there's kind of 2 halves to the pedestal during ImageCalibration.
first is the addition of the pedestal. that's controlled by the "Output Pedestal" section of IC (which is in the Output Files section). then there's the removal of the pedestal. that's in the next section. the idea is that you add the pedestal to your calibration frames using the Output Pedestal (say for instance for some reason the bias signal was greater than the dark signal; when you calibrate the darks they would come out with a bunch of 0 pixels, much like your lights have). now you've got dark subs which contain a pedestal of 100ADU and are tagged with the PEDESTAL fits keyword to indicate this. when you make a master dark, the PEDESTAL keyword is carried over to the integrated dark. then when you calibrate your lights with the master dark, IC will then subtract the pedestal value from the calibrated light, if it finds that keyword (that's what it does by default - the literal value is to subtract some other value, say for instance if there is no PEDESTAL keyword, but you know the calibration frames have a pedestal.)
the idea here is that the background value of a light is probably going to be much greater than the pedestal (due to light pollution or actual signal) and so removing the pedestal is OK. but in your case where there's pretty much 0 background, that would not work. so you want to put the pedestal in your lights, and leave it there. it will essentially be removed in processing when you manipulate the histogram.
in your case i think if you set the Pedestal to a literal value of 100, IC probably just subtracted another 100ADU which adds insult to injury
anyway, i think if you set Output Pedestal to, say 80, that might take care of the problem. since you're only running IC once, the pedestal won't be removed.
however, i guess the root question is why the bias frames have lower values than the background of the lights. i understand that your camera uses a sony sensor which has vanishingly low dark current, so that might have something to do with it.
maybe someone that uses one of those sensors can chime in - i don't know if they forgo bias/dark calibration completely - i've heard that people don't use darks with those sensors but i don't know if that also means they don't bother with bias either... i guess you can also just skip bias calibration of your frames and see how they turnout.
rob