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Pacific Power potentially wants its customers to pay $90M in wildfire liability

A substation owned by PacifiCorp is shown in this file photo.
Amelia Templeton
A substation owned by PacifiCorp is shown in this file photo.

In a filing Thursday with the Oregon Public Utility Commission, PacifiCorp asked its regulators to allow it to defer any costs related to wildfire liability through June 2024. That would allow the company the option to add those costs to customer rates in the future.

PacifiCorp has asked state regulators to let it potentially pass the cost of damages it owes for wildfires in 2020 onto its customers.

The utility provides electricity to much of Southern Oregon and Northern California, including Medford, Grants Pass, Klamath Falls, Roseburg, Mount Shasta and Yreka. Ashland has its own municipal power utility, and is not served by Pacificorp.

with the Oregon Public Utility Commission, PacifiCorp asked the regulatory body to allow the utility to defer any costs related to wildfire liability through June 2024. That would give the company the option to add those costs to customer rates in the future.

Earlier this week, a Multnomah County jury found PacifiCorp owes around related to four wildfires after its Oregon business, Pacific Power, had a hand in causing or worsening those fires on Labor Day weekend 2020.

鈥淭he deferred accounting application enables (PacifiCorp) to preserve its ability to seek (wildfire cost) recovery in the future in the event the outcome could potentially impact the financial stability of the Company, which would result in higher costs to customers,鈥 attorneys for PacifiCorp wrote regulators.

A class action lawsuit against the company for its role in the wildfires also remains ongoing, and jurors have found PacifiCorp could be liable for punitive damages to potentially thousands of Oregonians who lost property in the Echo Mountain Complex, Santiam Canyon, South Obenchain and 242 fires. The company has estimated those costs could reach into the billions of dollars.

PacifiCorp鈥檚 concerns about its financial future are not entirely unfounded. In 2019, California鈥檚 largest utility, Pacific Gas & Electric, went bankrupt after it paid out billions in lawsuits related to the deadly wildfires it caused.

鈥淧acifiCorp has not requested recovery and is not requesting the commission take action at this time,鈥 the company said in a written statement. 鈥淭his is a backstop to preserve our ability to take action in the event there is impact to the financial stability of the company.鈥

Oregon鈥檚 Citizens鈥 Utility Board, a nonprofit that advocates for utility customers at the state level, called it 鈥渙utrageous鈥 that PacifiCorp wants to potentially pass its legal costs on to Oregonians.

鈥淐ustomers pay the costs of prudent, reasonable utility operations,鈥 said Bob Jenks, the CUB executive director. 鈥淭he court found that Pacific Power was reckless and grossly negligent, and included punitive damages meant to punish the company, not customers. Customers should not pay a dime of these costs.鈥

The state Public Utility Commission, which approves rates and regulates utilities in Oregon, would need to approve PacifiCorp鈥檚 request before it can defer the wildfire liability costs. Citizens鈥 Utility Board said Friday that it intends to fight that approval.

The organization also noted that Pacific Power customers already experienced a rate increase this year for costs related to wildfire mitigation. Given PacifiCorp鈥檚 plans to spend more money in coming years on similar efforts, it鈥檚 likely customers will already see their bills rise before any costs related to the 2020 Labor Day fire litigation are added.

This story may be updated.
Copyright 2023 Oregon Public Broadcasting. To see more, visit .

Ryan Haas has been with Oregon Public Broadcasting since 2013. His work has won numerous awards, including two National Magazine Award nominations for the podcast "Bundyville." Prior to working at OPB, Haas worked at newspapers in Illinois, Florida, Oregon and the Caribbean.