Found in Seattle Japantown
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Found in Seattle Japantown

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pg&e workers photographed by merton doss, 1997.
some of you have never seen the 2000 film erin brockovich about a paralegal who helps the town of hinkley, ca sue the electric company that poisoned their ground water and gave them and their kids cancer and it shows
PG&E lawyer: Counselors. Let's be honest, here. Twenty million dollars is more money than these people have ever dreamed of.
Erin: See, now that pisses me off. First of all, since the demurrer, we have more than 400 plaintiffs. And let's be honest, we all know there are more out there. They may not be the most sophisticated people but they do know how to divide, and $20,000,000 isn't shit when you split it between them.
Second of all, these people don't dream about being rich. They dream about being able to watch their kids swim in a pool without worrying that they'll have to have a hysterectomy at at the age of 20 like, Rosa Diaz, a client of ours; or have their spine deteriorate, like Stan Bloom, another client of ours.
So before you come back here with another lame-ass offer, l want you to think real hard about what your spine is worth, Mr. Walker; or what you expect someone to pay you for your uterus, Miss Sanchez. Then you take out your calculator and you multiply that number by a hundred. Anything less than that is a waste of our time.
By the way, we had that water brought in special for you folks. Came from a well in Hinkley.
PG&E lawyer, refusing to drink the contaminated groundwater her clients admitted to polluting in 1987: I think this meeting's over.
erin brockovich full film on daily motion
you're welcome
Erin Brockovich was born in 1960.
She married young, divorced twice before she turned 30, and was raising three children on her own. She didn’t have a college degree, and she wasn’t building a career in any traditional sense. She was simply trying to survive, taking whatever work she could find—retail jobs, waitress shifts, anything that kept food on the table and the lights on.
In 1991, she needed a job badly and was hired as a file clerk at a small California law firm, Masry & Vititoe.
Her work was ordinary. She answered phones, filed documents, made copies, and kept things organized. It wasn’t glamorous, and it wasn’t meant to be.
Then, in 1993, she came across a case file that didn’t look ordinary at all.
It involved a real estate dispute in a small desert town called Hinkley. Inside the file were medical records. That immediately raised a question in her mind.
Why would a property case include medical information?
She started reading more carefully.
Then she noticed something else. There wasn’t just one case. There were many. All tied to the same town. And all pointing to the same disturbing pattern.
Cancer. Tumors. Serious illnesses. Miscarriages. Too many to ignore in such a small community.
Erin began making phone calls to residents in Hinkley. Their stories lined up. Families were dealing with cancer at unusually high rates. Children were getting sick. People were experiencing unexplained health problems that seemed to affect entire households.
Something was clearly wrong.
Then she came across letters from Pacific Gas and Electric, known as PG&E. The company had been communicating with residents, claiming the water was safe and even offering to test private wells.
On the surface, everything looked reassuring.
But one detail stood out.
The letters referred to chromium in the water and described it as chromium-3, a form considered harmless and even naturally occurring.
Erin didn’t have a scientific background, but she decided to dig deeper. She went to the library and started researching.
That’s when she learned something critical.
There are two forms of chromium. Chromium-3 is relatively safe. Chromium-6, however, is highly toxic and has been linked to cancer and severe health problems.
That discovery changed everything.
She continued digging and eventually found internal PG&E documents. Among them were engineering memos that told a very different story from what residents had been told.
The company wasn’t guessing. It wasn’t uncertain.
They knew.
From 1952 to 1966, PG&E had used chromium-6 in cooling towers to prevent corrosion. The wastewater from this process was dumped into unlined ponds, allowing it to seep directly into the ground and contaminate the groundwater.
Roughly 370 million gallons of contaminated water entered the Hinkley water system over time.
And people had been drinking it for decades.
Internal records showed that company engineers were aware of the risks as early as 1965. The warnings existed. The evidence was there. But nothing was done to stop it or inform the public.
Erin decided to go to Hinkley herself.
She knocked on doors, sat with families, and listened to their experiences. The stories were heartbreaking but consistent. Cancer diagnoses at young ages. Brain tumors. Repeated miscarriages. Nosebleeds. Illness after illness, all pointing in the same direction.
She began asking a simple question.
Do you want to take action?
More than 600 residents said yes.
PG&E responded with powerful legal teams and a strong defense. They argued that the illnesses were caused by other factors such as lifestyle, diet, or coincidence, anything except contaminated water.
But as the cases progressed, the pressure on the company grew.
Eventually, arbitration rulings led to major payouts in early cases, and PG&E began to understand the scale of what they were facing. The potential liability exceeded a billion dollars.
On July 2, 1996, the company agreed to settle.
The amount was 333 million dollars, at the time one of the largest direct-action settlements in U.S. history.
Roughly 650 people shared the settlement, depending on their medical conditions and level of exposure. Erin received a bonus of 2.5 million dollars from the law firm.
Years later, her story reached Hollywood. The film Erin Brockovich brought her work to a global audience, with Julia Roberts portraying her and winning an Academy Award for the role.
The case also had a wider impact. It led to increased testing of water systems across the United States, revealing chromium-6 contamination in multiple states and raising concerns about millions of potential exposures.
In Hinkley, the consequences were lasting. PG&E purchased properties, relocated residents, and the town slowly emptied over time. By 2016, it had become nearly a ghost town.
Cleanup efforts are still ongoing. Some areas still rely on bottled water. The environmental damage did not disappear with the settlement.
But it all began with a file clerk who noticed something unusual in a stack of papers.
No law degree. No authority. Just curiosity, persistence, and the refusal to ignore what didn’t add up.
I feel like more people should be talking about utility companies implementing repeated and exorbitant price hikes for the sake of increasing shareholder profits

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Every minute of my 2023 has been spent without electricity so far.
But at least there's nothing going on that would interest a historian like, say, a Papal funeral being presided over by another Pope for the first time in historical memory. Or a rare contested election for Speaker of the House that is not only a disastrous, newsworthy mess for the incoming Republican majority (as I immediately predicted following Election Day in November), but has featured the added bonus of spineless Kevin McCarthy having his ambitions crushed and getting publicly humiliated over-and-over again.
It's a good thing I'm not missing anything like that, right?
I guess I should feel lucky since Pacific Gas & Electric's legendary incompetence and notorious customer "service" hasn't killed anyone this time around. But there's plenty of time for that to still happen if PG&E's repairs continue at their current pace.
Happy New Year!
So I live like, smack in the middle of the California wildfires-mostly-caused-by-PG&E-negligence zone, and PG&E's solution to the problem while they slowly, slowly, slowly, allegedly, replace all the old lines and pipes and shit that haven't been replaced in 70 or more years *screams internally* is for this safety shutoff thing. Basically, if a branch or idk a piece of garbage touches a powerline wrong, the whole thing shuts off. Then they come out, investigate, turn it all back on.
This is to prevent wildfires. I get it. It's happened three times so far this month and the month is barely halfway through and we have the rest of our long summer (through October, usually) to go.
*screams externally*
Pacific Gas & Electric - Are You Ready? (1972)