Letter Writer Decries PG&E’s ‘Demented Rampage’

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Letter to the EditorOne more sorry event in California’s fire calamities is the insane reaction of P G &E to the changing climate. It’s almost as if the punishments they’ve had to endure this century- a long list of felonies, criminal convictions, endless litigation, San Bruno explosion, bankruptcies- has driven them to madness. I got my first shock of this last April, driving by Redwood Acres, in Eureka, where, without any permit, they’d sawed down a stately grove of giant redwoods. It was the act of a marauder, a defacer, right in the public eye, almost vengeful, executed, preposterously, as making “defensible space” around its substation (!). By no stretch of the imagination were these trees a fire hazard. Indeed, as well as being active fire fighters, through their critical role in carbon sequestration, these trees were an elegant reminder of Eureka’s noble antecedent as a mighty forest, of which only fragments remain.

This fall, P G & E has has taken to Humboldt County’s roads and forests in a similar mood. KMUD news documented their demented rampage last week, when they visited a protest staged in Humboldt Redwoods State Park. As you listen to the KMUD interviews, you can hear trees crashing in the background. The protesters fume as they watch this slaughter of large, healthy beautiful carbon-sequestering, oxygen-manufacturing and water-retaining engines. They are agitated by the destruction of a critical wildlife corridor, connecting the Park with Rainbow Ridge and the wild, foggy refugia of the Mattole North Forks. A tree sitter who has been sleeping in an old growth douglas fir to protect it, described the red tree voles, a listed species, also a favorite food of the endangered Northern Spotted Owls, living around her perch.

There has been no permit, no environmental impact statement. All done, absurdly, in the name of fire safety.

The rampage is occurring all over the County. Last week trucks full of arborists, tree markers and traffic directors invaded the Lost Coast. We counted 43 trucks, just on the tiny road from Highway 101 to Petrolia. On Lighthouse Road, leading to the beach, they have painted yellow Xes on the trees they will cut, and a dot on the ones they will top or trim. This is a tree-lined road. It passes the old growth Mill Creek Forest, saved in the eighties from Eel River Saw Mills by community action and fund-raising, now managed by BLM.

Large bay trees have Xes, as do broad- domed maples, under which generations of schoolchildren have passed, as they call out to the bus driver to watch out for squirrels.

P G & E cuts wherever it likes, whatever it likes, even in a State Park, as “enhanced vegetation management.” They can cut down trees before which women in the early 20th century lay down in their long skirts and bonnets to protect [them] from caterpillar tractors. As one protester at the Park remarked “It makes you question, is anything ever really saved?”

There are regulations which determine how far from the power lines P G & E is permitted to cut. One amiable and apologetic arborist said they could go 90 feet if there were a dead tree or other hazard which warranted cutting. According to PRC 4292, clearance is dependent on voltage. Ten-foot minimum clearance is required for high voltages: 110,000 volts or above.

But these are extremely low voltage wires along little country roads, and you can see Xes on large trees 50 feet or so upslope.

P G & E is a rogue corporation. The malfeasance dates back to the ‘80’s, with the revelations of Erin Brockovitch and the hexavalent chromium spill in Hinckley. Here is a partial list:
1) 1994: the Traumer fire, where P G & E was found guilty of 739 counts of criminal negligence.
2) Also 1994: criminal convictions on the Campbell fire, in Tehama County, and the Nevada County fire.
3) Pendola Fire, 1999, heavy fines for poor vegetation management.
4) 2008 Rancho Cordova pipe explosion which killed one person and severely burned another.
5) 2010 San Bruno gas pipeline explosion which killed 8 people and wounded 54. P G & E was convicted of 3,798 violations of state and federal laws. The lengthy proceedings revealed corporate documents listing profit as PG & E’s top priority, with safety coming in 5th.PG & E was given 5 years of probation and 200,000 hours of community service.
6) Butte Fire of 2016, which killed 2 people.
7) Camp Fire of 2016 which caused almost 100 deaths. The financial repercussions impelled P G & E to declare bankruptcy for the second time this century.
8) 2021 Dixie Fire, which burned over a million acres, due to P G & E equipment malfunction, and the Zogg Fire, which caused 1 death.

