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Punitive damages add to mounting costs for PacifiCorp鈥檚 role in 2020 wildfires

Ron Evans used what little water was available on his property in Gates to put out flames around their neighbor's house on Sept. 9, 2020.
Ron Evans used what little water was available on his property in Gates to put out flames around their neighbor's house on Sept. 9, 2020.

Two days after jurors in Multnomah County found that the utility PacifiCorp was to blame for wildfires in 2020, they ordered the company to pay punitive damages.

Two days after jurors in Multnomah County found that the utility PacifiCorp was to blame for wildfires in 2020, they ordered the company to pay punitive damages. That鈥檚 in addition to the .

Punitive damages are intended to act as a deterrent to future negligent behavior in civil cases. In PacifiCorp鈥檚 case, Wednesday鈥檚 decision by the jury will add to a pot of money headed toward potentially thousands more people who signed up as part of a class action lawsuit against the company.

The jury鈥檚 decision will require PacifiCorp to pay 0.25 times any economic and non-economic damages applied in the case. For the 17 named plaintiffs, that is likely to raise their owed damages to somewhere near $90 million.

During its closing arguments, PacifiCorp estimated that such a verdict could cost the company $11 billion in total once the thousands of people affected by the fires in the case are compensated. An exact figure could take some time to determine because it is not clear yet how many homes or other property were damaged inside the fire boundaries of the Santiam Canyon, South Obenchain, 242 and Echo Mountain Complex fires.

Still, the growing financial cost to the utility, owned by the multinational conglomerate Berkshire Hathaway, is the largest penalty an Oregon utility has ever faced for its role in starting wildfires.

The plaintiffs鈥 lawyers called the ruling a just outcome for people who had their lives irreversibly changed in Oregon鈥檚 most devastating wildfire season to date.

鈥淭he jury鈥檚 verdict is extremely gratifying after PacifiCorp refused to accept responsibility for any of the damages caused by its incompetence and utter disregard for people and property on Labor Day 2020,鈥 Cody Berne, lead trial attorney for Stoll Berne in the case, said in a statement.

PacifiCorp declined to comment following the verdict.

During its final pleas to the jury not to impose a strict punitive damages ruling, PacifiCorp lawyers argued that the company, specifically through its Oregon business Pacific Power, has been taking action to adapt to more severe wildfire seasons as a result of climate change.

鈥淧acific Power has made ... major investments and continues to make major investments in wildfire mitigation, in renewable green energy,鈥 lawyer Douglas Dixon said Tuesday, 鈥渁nd the way Pacific Power can continue to do that is by having the money and the resources available to make those investments.鈥

Dixon pointed to tree trimming, replacing power lines and other efforts by the company since 2020 to show it has responded to fire risk. While the company employed no meteorologists and had just 12 weather stations in Oregon before the Labor Day 2020 fires, it now has a team of six people forecasting weather and 115 weather stations across the state. He said that kind of work would be halted if jurors levied a heavy penalty, and he speculated the company could go bankrupt.

A similar punitive decision did after its equipment started several fires, including the deadly Camp Fire that destroyed the town of Paradise, California. Since emerging from bankruptcy, some Californians have felt the squeeze of .

鈥淭he truth is that every fire, including those before Labor Day and any after Labor Day, have changed the way Pacific Power operates,鈥 Dixon told jurors Tuesday.

As OPB previously reported, the substantial cost of the court case is . But Bob Jenks of the Oregon Citizens Utility Board, a customer advocacy group, said ratepayers may see their bills rise in coming years as electric utilities invest more to prevent costly fires 鈥 and the court rulings that can come out of them.

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.