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Wednesday, April 24, 2024 | Back issues
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PG&E Cancels $130 Million in Worker Performance Bonuses

Northern California utility Pacific Gas & Electric said it won't award $130 million in employee bonuses because of its recent bankruptcy filing, according to the San Francisco Chronicle.

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Northern California utility Pacific Gas & Electric said it won't award $130 million in employee bonuses because of its recent bankruptcy filing, according to the San Francisco Chronicle.

Flames burn inside a van as the Camp Fire tears through Paradise, Calif., on Thursday, Nov. 8, 2018. Tens of thousands of people fled a fast-moving wildfire Thursday in Northern California, some clutching babies and pets as they abandoned vehicles and struck out on foot ahead of the flames that forced the evacuation of an entire town and destroyed hundreds of structures. (AP Photo/Noah Berger)

Interim chief executive John Simon cited California's deadly wildfires and the company's precarious financial state in an internal email message to workers on Friday, the Chronicle reported. Senior leaders and the company's board of directors supported the decision, he said.

"The more I stepped back and thought about the impacts the wildfires have had on so many people outside our company, regardless of fault, the more I came to believe paying (performance bonuses) in 2018 was not the right thing to do," Simon said in the email.

PG&E had previously said it would not award executive bonuses this year.

The employee bonuses were for 2018 performance and were set to be announced in March. Some 14,000 employees were eligible.

"We're very upset," said John Mader, president of the Engineers and Scientists of California union. I just don't see how it's constructive to confiscate employee compensation, especially the people ... who try and prevent these kind of tragedies."

Mader, whose union represents 3,700 engineers and scientists, said it's unfair to punish workers who had nothing to do with the company's financial performance nor were at fault for the wildfires.

Consumer Watchdog President Jamie Court supported the decision but said it should have been announced earlier.

"I think this is just crisis management," he said. "Clearly, it's the right decision, but it should have been done in the first place, not after a public shaming."

PG&E filed for bankruptcy in January, saying it faced $30 billion in wildfire liability.

Categories / Employment, Energy

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