If any individual had been convicted of as many felony arsons, manslaughters and criminal negligences as this corporation, they would be in prison for life. Instead, it is permitted, indeed, subsidized, to execute stupefyingly expensive, impossible and counterproductive projects like this savage trimming over their 18,000 miles of power lines, in order to reduce the risk of another lawsuit.

But it is “too big to fail,” as they say. Sixteen million people, and the economy of a large part of the Pacific northwest, depend on it. Of course, it could not survive without successful lobbying at all levels( in 2018 alone it spent $10 million), including bribery and campaign contributions. However, the concept that one corporation can have such vast responsibilities, and also be guaranteed a profit for a stable of wealthy stockholders, is suicidal. Electricity is the economy’s life blood. P G & E cuts cost as it pleases, turns the power on and off as it pleases, and outsources the costs as its responsibilities to stockholders dictates.

Earth First!, some of whose members were at the Park protest, is dismissed by mainstream media, as a radical fringe organization. Nothing could be further from the truth. Earth First! together with other conservatives ( in the true, original sense of that word) merely takes direct nonviolent action when nothing else has worked. With the climate catastrophe, nothing else has worked. Since its origins, EF! has taken a long view, like many of the rest of us, and what it foresaw and feared decades ago has truly come to pass. Drought. Climate catastrophe. Disappearance of millions of species, which had been the joy and beauty of our lives only a couple of decades ago.

Direct action is just a finger in a dike pounded by giant waves of economic power, and crested, as it were, by a class of people who, at least so far, though aware of the risk, have been able to personally benefit from the destructive forces of these waves. Their long view contains a vision of their own individual salvation. They think they are going to get away with it, whether out into space, or nested in a New Zealand enclave, or a climate-controlled dome somewhere. The media, ably controlled by this class, which for years ignored evidence of the consequences of this profit-seeking assault on life, is now full of terrifying fire and flood narratives. Communities are demoralized, through fear of fire, or punitive hardships which corporations like P G & E can impose. They are afraid to interfere with these destructive corporate activities.

The power lines should be underground, as are most utility wires in Europe. P G & E may say it’s too expensive, but in this dismissal you hear the stockholders’ voices again. The real problem is the climate, which has changed. It is hotter. High winds caused by monster fires can hurl trees and flaming materials for long distances. We cannot fix a problem we as humans have created, with an expedient that only makes it worse. What we need to address, and quickly, is the climate crisis. By trimming trees, P G & E is treating its insurance risks, not the real problem.

Ellen Taylor

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Forest through the trees
Guest
Forest through the trees
2 years ago

This letter has no author noted, but I’m fairly certain who penned it, and thank them.

I am seeing countless perfectly wonderfully trees marked in such a arbitrary way on my commute as well and it saddens my heart.

My sense tells me this is PG&E taking a bandaid approach to, as the letter writer describes, a problem we ourselves have created with larger untold risks of calamity.

My hinky meter says it’s the parade of tree companies -specifically ACRT – that are the bad players on the ground. They have been who busying themselves for weeks with a parade of trucks and staff, “inventorying” and “marking for destruction” countless trees of all sizes. They are absolutely giddy over it.

I’ve had trees removed, it is not an easy task, and typically it is extremely expensive!

Those tree companies are seeing massive dollar signs and long term “job security” in these plum contracts with their new best friend and mega corporation PG&E.

And we the consumers will eat the costs. Or not eat, because of the costs. 😢 And the trees and forest swelling animals have no voice.

My concerns echo Ellen’s (if she indeed penned this important letter), in that there appears to be zero oversight. And the workers -who do not live locally- see each potential tree drop, or top, as a stack of hundreds, not as a valuable living part of our neighborhoods.

