3 times each tine we are told it is bad and that it is to techanical for them to remove and that they would notify their bosses. since then there has developed a large crack that is burnt on the bottom side of a large crack. the lights dim and we smell smoke from time to time when the wind blows. guess what? the fricken tree is still standing.. so untill i see that they are truely concerned by their acrions i will call bullshit on these carefully worded public relations campaigns they call psps. the fact of the matter is . if they had done their fricken jobs they would not need to cut thw power to ensure it wouldnt cause fires during the wind events. now it is nothing short of an attempt to cover their asses.
tell me if you leased a car and followed all the rules for maintaining it that you agreeded to but everytime it rained you were told you no longer were allowed to drive it because the electrical wasnt properly installed would you be happy ? we buy lease and pay taxes not only for these lines to be ran installed and maintained but also for pge failures from the past. its has reached the tune of around 20 dollars a month already. add to the that we are paying some of the largest electric rates in the nation. it isnt to far fetched for us to expect that A they would do their dam jobs B that we should not need to worry about buying and installing secondary power systems to keep our lights on.C that should they fail to do their dang jobs that they will be held accoundable.
PGE has been convicted of felony manslaughter. yet their board members ceo department heads have yet to serve one day in jail. instead they reciced bonuses and bailouts. kind of hard to sit on a jury at this point and convict someone of dui and a prison lenght when this sort of thing is happening. equal enforcement of the law or there can not be a law.
peoples outrage at PGE is justicified and untill they are forced to play by the same rules as the rest of us , when they are rewarded with bailouts bonuses and dividens for inaction and manslaughter instead of pink slips jailtime and sanctions over sight and preformance reviews. they will keep on same as always becUse it is nothing to them.

gunther
Guest
gunther
6 years ago
Reply to  Antichrist

Even though they’re convicted felons, politicians still take their lobby money, I mean contributions.

https://www.sfchronicle.com/politics/article/PG-E-lobbying-spending-in-California-soars-after-13575166.php

Guest
Guest
Guest
6 years ago
Reply to  gunther

Gunther, thanks.
The lobbyists are the problem.

In 98 Pg&e lobbied for de-regulation, and they got it, they have the $ to lobby. Then Enron got involved, they stole the money.

Now here we are.

Guest
Guest
Guest
6 years ago
Reply to  Antichrist

Thanks anti-Christ.

Govorment Cheese
Guest
Govorment Cheese
6 years ago
Reply to  Jo

ty jo. damed if you do, damed if you dont. light a candle. read a book by a fireplace. sleep outside. play a boardgame. chop firewood. if you cant live without electricity than my opinion is you shoulnt be allowed to live at all. ive been prepped for the last 20 years for things far worse than not having electricity!

Jo
Guest
Jo
6 years ago

Thank you pud for not being pge

Guest
Guest
Guest
6 years ago
Reply to  Jo

Depending on which PUD you mean, they too have been accused of causing power line fires. But again most PUDs have laws limiting their liability. And they don’t worry about having funding. Nor paying taxes. Nor pensions.

Willie Caos-mayham
Guest
6 years ago

??Thank you Kym for the information. ?

Willie Caos-mayham
Guest
6 years ago

??Safety over supply. ?

Guesty
Guest
Guesty
6 years ago

Heard from a pge lineman to expect Humboldt to be shut off for this… that makes 3 Thursday’s in a row with no power to SoHum!

Guest
Guest
Guest
6 years ago
Reply to  Guesty

Best to assume the worse and get ready.

Central HumCo
Guest
6 years ago
Reply to  Guest

Bottom line.

Thank you, Guest.

shak
Guest
shak
6 years ago

I love the meme that shows the Titanic sinking, with the caption: What’s the difference between California and the Titanic?
……….
The Titanic had it’s lights on when it sank.

laurie jensen
Guest
laurie jensen
6 years ago

Kym, will our power be off up here again in Hum, when the high winds are blowing way way south of us. I looked at the info you put up and we arent on the list this far north? I lost brand new ice-cream and frozenbread biscuit dough last time to having them in the freezer over frig in house. Lesson learned, keep them in big freezer in garage. I helped out in the neighbor hood for folks that couldnt make their coffee, or cook something to eat. My old gas stove and wall heater dont need power to work Even let 1 neighbor take a shower

This has been going on fir years, but people dint remember
Guest
This has been going on fir years, but people dint remember
6 years ago

If only people could remember, but most people can’t.

Enron stole the money years ago after Pg&e lobbied and got the de-regulation.
https://www.kqed.org/news/11781415/with-new-fire-threat-looming-pge-issues-alert-for-possible-midweek-blackouts

That Enron thing was all over the news but people don’t remember.

It’s happening again.