Los Angeles County sued Southern California Edison and parent company Edison International on Thursday to recover more than $100 million in costs and damages from a wind-driven wildfire that may have been sparked by one of the utility’s wires.
“This legal action is an important and essential step toward accountability and recovery,” county Supervisor Sheila Kuehl said.
It’s the latest lawsuit against SoCal Edison since a fire that started Nov. 8 charred more than 150 square miles, destroyed 1,643 buildings, damaged another 360 structures and killed three people. Numerous homes remain at risk of mudslides.
The official cause of the fire remains under investigation but the utility told the state Public Utilities Commission in December that an electrical outage before the fire may have been caused by a guy wire and a jumper wire making contact. Guy wires are used to provide pole support and jumpers connect two energized lines.
The fire raced from Ventura County through the western side of Los Angeles County until it was stopped by the ocean on the coast of Malibu. That municipality has said it plans its own lawsuit.