Underground power lines are the answer, not decimating our heritage and ironically adding further fuel to the fire.

VMG
Guest
VMG
2 years ago

The “arborists”, the “tree cutters”, they’re all contractors, and not a single tree cut “by PG&E”, is cut by a PGE employee…

Many of the yay-hoos who do this work, are neat clowns who spend 60% of their shifts sitting in their trucks, smoking weed and playing with their phones until 3 o’clock, when they actually do a little work, hacking down whatever, and feeding whatever through the chipper, until 4 o’clock, when they head back to the dump and the shop…

I agree that PGE should be held accountable, but we live in a state where our “fire crews” spend the winter cleaning up the forest floors and burning the slash and the trash which accumulated over decades…

Our state is unusually flammable, and it contains 40 million people, who complain no matter what PGE does!

Yes, those folks are dead, up there in Paradise, and it is amazing that Oroville hasn’t burned, that Clearlake Oaks is still standing, that Garberville is still Garberville and on and on…

Where in this state are Pine trees not dying from drought-shock?

I think we should gather up the homeless folks, start a giant tree-farm, maybe out there where the people are having trouble selling their weed, and get everyone to work planting new forests in a gigantic WPA sort of deal… Then the homeless will be able to live in bunk-houses, do righteous work, and eventually, we can bring back forests…

Even as we speak, people in the cities are moving to tall apartment buildings, all those 100 year old houses are being cleared out for tall buildings where lots of people can live…

The future is now, and we are going to have to adapt. PGE stock was $55, now it’s $10… Do you think the State of California could do a better job of managing this utility?

If you don’t like what they do, you have the same rights as every other citizen, to try to manipulate the law according to your own interests.

SO:

Take em to court, if you can raise the money!

VMG
Guest
VMG
2 years ago
Reply to  VMG

And visit Davis, California, where, in the late 70’s, every line, PGE, Telephone, TV cable etc, was undergrounded!

Ask the City of Davis how much it cost! And while you are there, enjoy all the trees…

Eureka could have done this, a long time ago…

Buncha Hot Air
Guest
Buncha Hot Air
2 years ago
Reply to  VMG

This isn’t Eureka or Davis. Not by a long shot.
The letter complains about the clearing work, yet cites all the fires PG&E is liable for. What do you want? These comments do a careful dog whistle racist dance around the fact that the crews are Hispanic. They work hella hard. They’re doing “too much, too fast” right? They’ve been working along Bull Creek Rd., And Wilder (AKA not the road to ArCA-Tah) for a while. Go get a late pass

https://youtu.be/x_tGMQtClO4

The reality of underground burial. Pretty mild video, but doesn’t support the notion.
Look up the LA underground High Voltage fiasco! High voltage lines require insulation like oils like PCBs. You need to circulate it to cool it. When there is a fault, you have to isolate, dig, de-oil, etc., etc. Freaking disaster!
I can’t wait to see the letter whining about the trenching up and down 70 % slopes!

Nooo
Guest
Nooo
2 years ago
Reply to  VMG

Are you suggesting Humboldt County is short on trees?

lol
Guest
lol
2 years ago
Reply to  VMG

Tree farms don’t bring back forests. Yes I think the state could do a much better job of managing the utilites, but it might make more sense to breeak the grid up into smaller sections managed by local governments.

We don’t, as citizens, have the same ability as corporations to manipulate the law.

VMG
Guest
VMG
2 years ago
Reply to  lol

Humboldt County is a good example of poor quality local government…

I don’t like PGE much, but, it’s what we got…

Compared to the State of California, which also hires contractors for everything, using a convoluted system of vendor management (?), I would say that PGE is doing it’s not so best, but I suspect things will improve over time.

And no, a tree farm won’t plant the forest, we need people to do that…

As far as manipulating the law, grass roots efforts have caused large amounts of change in society… Look at Ruth Ginsburg, who as soon as she was dead, was replaced by King Trump, who caused a giant step backwards in women’s rights by appointing Amy Barrett, a nightmare from the religious right…

If you sit there in Humboldt and complain, nothing much will change. Get up and lead, or roll another one… Your choice!

