Save East Bay Hills
  • Home
  • The Clear Cutting Plan
  • The Poisoning Plan
  • Take Action
  • Newsletter
  • PG&E
  • EBMUD
  • Imperiling the Public
  • Fire Abatement?
  • Eucalyptus
  • Biological Xenophobia
  • Experts
  • Debunking Misinformation
  • Donate
  • Map and Photos of Forests
  • Climate Change
  • Noise
  • Alternative Proposal
  • Goodbye Forestland!
  • Fraud
  • Information Sources
  • Statement in Opposition
  • Learn More
  • About
  • Contact
Picture
These are "before" and "after" photos of Panoramic Place in the Berkeley Hills. These trees, near transmission lines, were cut down. It was not done for "wildfire mitigation" as falsely claimed.

Cutting them down turns fire-abating trees into dried, flammable kindling, exacerbates climate change, destroys habitat, and ruins property values. It is also ugly.

You can stand up to PG&E and others who want to cut down trees.

Picture
Picture
PG&E has embarked on an environmentally destructive plan to cut down healthy trees in neighborhoods throughout its 100,000 miles of transmission lines. In the San Francisco East Bay hills, for instance, there are some streets where the tallest trees on virtually every lot will be destroyed or radically cut back, devastation that will render such neighborhoods unrecognizable after PG&E crews sweep through with chainsaws to destroy the very thing that makes such neighborhoods so desirable: their natural beauty.

In the place of soaring trees, large canopies, shade, and habitat for local wildlife, PG&E will leave tree stumps and empty sky, with many remaining trees being profoundly hacked without regard for beauty or symmetry. Not only will this loss take an emotionally devastating toll on many local residents, but by degrading landscaping and destroying property value-enhancing trees, it will also negatively impact what is for many residents their single greatest asset: their homes. 

Instead of allowing PG&E to kill trees, destroy local beauty and animal habitat, harm the environment, and degrade property values, the California Public Utilities Commission must force PG&E to eliminate the danger of fire by upgrading its equipment and putting lines underground. PG&E is sitting on over $1 billion in credit reserves to make these necessary upgrades. Instead of following the lead of other public utility agencies in California such as San Diego Gas & Electric and Southern California Edison which are already doing so, PG&E is determined to force local homeowners to bear the burdens associated with their attempt to limit liability from their own faulty and inadequate equipment instead.  

​On behalf of the millions of Californians served by PG&E, we demand that the California Public Utility Commission immediately suspend the planned destruction of healthy trees growing on our properties and on our collectively owned public lands and demand that PG&E use its considerable financial resources to protect both the environment and public safety by upgrading their antiquated infrastructure instead.

Read our letter to the CA Public Utilities Commission in opposition by
clicking here.

If trees on your property, your neighbor's property, or near your home have been tagged for destruction, you have rights. Download our flyer to learn what you can do to stop them by clicking here.

Sign the petition to stop this plan by clicking here. 

Update: PG&E's flawed plan calls for cutting down hundreds of thousands of trees in 2019, rather than upgrading its equipment: "PG&E forecasts removing approximately 375,000 trees in 2019 that have a higher potential to fail including at-risk species in addition to dead, dying or other hazard trees." 

Picture
Why is PG&E cutting down trees on streets where power lines will soon be underground?

​A three-part plan to underground wires in the Piedmont Pines neighborhood of Oakland is underway (despite the fact that some trees on these streets are still tagged for destruction). Phase 1 has been completed. Phase 2 (Chelton corridor) is expected to be completed by 2020 (if not sooner). Streets for this project include parts or all of Chelton, Girvin, Carisbrook, Ascot, Chatsworth, Darnby, Rydal Ct. and parts of Skyline. Phase 3 (Castle corridor) will begin as Phase 2 work wraps up. Phase 3 streets include all or parts of Castle Drive, Castle Park Way, Mastlands Drive, and Mountaingate Way.
Map of PG&E Wire Undergrounding
File Size: 594 kb
File Type: pdf
Download File

© 2020. All Rights Reserved.

SaveEastBayHills.org