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star.gif PG&E: Blackout at Just For You restaurant

BREAKING NEWS: PG&E electricity goes out at a restaurant just four blocks or so from the Potrero Hill power plant

By Bruce B. Brugmann

And so about 2 p.m. this afternoon (Thursday, 2/5/09), I walked in to the Just For You restaurant, just four blocks or so from the Potrero Hill power plant in the heart of Dogpatch. I wondered if PG&E had known I was coming in for my regular lunch of fried oysters.

For lights were out, the place was empty, and the proprietor, the normally jolly Arienne Landry, was sitting disconsolately in the corner with some friends and workers.

Arienne said that the electricity was off in the whole area and that PG&E had told someone who called that it would be back on at 3 p.m. "But they always say they can't guarantee power," she said, shaking her head at her shortened, expensive lunch hour. I asked if PG&E know I was coming. Arienne laughed.

I asked how much she was out in money. She said about $200 to $300. Arienne, who was reported in the Potrero View as a possible candidate for district supervisor, said she needed the money and would write to PG&E and ask for a reduction in her PG&E bill or other form of compensation. She said she would also copy the California Public Utilities Commission, the SF Board of Supervisors, and the Small Business Commission.
She said she would also ask the CPUC, the board, and the SBC to do a study of PG&E's treatment of San Francisco restaurants and other small businesses on service, reliability, rates, and collection policies.

It looks to me as if she has a good and timely issue. PG&E is a notorious no or slow pay for damages to small business, but the company is quick and tough as hell on small businesses that are slow pay, which many are these days. We get lots of complaints at the Guardian about PG&E hardball policies on small business and on their customers.

Now more than ever, PG&E should be giving a break to small businesses and not shove them against the wall on compensation for blackouts and slow pay and other increasing small business concerns.

We'll follow Arienne's request for compensation for damages. And we urge other small business people and their customers/residents to email us their problems with PG&E service and rates. There's no reason, except for PG&E resistance, that the CPUC and SF shouldn't start monitoring how PG&E treats our local small businesses. More: they should provide ombudsperson help during these tough times.

Meanwhile, I must report that the power at Just For You did go back on a few minutes before 3 p.m. And I did get my usual lunch of fried oysters with lots of red cajun sauce. They were better than ever today. B3, who sees from my office window the fumes of the Potrero Hill plant, pumping poisons into the city every minute of every day, courtesy of PG&E and Hearst journalism

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Comments (2)

Tony Gantner:

Bruce: Your piece was a great literary read, and as well describes a problem that has been experienced by virtually every small business in the City. There should be an online claims procedure provided by P,G&E that takes no more than a half hour to fill out, and without bureaucratic delays in responding to such claims. If P,G&E is concerned about the veracity of such claims for lost revenue, an online digital signature by the small business owner made under penalty of perjury would be an effective way to mitigate against any inflated claims.
I am taking the liberty of sending your excellent blog onto two Small Business Commissioners who are both members of the North Beach Merchants Association, an organization which I helped found.
Glad to see you finally got your fried oysters to eat for lunch! Let's hope that in the near future those oysters will be cooked by 100% clean energy, delivered over a municipally-owned power grid.
Regards--Tony Gantner

bruce b brugmann:


Tony,

Thanks for your good point. Another key point is that, if we had public power as federal law mandates (because of the Raker Act and building the dam in Hetch Hetchy Valley), the city would have $300 million each year or so to deal with the structural budget crisis. More: PG&E would not not be able to yank upwards of $650 million or so out of the economy in high rates. PG&E more than any other company is responsible for our annual budget crisis, yet it is working with its allies to knock out any vestige of clean, cheap public and community choice aggregation power. Alas. B3

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