Panthera Onca
Guest
Panthera Onca
2 years ago

PG&E says that burying power lines costs $3M per mile, and the forestry costs $500K per mile. I do not believe any of that. There is a machine that cuts a ditch, sticks the cable 2 meters down and then buries it. Get one and try it. They do not have a Timber Harvest Plan and without one it is impossible to sell the logs that PG&E cuts on your land. They should have gotten a blanket THP that landowners could use to sell the millions of dollars in timber they are cutting. You can get a THP of your own, but you should not have to, it should be provided for you. They are your trees and they could grow and get more valuable for you. PG&E says they have 2400 miles of critical lines to clear and they are going to do 1800 miles before the end of the year. They have spent two months doing two miles of lines near me, cutting 1200 trees. This is because they did nothing for twenty years but shovel stock dividends at stockholders and blow off the safety stuff cause it was too expensive. When you pay your PG&E bill ( I do not buy power) remember who you are paying.

VMG
Guest
VMG
2 years ago
Reply to  Panthera Onca

This may be correct, but I don’t want to pay $5.00/kilowatt hour!

There is no great solution here, but it is nice to have electric power…

The real problem is lack of water to run generators, so pray for rain!

And if you don’t buy power, you are either running a generator or using solar/batteries, so you are paying for that power…

Panthera Onca
Guest
Panthera Onca
2 years ago
Reply to  VMG

Paying for solar equipment is not purchasing electrons.

Last edited 2 years ago
Bad Guy
Guest
Bad Guy
2 years ago
Reply to  Panthera Onca

The lines they need to lay underground need to be insulated and much larger in size because being buried, they create a lot of heat inside conduit. In free air they are able to run smaller lines without insulation. The amount of concrete needed for junctions is incredible and take up a lot of room. Copper prices are at historic levels, etc. Its not just about trenching.

And lets not forget that there is life we need to consider underground too…

Fndrbndr
Guest
Fndrbndr
2 years ago
Reply to  Bad Guy

The transmission lines are made out of an aluminium alloy.

VMG
Guest
VMG
2 years ago
Reply to  Panthera Onca

Semantics…

Most of the solar systems I have seen, were either broken down, or in need of repairs.

After the PSPS, many of my neighbors installed generators, which need maintenance, and solar/battery systems, which need frequent repairs…

The best system I ever saw was an old engineer/placer miner in Camptonville, who ran the spring-fed stream through pipe down the hill to his water-turbine generator, and ran his lights etc on 12V DC…

This was in 1965. He told me he got $5million worth of gold out of his mine, and that it cost him $4million to mine it…

Last edited 2 years ago
laura cooskey
Guest
laura cooskey
2 years ago
Reply to  VMG

Most of the “solar” systems i know are actually petroleum-fueled generators, occasionally relieved when someone has the time, money, or inclination to fix the purported “alternative energy” system for a few days or weeks. It makes them feel good to say they’re off the grid, though.

lol
Guest
lol
2 years ago
Reply to  VMG

You must have seen very old early solar systems. That is in no way typical for professionally installed solar systems.

thetallone
Guest
thetallone
2 years ago
Reply to  VMG

Wha? Solar systems are simple and reliable, and generally the only maintenance is replacing the storage batteries. My panels are 31 years old and give me volts whenever the sun shines.

lol
Guest
lol
2 years ago
Reply to  VMG

The great solution is to slash executive pay at PGE dramatically, while we work to transition to public owned utilities.

GrumpyOldGuyD
Member
2 years ago
Reply to  Panthera Onca

How do you trench across river gorges and valleys? Rocky or granite terrain? Steep slopes? Overhead power lines are a clear shot across those obstacles. Picture Mattole Road, with 1/2 mile long drives to the nearest overhead circuit. Burying the main circuit is one thing, then you have to trench down each individual driveway.

