Placerville Newswire
  • Crime
  • Culture
No Result
View All Result
Get Started
Placerville NewsWire
  • Crime
  • Culture
No Result
View All Result
Placerville NewsWire
No Result
View All Result

Why PG&E’s Undergrounding in El Dorado County Is Raising Your Electric Bill

Regulators approve billions for wildfire safety — residents face construction, outages and higher rates as PG&E buries lines across the county.

Cris Alarcon by Cris Alarcon
October 28, 2025
in Government
428 27
0
Why PG&E’s Undergrounding in El Dorado County Is Raising Your Electric Bill

PG&E’s undergrounding

Share on FacebookShare on TwitterWhatsappReddit

By Cris Alarcon, InEDC Writer. (Oct 28, 2025)

Placerville, Calif. — Pacific Gas & Electric Co.’s aggressive program to bury power lines and harden its distribution network across El Dorado County is intended to cut wildfire risk — but the capital cost of that work is a direct driver of higher electricity bills for local customers, regulators and advocates say.

You might also like

Ted Gaines Launches Bid for El Dorado County District 4 Supervisor Seat

Ted Gaines Launches Bid for El Dorado County District 4 Supervisor Seat

May 5, 2026
El Dorado County Treasurer Race Hit by Allegations of Misrepresentation in Candidate Statement

El Dorado County Treasurer Race Hit by Allegations of Misrepresentation in Candidate Statement

May 5, 2026

PG&E reports it completed 51 miles of undergrounding and 142 miles of overhead system upgrades in El Dorado County through 2024, and planned to complete roughly 75 miles of additional undergrounding and 55 miles of upgrades in 2025. The utility’s local project pages and maps also show ongoing construction schedules and neighborhood-level forecasts.

How costs move from trenches to bills
Utilities recover major capital spending through regulatory proceedings. PG&E seeks authorization and cost recovery through its General Rate Case (GRC) filings and wildfire-related proceedings — including reviews of its Wildfire Mitigation Plan (WMP). When the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) or the Office of Energy Infrastructure Safety approves programs or finds spending “prudent,” those dollars are converted into rate base or surcharges and spread among customers over time — a mechanism that turns undergrounding projects into line items on residential and commercial bills.

Recent CPUC and state reports show regulators have authorized wildfire-mitigation-related costs in recent years and continue to evaluate PG&E’s requests in multi-billion-dollar filings. A CPUC report on utility costs and related regulatory materials explains that decisions on projects such as undergrounding and covered conductor were explicitly part of recent GRC approvals and other regulatory reviews.

Stakeholders push competing messages
PG&E emphasizes safety and long-term reliability. “Undergrounding and system upgrades — improving wildfire safety and reliability in your community,” reads the utility’s El Dorado County project page, which details phases from scoping to post-construction and offers local outreach contacts. PG&E says buried lines dramatically reduce the risk of utility-caused ignitions and lessen reliance on Public Safety Power Shutoffs.

But the state’s Public Advocates Office — the consumer advocate within the CPUC — warns the scale and cost of PG&E’s requests threaten affordability. In an April 2025 commentary the office criticized PG&E’s multiple multi-billion-dollar requests for work and said customers are “shouldering the burden” of higher rates, noting PG&E’s electricity rates rose sharply over the last decade. “Customers are being asked to absorb escalating costs while the utility avoids structural changes that would improve long-term performance and affordability,” the office wrote.

Why some consumer groups object
Critics say undergrounding is expensive — often costing millions per mile in rural and mountainous terrain — and that a mix of solutions (targeted burial, covered conductor, stronger poles, vegetation management) can achieve risk reduction with lower costs. Public Advocates and other ratepayer groups have pushed the CPUC to scrutinize cost-benefit analyses and to limit recovery of sweeping, high-cost programs unless clearly justified. Recent CPUC guidance documents and staff proposals underscore that regulators are balancing wildfire risk reduction against affordability, and sometimes approving portions of PG&E’s plans while trimming others.

Local consequence: what El Dorado customers should expect
For customers in El Dorado County, the practical effect is higher rates when large mitigation programs are approved — though the exact monthly impact varies with which costs the CPUC permits, how they are amortized, and whether the commission orders surcharges or spreads costs system-wide. PG&E’s ongoing construction schedules — accessible via local maps and project PDFs — mean residents will continue to see crews, traffic controls and occasional planned outages as projects move forward.

