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A $117 million settlement has been reached with former PG&E Corp executives and directors who were accused in a lawsuit of lax oversight of the utility’s safety measures prior to the 2017 North Bay and 2018 Camp wildfires.

The settlement was announced on Thursday by the PG&E Fire Victim Trust, which compensates victims of fires that the parent of Pacific Gas & Electric started between 2015 and 2018.

Frank Pitre, a lawyer for the trust, said in a statement that the settlement was among the largest of its type, and that money will be used to pay the “vast majority” of claims held by federal agencies that helped battle the fires.

PG&E had no immediate comment. Settlement payments by corporate officers and directors are often covered by insurance.

The North Bay fires, sometimes called the Wine Country fires, broke out in October 2017 in Napa, Sonoma, and nearby counties. They caused at least 44 deaths, burned more than 245,000 acres, and damaged or destroyed many wineries.

Thirteen months later, the upstate Camp Fire killed 85 people, burned more than 153,000 acres, and destroyed most of Paradise, California, a town that had about 26,000 people. It remains the state’s deadliest and most destructive wildfire.

The trust said the North Bay Fires could have been prevented had PG&E cut off power sooner, while the Camp Fire was caused by PG&E’s failure to inspect and maintain its aging equipment and infrastructure.

PG&E assigned the trust the right to pursue claims against the executives and directors when the utility emerged from Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2020. The trust said it has disbursed $4.9 billion to fire victims.

Copyright 2022 Thomson/Reuters

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