Remember in the ’90s when Harrison St was undergrounded? The disruption down Harrison was one thing. Businesses and homes had to have their front yards trenched to underground to each location, then replaced. Individual home and business Main Power panels had to be converted from overhead to underground service. This took a better part of 8 months or so to complete, and that was only for about 1 mile of underground conversion. You make it sound so simple, but clearly have no grasp of what it takes to convert from overhead to underground….

Joshua WoodsD
Member
2 years ago

If you don’t like PG&E, boycott them. Turn off your power and show them how serious you are otherwise take your manufactured outrage somewhere else.

lol
Guest
lol
2 years ago
Reply to  Joshua Woods

That is a very stupid thing to say. I’m sure you must be able to see the lack of logic in your comment.

Ernie Branscomb
Guest
2 years ago

I don’t read announcements that are not signed.

Take your choice, people or wilderness. People keep making babies, so I guess that the die is cast.

Last edited 2 years ago
Ernie Branscomb
Guest
2 years ago
Reply to  Kym Kemp

Thanks. Now I’m sorry that I read it. I was better off before.

Your timeline
Guest
Your timeline
2 years ago

The camp fire was is 2018
Zogg fire was 2020

Mary Ann Neal-Norton
Guest
Mary Ann Neal-Norton
2 years ago

The number of healthy, straight firs they are planning to take out on Thomas Rd in Salmon Creek is overwhelming. I have written to them asking about their rational of taking the only trees on some slipping slopes as well as what responsibility they will take for the fire danger and mess caused by all that lumber if left to rot alongside the road, not to mention the loss in value of a lot of merchantable timber. Do not expect to get an answer.

guest
Guest
guest
2 years ago

Lots of white trucks with one person per truck. Hundreds of trees fallen if not thousands. Meanwhile power lines falling on the ground (no wind) starting fires. A total waste of money.

laura cooskey
Guest
laura cooskey
2 years ago
Reply to  guest

Yeah, i noticed that when i drove to town a week or two ago and passed a dozen or two white ACRT trucks, all with one driver each! And coming out to the Valley at about 10 a.m., so that they’d have few hours of daylight to work in and could return another day… and another day… for more pay and more pay.

guest
Guest
guest
2 years ago
Reply to  guest
Country Joe
Guest
Country Joe
2 years ago

Pacific Graft and Extortion is not our friend…

Migs
Guest
Migs
2 years ago

Personal responsibility is paramount when it comes to protecting your property from fire. We don’t have wireless electrical distribution yet, and underground power isn’t feasible in most cases. I don’t think most realize the quality of life they will be giving up when it comes to the green movement. Remember the oligarchy behind this ever expanding green agenda. They are the biggest violators of environmental/work conditions across the globe. I am an environmentalist at heart, but I see most of this agenda as a massive Trojan horse and tool for absolute control over our lives. They want you in the pod eating bugs, not on your homestead where we belong. Regardless of where you stand in the debate, the end result will be much higher energy prices that will affect the middle class far more and make it increasingly difficult to live autonomous lives with sovereignty over our private property. Don’t play into their hand. I miss the old hippies. The new ones are just pushing Marxism on us all behind an imac from the confines of modern Khrushchyovka. This is leading to American enslavement to the New Technocracy/Corporatocracy.

Gail Samuels
Guest
Gail Samuels
2 years ago

Matt ole rd. through the redwoods to Honeydew has many places where wires cross back and forth. The redwood forest has them underground mostly but many big fir trees are laying down now. Neatly limbed but unaccessable. We have been visited by many surveyers checking out the lines. Asking them to take younger trees they replied they were after larger ones. We’re waiting for the cutters to make sure the left hand knows what the right hand says. Wish they’d replace all the rotten power poles while they’re at it.

