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Rising gas prices bring worry
Advocates try to boost assistance programs
for low-income consumers
Markeshia Ricks
Tuscaloosa News (AL)
July 21, 2003
With the price of natural gas going up and the economy still down,
advocates for the poor are trying to make sure the budgets for their
utility assistance programs don’t disappear.
“What most people don’t understand is that our client
base has yet to recover from last winter’s bills," said
Louis Barnett Jr., executive director of Community Service Programs
of West Alabama Inc. “This increase only serves to worsen
the situation for the elderly, those with disabilities and the working
poor."
Last week, Alagasco, Alabama’s largest natural gas supplier,
warned its 460,000 customers to expect higher heating bills this
winter, while the Community Action Association of Alabama was lobbying
members of Congress for additional funding for the Low Income Home
Energy Assistance Program.
Community Service Programs of West Alabama, the local arm of the
CAA, administers LIHEAP in West Alabama.
LIHEAP provides money to help low-income families pay home heating
and cooling costs. Right now it is funded at $2 billion through
fiscal year 2004, up from $1.7 billion the year before.
But anti-poverty activists are asking Congress for $3.4 billion
for the 2004 fiscal year in anticipation of higher energy costs
this winter and a continued economic slump that has forced more
families to seek help from local social services agencies.
During the summer, CSP helps about 3,000 people obtain basic assistance
with paying utilities, and an additional 900 whose services have
been turned off or are under threat of being disconnected, Barnett
said.
“The problem will be compounded and add more of a hardship
to those who can least afford the increase," he said. “We
will have to scrounge around for a way to help people."
In March, Alagasco increased its rates by more than 13 percent to
offset an increase in natural gas prices, but the impact has yet
to be felt by customers because gas usage during the summer is low.
Alagasco’s Tuscaloosa division serves about 38,000 people
in Tuscaloosa, Pickens, Greene and Hale counties.
The company administers its own customer assistance programs, but
a company spokesman could not provide exact numbers on how many
people use those programs.
“We don’t keep track of the people who use the program,
and we often refer them to other people for assistance," said
Alagasco spokesman André Taylor. “But, speaking from
general observation, we haven’t seen a great deal of fluctuation
overall in the number of people using our assistance programs. It
has been pretty much the same in the last few years."
But advocates at other assistance agencies in Tuscaloosa County
tell a different story.
Karen Thompson, a social worker with Temporary Emergency Service
of Tuscaloosa, said her agency doesn’t receive LIHEAP money,
but more money for that program would mean less strain on TES’s
assistance program.
“We get 50 to 75 phone calls a week about assistance with
utility bills, but with the economy being so bad, our normal donations
are at an all-time low," she said. “Any more funding
the agency that administers that program can get is good for us
because then the people they help won’t be calling us."
Thompson said she’s seen more people applying for utility
and other assistance programs in the past few years because of the
struggling economy.
“If programs like LIHEAP don’t receive more funding,
it will put many individuals under a tremendous burden," she
said. “These programs benefit many seniors who have fixed
incomes. They have to have air and heat ó it’s hard
when you don’t know what to anticipate."
Barnett said the flagging economy has brought a different type of
clientele through the doors of Community Service Programs, which
serves Tuscaloosa, Greene, Hale, Bibb, Fayette and Lamar counties.
“We are seeing more folks entering the system that have lost
their jobs through downsizing or taking jobs at reduced pay,"
he said. “If we don’t get more funding, we might have
to decrease the awards we make to people."
Barnett said awards are made based on a variety of criteria like
income, age, disability and whether a person or family is about
to lose or has lost service.
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