The Fire Victim Trust was established in 2020 from the bankruptcy of PG&E to offer an efficient and equitable claim review process to compensate Fire Victims for damages caused by the 2015 Butte, 2017 North Bay, and 2018 Camp Fires.

Secondary

Helping people rebuild their lives

The Fire Victim Trust was established in 2020 from the bankruptcy of PG&E to offer an efficient and equitable claim review process to compensate Fire Victims for damages caused by the 2015 Butte, 2017 North Bay, and 2018 Camp Fires. Secondary

Latest Progress

Last updated on Nov 27, 2024

Total Payments and Awards

71,802 (100%)

40,416 (100%)

40,412 (99%)

$19.55 billion

$13.60 billion

Submitted Claims Questionnaires

CQs submitted as of 11/27/24 (40,416)

Claimants with Submitted Claims Questionnaires (CQs)

71,802

Submitted CQs

40,416

Claims Asserted

254,827

Claimants with Determination Notices

71,802 (100%)

CQs with Determination Notices Issued

40,416 (100%)

CQs with Accepted Determination Notices

40,412 (99%)

Paid Claimants

64,246 (89%)

Amount Paid

$13.60 billion

Amount Awarded

$19.55 billion

A Message from Trustee Cathy Yanni

November 13, 2024
image 1
I am proud to announce that, as of the October 24th pro rata increase to 70%, the Trust’s payments to fire victims have surpassed the total anticipated Trust funding of $13.5 billion. This milestone reflects the Trust’s unwavering commitment to fire victims and our careful stewardship of the limited funds the Trust was given.

While October’s 4% pro rata payment increase may not have seemed significant to some, in reality, it was an additional $766 million paid to fire victims at the end of last month. This brought the Trust’s overall payments fire victims above $13.58 billion.

The Fire Victim Trust was created by the Bankruptcy Court as a limited trust. This means we were charged with a limited purpose and given a limited fund—the $13.5 billion that the Bankruptcy Court ordered PG&E to place into the Trust: half in cash, or $6.75 billion; and half in PG&E common stock, or 477 million shares.

I’ve often said in my letters, videos, and through media interviews that one of our main objectives from the beginning was to maximize proceeds to claimants by carefully timing the sales of these shares. When the Trust was created in July 2020, the 477 million shares we received were only worth $4.31 billion, not the $6.75 billion the parties calculated in the lead up to the Court’s approval in February 2020. This $2.44 billion shortfall was the ground we had to work hard to make up. And we did just that.

The Trust now has paid over $13.58 billion to fire victims. That payment total will increase as the remaining Minors Compromises are completed and we are able to pay those claimants their 70% pro rata shares as well. And, while we do not yet know the timing, we also expect one more pro rata percentage increase. This will be a small top off payment issued in 2025 as we complete the Trust’s wind down.

Our main objective now is to close in on the end of this process. I’m pleased to report that over 99% of the required releases have been signed and returned, and almost 70% of Minors Compromise cases are complete. Last month I announced a December 16, 2024, deadline for all lawyers and authorized representatives to start the Minors Compromise process. If you have questions about that process, you can review my October letter (here) and can contact your assigned Case Manager or email info@firevictimtrust.com.

I look forward to connecting again in December.

Thanks,

Alternate Text

Cathy Yanni



Latest Trust Updates

News Icon 1

Trustee Cathy Yanni announces a pro rata payment percentage increase to 70% effective October 24, 2024. This increase is possible following two major milestones: a 99.9% notice acceptance rate and a 99% Release submission rate as of September 2024.

News Icon 1

Following up on support for previous tax relief legislation, Trustee Yanni wrote to Senator Schumer requesting support for H.R. 7024, which would amend the IRS Code of 1986 and would exclude qualified wildfire relief payments from gross income, and voicing her support for H.R. 5863 and H.R. 4970.

News Icon 1

Continuing the push for tax relief for fire survivors, Trustee Yanni wrote to Senator Crapo requesting support for H.R. 7024, which would amend the IRS Code of 1986 and would exclude qualified wildfire relief payments from gross income.

News Icon 1

Trustee Cathy Yanni announces a pro rata payment percentage increase to 66%. This increase is possible following two major milestones: a 97% acceptance rate as of March 2024 and the Trust’s final sale of PG&E stock in December 2023.

Contact Us

If you need assistance with questions related to the Fire Victim Trust, use one of the following methods to contact the Claims Processor for the Fire Victim Trust.

icon-mail

Mail
Fire Victim Trust
P.O. Box 25936
Richmond, VA 23260

Important: The contact information and methods listed on this page are for communications with the Claims Processor for the Fire Victim Trust. Kroll Restructuring Administration (formerly Prime Clerk) is the claims and noticing agent in the PG&E Bankruptcy Cases responsible for filing Proof of Claim forms with the Bankruptcy Court. Kroll is not responsible for receiving and processing information related to your Fire Victim Trust claims.

 
FVT-Logo-Large 2