
Campaign
Urges Lawmakers to Provide $600 Million in Emergency Funding for
LIHEAP
For Immediate Release, Wednesday, October 12, 2005
Contact: David Fox, 202-331-2962
WASHINGTON — A new winter energy cost forecast released by
the U.S. Energy Information Administration makes a strong case for
Congress to increase funding for a federal program that helps at-risk
Americans pay their home energy bills, a coalition of advocates
for the program said today.
In a revised energy outlook taking into account the impact of Hurricanes
Katrina and Rita on the energy production and distribution system,
the EIA said Americans nationwide should be prepared to pay 48 percent
more this winter than last for natural gas and 32 percent more for
heating oil. It said propane is likely to cost 30 percent
more than a year ago, while electric costs may be 5 percent higher.
“What EIA is forecasting suggests that almost every American
family will notice a big difference in their energy bills this winter,”
said David Fox, executive director of the Campaign for Home Energy
Assistance, a coalition of advocates for the Low Income Home Energy
Assistance Program (LIHEAP).
“Unfortunately, those hurt the most will be those least able
to pay more,” he added. “Higher energy costs will be
devastating for senior citizens and disabled people living on fixed
incomes and for low-income households with small children who are
already struggling — and sometimes failing — to make
ends meet.”
The Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program, or LIHEAP, was created
to help our most vulnerable citizens when energy costs become more
of a burden than they can handle. But funding for the program
has never kept pace with inflation, and the percentage of households
it serves has declined steadily since LIHEAP began in 1982.
“This year, LIHEAP has been able to help less than 15 percent
of the estimated 32 million households eligible for assistance,”
said Skip Arnold, executive director of Energy Outreach Colorado,
a member of the Campaign. “With the skyrocketing cost of energy
we’re facing now, there’s simply no way for LIHEAP to
keep up with the need unless Congress provides more money.”
Lawmakers provided $1.875 billion for LIHEAP in Fiscal Year 1982,
the first year of the state block grant program as we know it today.
In FY 2005, LIHEAP was funded at $1.885 billion.
“The cost of living more than doubled during that period —
even before energy costs began their sharp rise,” said David
Rinebolt, executive director of Ohio Partners for Affordable Energy,
also a member of the Campaign. “Meanwhile, the number
of people getting help has declined steadily, while the number eligible
for assistance — and, therefore, having to make the difficult
choice between paying for food and medicine or paying to heat or
cool their homes — has been growing.”
The National Association of Utility Regulatory Commissioners and
the U.S. Conference of Mayors both passed resolutions this year
urging Congress to increase funding for LIHEAP, and 28 of the nation’s
governors recently signed a letter to the House and Senate leadership
seeking additional money for the program.
When the Senate took up the Department of Defense appropriations
bill earlier this month, 50 senators supported an amendment to add
$3.1 billion in emergency supplemental funding for LIHEAP in Fiscal
Year 2006, which would have increased funding for the program to
its authorized level of $5.1 billion. The measure failed to
win the 60 votes needed to overcome a procedural point of order.
“While advocates for LIHEAP are disappointed that the amendment
failed, it was very encouraging that 50 senators supported full
funding for the program,” Fox said. “Our hope,
now, is that Congress will find another legislative vehicle —
perhaps as part of a hurricane relief package — through which
it can add more money for LIHEAP.
“We’re facing an energy price crisis right now. While
we certainly have to begin looking at long-term solutions, there
is an immediate need that must be addressed. LIHEAP is the
one federal program that can provide some immediate relief.”
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