Comment by aidenn0

Comment by aidenn0 8 days ago

2 replies

The camp fire was caused by a failed hook on lines where similar hooks showed extreme wear-and-tear, despite PG&E claiming to have inspected them recently. It's not like we just decided to say it was PG&E's fault; their inspections were clearly missing important deferred maintenance.

If the fire had been caused by someone without the funds to pay for damages (e.g. a homeless encampment (Day Fire) or college students improperly extinguishing an illegal bonfire (Tea fire)), then there might be criminal charges, but insurance companies will be on the hook.

tekknik 8 days ago

So some random person lost their job because they didn’t actually do the inspection and now everybody in northern CA pays higher rates. Do you see what you did there? Who do you think won here?

People will not start doing proper inspections until you punish the individual harshly, instead of the company.

  • aidenn0 8 days ago

    My point was that twofold:

    1. torts often fail to make people whole, and even when they do, they aren't always a good deterrent.

    2. The comment I was replying to implied that SCE was a scapegoat for the Camp Fire; all evidence strongly suggests that this is not the case.