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PG&E Bankruptcy Disclosure Prompted by New California Law

Submitted by jhartgen@abi.org on

PG&E Corp. was prompted to disclose its intent to file for chapter 11 by a new California law that includes a novel provision requiring utilities give employees a 15-day heads-up before seeking protection and freezes for at least six months the utility’s ability to potentially layoff workers after filing for bankruptcy, WSJ Pro Bankruptcy reported. The law, which took effect Jan. 1, is intended to provide employees, creditors and state regulators “the maximum amount of transparency” about a coming bankruptcy, said Paul Payne, spokesman for California Sen. Bill Dodd (D-Napa). The provisions were included in a sweeping bill Sen. Dodd introduced last year aimed at protecting employees and improving how utilities and the state government respond to wildfires, which have devastated California. The law “ensures that employers and state regulators aren’t caught off guard by a bankruptcy,” Payne said. The state law also prohibits utilities such as PG&E from laying off its rank-and-file employees or reducing their wages or benefits for 180 days after filing for bankruptcy. Any request to reduce the company’s workforce would need to be reviewed by the California agency regulating privately owned utilities, according to a Senate analysis of the law from August.