Just Sayin
Guest
Just Sayin
2 years ago

Just do us a favor and cut yourselves down, the delusional whining from you people is moronic at best. Sell your cars, quit buying electronics, disconnect your power and gas, don’t cut trees for heat. Stand by your convictions and die this winter!

thetallone
Guest
thetallone
2 years ago
Reply to  Just Sayin

In other words, if you use any form of power, you cannot make any comments about how you want it produced, how much it costs…this comment is moronic at best.

laura cooskey
Guest
laura cooskey
2 years ago
Reply to  Just Sayin

Just so you know, the letter writer is one of the lowest-consumption people i know… she lives the old adage of “Use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without.” And her property is not on PGE.
Not that one should handicap oneself so as to conform to the standards of an ideal world, when there’s still so much work to be done toward those ideals.

Plant more trees
Guest
Plant more trees
2 years ago
Reply to  laura cooskey

My experience with the arborists (Ian and Robert) has been very positive.
Robert checked fifty trees (some 135 foot tall Doug firs) and there will only be a few branches trimmed.

I was told last week and today (supervisor inspection) that if a tree is over fifty years old it is considered a “heritage” tree and will not be cut down if the landowner objects. I understand people fear of losing trees.

The new PG&E standards are six foot clearance on both sides of the power line and unlimited upward (was 16ft).

Of course if a tree has a rotted trunk (fire damage) or infestation (pine borer beetle) that would cause the tree to fall (and break the electrical lines causing a forest fire) then they would remove/cut it down.

I challenge everyone on this blog to a simple challenge:
Plant two fruit trees each year and minimum of ten conifers.

Keep Humboldt Green!

p.s. I have had more tree damage this year from bears
than from PG&E on the flat in Petrolia.

Fndrbndr
Guest
Fndrbndr
2 years ago

Two years ago they enhanced the setbacks from the lines on my property. Cut probably 1,000 trees from saplings to 30″. They wanted to chip the small stuff and leave the big stuff where it fell. I pulled up my easement from 1950. It was a couple paragraphs stating the interaction between the owner and PGE. We argued for two weeks and almost went to court. In the end they decided to follow the easement. I made them broadcast the chips in a thin layer and remove what they could in a chip truck. My neighbor took most of it. The logs were piled neatly in decks. I hired a portable mill to Mill it this spring. We got 1800 1x8x10′ and built 600′ of fencing. We also got the framing for a post and beam 2 story house 32×40, 8×10 beams 8×8 posts, 2×8 joists. The county has a alternative owner builder program, no framing inspection, lumber doesn’t need a grading stamp. In the end PGE spent 300k and I spent 16.

Antichrist
Guest
Antichrist
2 years ago

Pg and e is supposed to clear from easement line to easement line , they had stopped doing that to appease people however when the law suites started flowing in and they lost those cases based upon them not clearing , they decided to follow through with their responsibilities and clear their easements and now people are upset. Maybe when people build their homes and grows out in bfe they should think about the environment before they get power, how many people complaining have developed their property or had power brought into or on it have opted to have underground service when they were paying the material and labor costs themselves? I have been around folks that when they find out the final cost said f that and went with poles and overhead service so before everyone jumps on the bandwagon please make sure you never put your own finances above a few trees yourself

Luke
Guest
Luke
2 years ago

It is not PG&E’s fault.CPUC is forcing them to cut trees and since they have not cut enough trees to their satisfaction ,they put them on enhanced supervision. If they fail they could take over PG&E.

Thirdeye
Guest
Thirdeye
2 years ago

Does this willfully ill-informed fuss budget who thinks she knows everything ever quit? The “giant” redwoods near Redwood Acres were stump sprouts from the 1950s or 1960s, weakly attached to their root systems and presenting an elevated fall hazard to a substation that provides power to hospitals. They were cut under a NTMP (CalFire jurisdiction) that some numbnuts from local government failed to consider before posting a violation notice. And the whole chorus demanding undergrounding of power lines instead of hazard tree removal has no idea what undergrounding involves or when it is appropriate.