PG&E Suggested “Prozac” for Those Injured by Smart Meters – SCE Schemed Higher Fees to Force Smart Meters on the Poor Founder and Director, Stop Smart Meters! New e-mails brought to light between Pacific Gas and Electric
(PG&E), Southern California Edison (SCE), and the California Public
Utilities Commission (CPUC) reveal the extent of corruption and backroom
dealing that have characterized the state’s smart meter program.
E-mails reveal that former CPUC President Michael Peevey was aware of health problems caused by smart meters early on in the program,
and that commissioners and staff themselves experienced overcharging
and electronic interference issues with smart meters. Meanwhile,
utilities schemed with regulators behind the scenes to raise opt-out
fees to force people in poverty to stick with the unpopular meters and
prop up the failing multi-billion dollar smart grid program in
California. Former CPUC President Michael Peevey, who retired in December and is
currently the subject of a criminal probe by the U.S. Attorney and State
Attorney General who are investigating allegations of bribery and corruption,
assured the public that the meters were accurate, were no fire hazard,
and no threat to health. A different picture has emerged from initial
research into more than 120,000 e-mails and memos between CPUC and
PG&E. Peevey wrote to PG&E in September of 2010 (emphasis ours):
Peevey says to PG&E, “if it were my decision.” As Sandi Maurer of the EMF Safety Network has pointed out, being the Commissioner in charge of the smart meter opt out proceeding, technically it was his decision.
But that does not appear to be where the true power lies according to
this e-mail exchange. Apparently the “Company” calls the shots and
Commissioners obey. The “other companies” Peevey refers to include GE,
Landis & Gyr, Silver Spring Networks, Wellington Energy, Verizon,
Edelman and others. In another e-mail from 2010, Peevey’s Chief of Staff Carol Brown writes to PG&E:
Brian Cherry, VP of Regulatory Relations at PG&E replies:
Suggesting that people take pharmaceuticals to treat health problems
caused by the company’s meters is unspeakably arrogant, dangerous, and
corrupt. The only thing that has consistently helped people suffering
health effects from EMF has been the removal of smart meters and other nearby wireless transmitters.
And the utilities knew it. But to officially have smart meters removed,
the CPUC under Peevey, required Californians to pay an upfront fee and
monthly charge starting in January 2012. In public, the utilities and CPUC have justified the $75 initially
and $10/ month fees for analog meters (to have the same thing that
customers have always had) by arguing that individuals should pay for the costs they create.
In private however, a different story emerges. In e-mails between
California utilities and Marzia Zafar, CPUC’s current Director of Policy
and Planning, a 15 year utility industry employee including 4 years as a
So Cal Gas lobbyist who was involved in the Bill Devereaux Spy Scandal, Zafar tells the utilities:
Zafar is saying if they eliminate the initial opt out charge for analog meters, up to half of California’s electric customers may refuse smart meters, given all the publicity around safety and inaccuracy problems, and that needs to be avoided at all costs – by ensuring fees remain unaffordable.
This e-mail demonstrates clearly that the opt out fee is intended not
to “cover costs” but to suppress choice, prop up a failing and dangerous
smart grid and penalize people for disobeying a forced, corporate and
undemocratic deployment. Making it more difficult for those in poverty to opt out seemed to be
a particular priority for Southern California Edison, Peevey’s former
employer. Many low-income customers live in apartment buildings where
banks of smart meters expose residents to high levels of pulsed RF
radiation that the World Health Organization considers a Class 2B Carcinogen. “CARE” is a reduced utility rate program for families living below the federal poverty line. In January 2012, Michael Hoover of SCE wrote to Zafar of CPUC and Cherry of PG&E:
Could using financial screws to force hazardous meters on those in poverty be too toxic even for Brian Cherry, who replies:
Then Zafar, like a bully in the playground, chides Cherry for being soft:
In November of 2011, CPUC officials internally circulated a press
release from Stop Smart Meters! that made reference to the fact that PG&E had recently replaced a smart meter with an analog on a woman’s house in Santa Cruz whose family was suffering health impacts from the new microwave-emitting meter. Zafar rebukes PG&E
and orders them to keep smart meters on homes, even after residents
have demanded and given legal notice that they be removed, and even for
those with physician’s letters or those suffering so badly they could no
longer occupy their homes (“this blog” is StopSmartMeters.org):
Despite Zafar’s hard line stance, it turns out she knew from personal
experience that there were serious problems with the meters, showing
how widespread problems with the new meters actually are. She wrote in January 2011 to PG&E:
According to the LA Times,
when a smart meter was installed on former CPUC President Michael
Peevey’s 3118 sq. foot second home in Sea Ranch on the Sonoma County
coast (where Peevey and PG&E’s VP of Regulatory Relations Brian
Cherry shared bottles of Johnny Walker Blue Label according to e-mails)
Peevey’s bills went through the roof and he complained to PG&E in November 2011:
Apparently Peevey wasn’t the only Commissioner who reported significant overcharging. PG&E wrote in an e-mail that two commissioners in one night complained about inaccuracies on their bills after smart meters were installed. In September 2011, after a fire started in a smart metered electrical panel in a Santa Rosa Mall,
Cherry wrote to CPUC Executive Director Paul Clanon. There was not the
slightest concern about whether the smart meters were actually starting
fires, or whether and how the CPUC and/ or PG&E should investigate
this potentially serious public safety hazard. Instead the focus was on spinning the story in the media:
What exactly is meant by “sympathetic” given that hundreds of thousands of smart meters have now been recalled due to fire risk? In November 2013, PG&E was again scolded by Zafar after their
call center staff advised a customer who had problems with smart meters
to (gasp!) contact the CPUC. Sidney Dietz of PG&E responds:
The task of the California Public Utilities Commission’s Consumer Affairs Branch- according to the CPUC’s website- is to: “assist consumers in resolving disputes with their utility company.” Yet, Ms. Zafar chided PG&E for “passing the problem”
when customer service representatives suggested that people with smart
meter problems contact the CPUC. These e-mails confirm what watchdog
groups have been claiming for years—that the CPUC literally has become a satellite office for the investor owned utility and telecom corporations- a “rogue agency” as former CPUC President Loretta Lynch now refers to the agency she once led. While CPUC officials privately grappled with problems caused by smart
meters at their own homes, publicly they denied these problems existed
despite thousands of complaints to the contrary confirming these were systemic problems. An unfair and extortionate opt out policy was approved in violation of the CA Public Utility Code, charging customers hundreds of dollars a year to protect their safety. Thousands still refuse to pay this extortion. Those responsible for this criminal activity should be
prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law, and the California
legislature needs to do its job and hold hearings to get to the bottom
of these criminal relationships that have cost Californians their
lives. All redacted e-mails must immediately be made public. Peevey and company should be put behind bars. Given the lies, recklessness and betrayal of trust that has
characterized the forced smart meter deployment, the extortionate opt
out fee policy should immediately be eliminated and past fees that have
been paid by ratepayers refunded with an apology. Excessive charges paid
by utility customers based on inaccurate smart meter readings must
likewise be refunded. A truly independent investigation into fires,
health hazards, and the calibration and accuracy of smart meters must be
carried out. Smart meters must be recalled and replaced with safe,
electromechanical analog meters NOW. At the end of the day, human life
is more important than protecting this corrupt power structure and the
egos of PG&E and CPUC executives. Special Thanks to the following groups for ongoing collaborative
research efforts that have led to the discovery of these e-mails:
.
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the whole system is rotten to the core.
there was a guy in eugene on the board of the utility company who was obviously sent to push the smart meters through. these people's incomes and assets need to be audited. i prefer the idea of a moneyless society so that there would be no incentive for cheating, stealing, lying, deceiving, etc. and anyone who behaves in those ways would be counseled by a compassionate committee until s/he felt no need to behave in antisocial ways. money + torture > psychopathy. will forward this to friends who work to save us EMSs. :) if it was up to me, most corporations would be dismantled, as they used to be, after they completed their assigned project. love, patricia On Feb 26, 2015, at 11:10 PM, Fog Top [via ES] wrote: > > PG&E Suggested “Prozac” for Those Injured by Smart Meters – SCE Schemed Higher Fees to Force Smart Meters on the Poor > > By Josh Hart, MSc > Founder and Director, Stop Smart Meters! > > http://stopsmartmeters.org/2015/02/26/pge-suggested-prozac-for-those-injured-by-smart-meters-sce-schemed-higher-fees-to-force-smart-meters-on-the-poor/ > > New e-mails brought to light between Pacific Gas and Electric (PG&E), Southern California Edison (SCE), and the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) reveal the extent of corruption and backroom dealing that have characterized the state’s smart meter program. E-mails reveal that former CPUC President Michael Peevey was aware of health problems caused by smart meters early on in the program, and that commissioners and staff themselves experienced overcharging and electronic interference issues with smart meters. Meanwhile, utilities schemed with regulators behind the scenes to raise opt-out fees to force people in poverty to stick with the unpopular meters and prop up the failing multi-billion dollar smart grid program in California. > > Former CPUC President Michael Peevey, who retired in December and is currently the subject of a criminal probe by the U.S. Attorney and State Attorney General who are investigating allegations of bribery and corruption, assured the public that the meters were accurate, were no fire hazard, and no threat to health. A different picture has emerged from initial research into more than 120,000 e-mails and memos between CPUC and PG&E. Peevey wrote to PG&E in September of 2010 (emphasis ours)... > |
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