FY 2004 Appropriations for the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program
(LIHEAP)
Testimony of the National Consumer Law Center on Behalf of Its Low-Income
Clients
Submitted to the United States House of Representatives Committee on Appropriations
Subcommittee On Labor, Health And Human Services and Education
May 23, 2003
Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee, the National Consumer
Law Center (NCLC)1 appreciates the opportunity to submit
written testimony regarding the critical appropriation of funds for the Low
Income Home Energy Assistance Program for FY 2004. This testimony is submitted
on behalf of our low-income and elderly clients who are coping with high and
volatile energy prices, severe weather and large arrearages, and face sacrificing
other necessities such as food or medicine to avoid loss of essential home
energy.
NCLC is a strong supporter of the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance
Program (LIHEAP),2 the primary safety net between low-income
consumers and the disconnection of vital utility service. We thank you for
shielding LIHEAP from the Administration’s proposed $300 million cut
to the FY 2003 appropriation and urge you to protect struggling low-income
households this coming heating and cooling season. The pressures on low-income
households, many of them working poor and fixed-income seniors, from unaffordable
energy bills show no sign of abating. Indeed the forecasted tightness in natural
gas this summer and winter makes the need for increased spending on LIHEAP
more urgent. We urge an appropriation of, at a minimum, $3.4 billion for the
regular LIHEAP program in FY 2004 as well as advance appropriations for FY
2005 of at least $3.4 billion for the regular program.
Upcoming Winter Fuel Prices Expected to Remain High
Low-income households are facing a bleak winter due to the
record low levels of natural gas in storage.3 The exceptional
tightness in natural gas supply is placing very strong upward pressure on
price that will keep prices high and volatile into the winter heating season.4
Making matters worse for low-income consumers is the connection between natural
gas and electricity. Many of the newer power plants run on natural gas, and
this competing demand from electric power plants will keep the amount of natural
gas in storage below normal levels this winter, especially if there are heat
waves this summer.5 The tightness in natural gas supply will
also cause a corresponding increase in the cost of electricity for many consumers
due to the reliance on natural gas to fuel newer power plants.6
Recently in Massachusetts, the utility commission approved a 43 percent rate
increases for Massachusetts Electric Company’s residential electricity
default service customers7 due, in significant part, to the
increase in natural gas prices.8 Recent analysis of home
heating data shows that around 51 percent of LIHEAP recipients heat with natural
gas and almost 30 percent use electricity for heat.9
The winter outlook for LIHEAP households using home heating
oil is also grim. Around 8 percent of LIHEAP recipients heat with home heating
oil.10 The price of home heating oil is driven in significant
part by the price of crude oil11 and recent estimates from
the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) are that residential retail
fuel oil prices will also remain high in 2003.12 EIA estimates
that retail residential fuel oil will be around 15 percent higher in the 4th
quarter of 2003 compared to the 4th quarter 2002.13
Initial indications are that low-income families have been battered
by their energy bills this winter and that arrearages and terminations are
a serious problem for families as they move out of the protections from winter
shut-off moratoria. This winter low-income families endured substantially
higher fuel costs and more severe weather than last year,14
similar to the difficult winter of 2000-2001. Analysis of residential disconnection
and arrearage data from Iowa show that arrearages accumulated during the 2000-2001
winter heating season lead to unprecedented numbers of terminations which
continued to remain high even during the warm weather months.15
Basically, families were carrying such high arrears that they were unable
to dig themselves out before losing service. A similar trend is appearing
this year.
Utilities in Pennsylvania that are regulated by the Pennsylvania
Public Utility Commission (PUC) have established universal service programs
that assist utility customers in paying bills and reducing energy usage. Even
with these programs, electric and natural gas utility customers find it difficult
to keep pace with their energy burdens. Harsh winters and increased energy
costs have a dramatic impact on a low income customer’s ability to pay
their energy bills. According to Mitch Miller of the Pennsylvania Utility
Commission, “Due to the colder than normal winter, and increased natural
gas costs, 1,250,000 Pennsylvania consumers are now overdue and owe approximately
$400 million in utility arrearages, an increase of 17% from last year. When
customers’ arrearages increase dramatically, it may take several years
for these arrearages to be paid. In 2003, service terminations continue to
be high: Utilities have terminated service to 22,760 households in April 2003
alone. Through April 2003, the Pennsylvania Utility Commission has received
23,418 requests from consumers for help in making payment arrangements with
their utilities – an increase of 22% from last year.”
