Restoration efforts began this morning and will continue until tonight when all affected customers are expected to be restored.

PG&E Continues Shutting Off Power for Safety | PG&E

June 10, 2026

PG&E begins shutting off power for safety

PG&E is monitoring a weather pattern that could lead to targeted power shutoffs for about 5,000 customers in portions of nine counties in the North Bay, North Coast, and Western Sacramento Valley regions to reduce wildfire risk. The potential weather pattern is forecasted to enter our service area on Wednesday morning and could persist through Thursday.  This would be the second Public Safety Power Shutoff (PSPS) of 2026.

Counties 

  • Colusa: 910 customers, 41 Medical Baseline 
  • Glenn: 987 customers, 31 Medical Baseline 
  • Lake: 83 customers, 6 Medical Baseline 
  • Napa: 905 customers, 43 Medical Baseline 
  • Solano: 104 customers, 9 Medical Baseline 
  • Sonoma: 632 customers, 29 Medical Baseline 
  • Sutter: 307 customers, 7 Medical Baseline 
  • Tehama: 1,147 customers, 97 Medical Baseline 
  • Yolo: 29 customers, 0 Medical Baseline 

Tribal Areas 

  • Cortina Rancheria: 8 customers, 0 Medical Baseline 
  • Grindstone Rancheria: 45 customers, 6 Medical Baseline

Please see the latest Currents article for more information https://www.pge.com/en/newsroom/currents/safety/pg-e-monitoring-weather-that-could-prompt-targeted-power-shutoff.html

PG&E begins shutting off power for safety

Date: June 10, 2026

UPDATE: 2 p.m., Wednesday, June 10

After monitoring weather conditions and ground conditions overnight, PG&E began de-energizing targeted areas at 2 p.m. on Wednesday, June 10. The first wave of de-energization occurred in Colusa, Glenn, Tehama counties, and Grindstone Rancheria.

Additional areas could be de-energized throughout the day, based on how the weather pattern develops. This PSPS could affect approximately 5,000 customers in 9 counties in PG&E’s service area.

Support for impacted customers

Customers can look up their address online to find out if their location is being monitored for the potential safety shutoff at pge.com/pspsupdates.

PG&E is opening 9 Community Resource Centers (CRC) in heavily affected counties. Searchable information on CRC locations is available online at PG&E’s Outage Center.

During a PSPS, Community Resource Centers offer community members access to resources, including:   

  • A safe, climate-controlled location to meet their basic power needs, such as charging medical equipment and electronic devices   
  • Up-to-date information about the PSPS 
  • Water, snacks, blankets, ADA-accessible restrooms and other essential items to reduce hardships to our customers 

More information on PSPS 

PG&E initiates PSPS when the fire-weather forecast is severe enough that people’s safety, lives, homes and businesses may be in danger of wildfires. Our overarching goal is to stop catastrophic wildfires by proactively turning off power in targeted areas when extreme weather threatens our electric grid.    

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UPDATE: 11 a.m., Wednesday, June 10

PG&E continues to monitor weather conditions for a possible Public Safety Power Shutoff affecting as many as 5,000 customers in portions of nine counties and two tribal areas.

Winds have come in weaker than forecasted and are below the speeds that would trigger a shutoff. We will continue to monitor wind speeds and humidity levels and notify customers if it becomes necessary to turn off power.

It is possible that a second period of adverse weather forecasted for this evening could make shutoffs necessary.

Customers can look up their address online to find the latest conditions for their location at pge.com/pspsupdates.  

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PG&E is monitoring a weather pattern that could lead to targeted power shutoffs for about 5,000 customers in portions of nine counties in the North Bay, North Coast, and Western Sacramento Valley regions to reduce wildfire risk. The potential weather pattern is forecasted to enter our service area on Wednesday morning and could persist through Thursday.  This would be the second Public Safety Power Shutoff (PSPS) of 2026.

Given the high temperature, high wind forecast, and dry vegetation conditions, PG&E has sent advanced notifications beginning on Monday evening to customers in targeted areas where PSPS could occur. The determination of whether to proactively shut off power, as well as locations of outage durations, will depend on the weather.    

Precipitation fell across portions of our territory yesterday. While measurable amounts fell in some locations, specifically along the North Coast, the nature of PG&E’s service territory means other areas sit in what is known as a «rain shadow,» where topography blocks precipitation from reaching them. Unfortunately, the area we are currently considering for PSPS received miniscule amounts of rain, if any. By Wednesday morning, dry and breezy conditions will have erased any gains in dead-fuel moisture that we have seen and fuels will be critically dry and receptive to fire.

 The potential PSPS event could affect approximately 5,000 customers in parts of nine counties and two tribal areas. The potentially impacted counties are Colusa, Glenn, Lake, Napa, Sonoma, Sutter, Tehama, Solano and Yolo. The federally recognized Tribes that may be impacted are Cortina Rancheria and Grindstone Rancheria. 

Support for impacted customers

 PG&E will work with local officials to open Community Resource Centers in heavily affected counties. Searchable information on CRC locations will be available online at PG&E’s Outage Center

During a PSPS, Community Resource Centers offer community members access to resources, including:  

  • A safe, climate-controlled location to meet their basic power needs, such as charging medical equipment and electronic devices
  • Up-to-date information about the PSPS
  • Water, snacks, blankets, ADA-accessible restrooms and other essential items to reduce hardships to our customers
  • Grab-and-go bags with essential items such as water, snacks, and a PSPS information card with additional PSPS resources including where to find estimated restoration times

More information

 PG&E initiates PSPS when the fire-weather forecast is severe enough that people’s safety, lives, homes and businesses may be in danger of wildfires. Our overarching goal is to stop catastrophic wildfires by proactively turning off power in targeted areas when extreme weather threatens our electric grid.  

 Customers can look up their address online to find out if their location is being monitored for the potential safety shutoff at pge.com/pspsupdates

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