Power line may have sparked LA wildfire, lawsuit alleges

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As wildfires across Los Angeles continued to burn, some residents are already starting to point fingers at the local power utility as the culprit. Southern California Edison is facing multiple lawsuits alleging the company is responsible for the deadly Eaton fire that nearly leveled Altadena.

While officials continue to investigate the cause of the fire, at least four suits allege that SCE failed to de-energize power lines, the Los Angeles Times reports. A lawyer for one of the plaintiffs said they filed suit early in an effort to preserve evidence.

“We have video, we have photographs, we have eyewitness accounts.”

Utilities have faced a string of lawsuits in recent years in the wake of devastating wildfires, typically over power lines sparking blazes. SCE alone has had to pay hundreds of millions of dollars in settlements for at least seven previous blazes, according to NPR.

“We have video, we have photographs, we have eyewitness accounts, not just from our clients but other residents that were there and alleged to have seen sparking, to have seen arcing occurring on those lines that subsequently triggered a fire,” Ali Moghaddas, an attorney representing an Altadena resident who lost her home, told NBC.

“Our hearts remain with our communities during the devastating fires in Southern California and we remain committed to supporting them through this difficult time,” SCE spokesperson Jeff Monford told the Los Angeles Times yesterday, adding that the utility still needed to review the complaint. The company claimed last week that power lines near Eaton Canyon “were de-energized well before the reported start time of the fire” as a preventative measure.

At least one suit cites data from Whisker Labs, a company that monitors power grids, that shows a “significant spike” in faults in the area just before the fire broke out. A fault happens when a power line brushes against vegetation, another line, or other materials — an event that can lead to sparks.

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