PG&E has been caught several times over the years "diverting" millions from one intended expenditure to another. Punishment seldom amounts to much. Sometimes death for others becomes the result of diverting the money from the intended expenditure. Another California utility has also be caught doing this in the past, again with almost no penalty.
"Diverting" can be read as stealing with no loss of information. Gene On Jan 13, 2012, at 9:40 AM, c b wrote: > http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=%2Fc%2Fa%2F2012%2F01%2F13%2FMNPA1MONMU.DTL > > > PG&E broke laws before San Bruno, state finds > > Jaxon Van Derbeken, Chronicle Staff Writer > > Friday, January 13, 2012 > > Pacific Gas and Electric Co. broke numerous state and federal safety > laws leading up to the San Bruno gas-pipeline disaster, including > failing to inspect the line for flaws after twice spiking the pipe's > gas level beyond the legal limit, state regulators said Thursday. > > Had PG&E conducted an inspection using high-pressure water, as called > for by federal law, it would doubtless have discovered that the > pipeline running under San Bruno was substandard, the California > Public Utilities Commission said. That discovery would have averted > the 2010 explosion that killed eight people and destroyed 38 homes, > the commission said in a report on the disaster and the factors that > caused it. > > The five commission members voted unanimously at their meeting in San > Francisco to adopt the findings of the 171-page staff report, the > first step in a process that could result in PG&E being fined hundreds > of millions of dollars for safety violations. > > The commission issued its findings less than six months after the > National Transportation Safety Board took it to task for its lax > oversight of PG&E's gas operations before the explosion of the 30-inch > gas-transmission line Sept. 9, 2010. > No stress on safety > > In finding PG&E to blame for the blast, the federal board found that > the company had a dysfunctional safety culture that had led it to > ignore problems on the San Bruno line and elsewhere in its gas system. > Its inspection program was inadequate, its record keeping was shoddy > and its emergency response the night of the explosion was sluggish and > chaotic, federal investigators said. > > The PUC report echoed many of those findings in identifying a series > of laws it said PG&E had broken. At the core, it said, was a failure > by PG&E's management "to foster a culture that valued safety over > profits." > > The commission found that PG&E had violated industry standards when it > installed the San Bruno pipe in short sections in 1956 - the metal was > weaker than it should have been, and the pipe was held together with > incomplete welds, the state noted. The company's pipeline integrity > management program, record keeping and emergency response all violated > the law, the utilities commission said. > Singling out spiking > > State regulators went beyond the federal safety board, however, in > pointing a finger at PG&E's intentional spiking of gas levels on the > pipeline, a practice The Chronicle revealed last year. > > In a series of stories, The Chronicle revealed that PG&E twice boosted > the pressure on the San Bruno line - in 2003 and in 2008 - in what the > company now acknowledges was a misguided effort to preserve gas > capacity under pipeline safety rules. It soon halted the practice and > has now abandoned it. > Engineers' conclusion > > State engineers concluded that the company broke federal pipeline > safety laws when it first boosted the pressure in December 2003 to > just above the maximum allowed pressure of 400 pounds per square inch. > > Regulators determined that the first spiking was essentially an effort > to get around federal rules aimed at capping pressure on an urban > pipeline at the highest point at which it had operated over a > five-year period. > > At the time of the first spiking, PG&E knew the San Bruno pipe > qualified as an urban line, even though it waited until the next year > to formally recognize it as such. The state commission said PG&E > should have known better than to spike first and declare the line to > be in an urban area later. > > Under federal law, the fact that PG&E spiked the line slightly above > the legal maximum should have triggered an inspection for any damage > caused by the spike itself, the state said. Such a test would have > exposed the faulty weld that ruptured in 2010, causing the explosion. > > The report also said PG&E had violated a state order when it recorded > over a video taken in its Brentwood gas center control room the night > of the disaster. > > "PG&E explained that the videotape was retained on a digital video > recorder that was part of the closed-circuit electronic security > system and was overwritten after approximately 60 days when it became > full," the report said. The utilities commission had ordered PG&E to > preserve all evidence related to the San Bruno explosion. > > "By erasing a digital video recording made during the incident at its > Brentwood control room, PG&E destroyed potentially relevant > information," the report concluded. > PG&E pledges changes > > In a statement, PG&E President Chris Johns said the utility took the > findings "very seriously, and we will cooperate fully with the > investigation." > > "It is clear that PG&E's past gas operations practices were not what > they should have been," Johns said. "We have admitted these > shortcomings, and we are committed to raising the level of pipeline > safety to new, higher standards." > > He outlined several "fundamental changes" the company made after the > disaster to make sure its "operations are as safe as possible," > including pressure testing, installation of automatic shutoff valves, > pressure reductions on some pipelines and improved emergency response > plans. > > "We recognize that there is much more work ahead to be the company our > customers expect us to be," Johns said. > > Mike Florio, the utilities commission member who oversees gas safety > rule-making proceedings, welcomed the report as a critical step in > assuring safety. > > "This is the end of the beginning," he said. > > The penalties against PG&E could be enormous. They are likely to far > exceed the $38 million the company was fined for a 2008 gas explosion > in Rancho Cordova (Sacramento County), the biggest gas-related penalty > the state has levied against the company. > > "When you have violations covering years and years, and the penalty is > per day ... you could name any number," Florio said. "But the idea of > all of this is to determine a just and reasonable fine. > > "The most important thing of all," Florio said, "is to change the way > this company operates." > > E-mail Jaxon Van Derbeken at [email protected]. > > http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2012/01/13/MNPA1MONMU.DTL > > This article appeared on page A - 1 of the San Francisco Chronicle > _______________________________________________ > pen-l mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l _______________________________________________ pen-l mailing list [email protected] https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l