What to watch next
Residents who want to follow the financial and safety tradeoffs should monitor: (1) PG&E’s current GRC filings and WMP updates, (2) CPUC proposed and final decisions tied to recovery of wildfire mitigation costs, and (3) consumer-advocate filings and public comment periods. The CPUC has public participation hearings and posts proposed decisions and fact sheets on its website; the Public Advocates Office posts commentary and analysis of rate impacts.

“Residents want safe power, but they also want bills they can afford,”

said a spokesperson for the Public Advocates Office in published commentary.

“The focus should be on delivering results — not approving unchecked new spending.”

—
Sources: Pacific Gas & Electric Co. (El Dorado undergrounding and maps); California Public Utilities Commission reports and staff documents; California Public Advocates Office commentary. Links to key public documents and maps are available from PG&E’s El Dorado County project page and the CPUC’s public docket pages.

Cris Alarcon

Cris Alarcon

Former Member: Executive Board of Directors, Treasurer, Boys & Girl Club of El Dorado County Western Slope. - Former Member: Board of Directors, Treasurer, Food Bank of El Dorado County. - Opening Team Dealer at Red Hawk Casino - Retried EDC Elections Department Inspector. - Chairman of El Dorado County Charter Review Committee, Youngest Charter Member of the Hangtown Kennel Club. - Political Strategist and Campaign Manager.

Related Stories

Ted Gaines Launches Bid for El Dorado County District 4 Supervisor Seat

Ted Gaines Launches Bid for El Dorado County District 4 Supervisor Seat

by Cris Alarcon
May 5, 2026

Veteran public official Ted Gaines has entered the race for El Dorado County’s District 4 Supervisor seat, highlighting his tax...

El Dorado County Treasurer Race Hit by Allegations of Misrepresentation in Candidate Statement

El Dorado County Treasurer Race Hit by Allegations of Misrepresentation in Candidate Statement

by Cris Alarcon
May 5, 2026

A controversy is unfolding in El Dorado County as questions emerge over a Treasurer candidate’s job title in official voter...

Affirmed Housing Revives Controversial Rescue Apartment Project Under New State Law

Affirmed Housing Revives Controversial Rescue Apartment Project Under New State Law

by Cris Alarcon
May 4, 2026

A rejected Rescue housing project is back—this time backed by new California laws that could force fast-track approval.

Questions Over Party Affiliation and Political Alliations Surface in Emerging El Dorado County Supervisor Race

Questions Over Party Affiliation and Political Alliations Surface in Emerging El Dorado County Supervisor Race

by Cris Alarcon
May 3, 2026

A growing online discussion about the 2026 El Dorado County Board of Supervisors race is drawing attention to questions surrounding...

Recommended

Guided by Fireflies: A Journey Through Glowing Nights Across the Globe

Guided by Fireflies: A Journey Through Glowing Nights Across the Globe

May 7, 2025
Community Honors History at 33rd Annual Fair Play Cemetery Clean-Up

Community Honors History at 33rd Annual Fair Play Cemetery Clean-Up

April 15, 2026

Popular Story

  • Placerville Businessman Steve Stymeist Lists 31-Acre Luxury Compound for $3.25 Million

    Placerville Businessman Steve Stymeist Lists 31-Acre Luxury Compound for $3.25 Million

    978 shares
    Share 391 Tweet 245
  • Body Recovered During Water Rescue at Rock Creek Bridge Area in El Dorado County

    835 shares
    Share 334 Tweet 209
  • El Dorado County Treasurer Race Hit by Allegations of Misrepresentation in Candidate Statement

    723 shares
    Share 289 Tweet 181
  • Ethics Questions Arise in El Dorado County Treasurer-Tax Collector Race

    715 shares
    Share 286 Tweet 179
  • Pollock Pines Park Renovation Project Recommended for $1.4 Million State Grant

    675 shares
    Share 270 Tweet 169
  • Buy JNews
  • Support Forum
  • Pre-sale Question
  • Contact Us

© 2023 Placerville Newswire Commentary is produced by the Placerville Newswire, a private service focusing on Placerville Local Area issues. All conclusions expressed in this publication should be understood to be solely those of the author(s). You may find us in El Dorado County Placerville, CA 95667

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Landing Page
  • Buy JNews
  • Support Forum
  • Pre-sale Question
  • Contact Us

© 2023 Placerville Newswire Commentary is produced by the Placerville Newswire, a private service focusing on Placerville Local Area issues. All conclusions expressed in this publication should be understood to be solely those of the author(s). You may find us in El Dorado County Placerville, CA 95667