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To: Richard Mazzarella who wrote (67227)4/6/2001 3:24:02 PM
From: Rarebird  Respond to of 116741
 
Calif. utility seeks Chap. 11 bankruptcy

Friday, April 06, 2001 01:58 PM EDT

SAN FRANCISCO, Apr 06, 2001 (United Press International via COMTEX) -- Pacific
Gas & Electric Company sought bankruptcy protection Friday after executives
decided there was no immediate end in sight to California's electricity crunch.

PG&E, a unit of PG&E Corporation, filed for Chapter 11 reorganization in San
Francisco due to debts totaling around $300 million per month for power
purchases that the company is not allowed to pass on to its customers.

"We chose to file for Chapter 11 reorganization affirmatively because we expect
the court will provide the venue needed to reach a solution, which thus far the
state and the state's regulators have been unable to achieve," said Robert D.
Glynn, Chairman of Pacific Gas and Electric Co. "The regulatory and political
processes have failed us, and now we are turning to the court."

PG&E and the state's other largest utility, Southern California Edison, have
been on the brink of bankruptcy for the past several months due to wholesale
power prices that have risen well above the retail price they are allowed to
charge their customers under the state's deregulation rules.

The mounting unpaid tab crippled the utilities' credit and forced the state to
step in to buy electricity on behalf of the companies.

Glynn said that PG&E had been waiting for the state to come up with a workable
plan to increase the cash flow into the utilities' coffers. However, he accused
the state of dragging its feet to the point that the window of opportunity to
avoid bankruptcy had closed.

"Statements by the governor and other public officials since last September gave
us reason to believe that a solution could be reached outside the context of
Chapter 11 that would restore the utility's financial viability and enable it to
meet its financial obligations equitably," Glynn said. "These statements have
not been followed up by constructive actions, and a reorganization in Chapter 11
is now the most feasible means of resolution."

Gov. Gray Davis announced Thursday evening he was backing a proposed retail rate
hike for Edison and PG&E that will average more than 25 percent and is targeted
at consumers that use higher-than-average amounts of power.

--

(Reported by Hil Anderson, Chief Energy Correspondent, in Los Angeles.)

Copyright 2001 by United Press International.

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