The low income households in New England are also reeling from
the brutal winter. According to Charlie Harak, senior utility attorney for
the National Consumer Law Center, “Arrearages in Massachusetts have
gone through the roof for low-income households. At one major gas company
there was a 150% increase in arrearages for low-income households in February
2003 from February 2002. More disturbing, the low-income households in arrears
owed more than 3 times as much in 2003 than 2002. The cost of gas more than
doubled over the course of this winter and it is now much more common for
customers to owe $1,000, $2,000 or even more. Customers using home heating
oil have also suffered this winter. Massachusetts is enduring home heating
oil prices approximately 50 percent higher than ever before. Even by April
of this year the price of home heating oil had not declined significantly.”
The expected high fuel costs this coming winter will cut into
the reach of LIHEAP assistance to vulnerable low-income households and severe
weather will only exacerbate matters by increasing household energy costs.
Without an increase in LIHEAP appropriations, states will face the very difficult
choice of serving fewer households or providing less energy assistance to
eligible applicants as highlighted by this past heating season in Iowa. As
of the end of March, Iowa has a record number of LIHEAP households (24,000)
with past due accounts, that together total nearly $8 million in arrearages.16
The number of disconnections in April for residential customers is at its
highest level in 5 years.17 Around 79,000 households, mostly
households with elderly residents or residents with young children or disabilities,
received LIHEAP assistance this year, but the benefits averaged just $330.18
Unless LIHEAP appropriations increases substantially for FY 2004, even maintaining
the status quo will likely be very difficult.
Growing utility arrearages for low-income households will only
place these fragile households on a downward spiral towards disconnections.
Adequate LIHEAP assistance can help families facing terminations, but even
more important, adequate LIHEAP appropriations can help struggling families
stay current on their energy bills.
The Growing Need for LIHEAP
The need for heating and cooling assistance provided through
LIHEAP grows more urgent in this sluggish economy. LIHEAP has always been
a key stepping stone to help households move from welfare to work. Now with
long-term unemployment at the highest level in two decades19
and the loss of about 2.7 million jobs since January 2002, with a substantial
percentage of those jobs in the manufacturing sector,20
the number of families struggling to pay their energy bills will swell. Without
increased LIHEAP appropriations, fewer families will be able to manage their
energy bills.
Those who cannot pay their winter heating bill often face dire
choices such as sacrificing food and medical care.21 The
loss of essential utility services can be devastating, especially for poor
families that can find themselves facing the prospects of hypothermia in the
winter, hyperthermia in the summer,22 eviction, property
damage from frozen pipes, the use of dangerous alternative sources of heat,23
and the potential threat of the intervention of child welfare agencies.24
Studies have also demonstrated the clear links between homelessness and utility
disconnections, as well as the connections between unaffordable utility service
and the disruption to families and children’s education. LIHEAP works
to bring fuel costs within a manageable range for low-income households. There
are other societal benefits to a strong LIHEAP program. A recent study documents
an association between receipt of LIHEAP assistance and a reduced incidence
of undernutrition in young children.25
The purchasing power of LIHEAP in 1981, adjusted to 2003 dollars,
was $3.86 billion and in 1985, was $3.62 billion.26 The
need for LIHEAP assistance during this current period of high fuel prices
and a sluggish economy with record levels of long-term unemployment and severe
budget crises in the states27 requires a similar level of
commitment to the program. The elements for a difficult winter for low-income
families are already lining up. An increased appropriation to the regular
LIHEAP program of $3.4 billion would go a long way toward addressing the problem
of energy affordability head-on.
The Need for Advance Appropriations
The timing of the release of the LIHEAP block grant to the
states is critical for the efficient operation of their programs. The normal
appropriations cycle leaves very little time between enactment and the start
of most states’ heating programs. In exceptional years, states have
even had to open their programs before enactment of the appropriations legislation,
relying on the funding in the Continuing Resolution process to sign contracts
and begin accepting applications. Benefit levels often have to be adjusted
once the final appropriations for the program are set. Advance appropriations
allow states to determine income guidelines and benefit levels ahead of time
and avoid the scramble caused by uncertainty in the funding amount.
Similarly, while emergency contingency LIHEAP assistance is
important for responding to life-threatening brutal winters and summer heat
waves, an increase in the regular LIHEAP block grant would allow states to
design a solid LIHEAP program that includes proactive, timely and appropriately
designed responses to crisis situations. Emergency contingency funds are often
released after the emergence of a full-blown crisis, creating a lag time between
the emergence of a crises and the actual receipt of the assistance. The scramble
to release the assistance is compounded where a crisis arises after the state’s
LIHEAP program has shut down for the season. A more adequate appropriation
for the core program would provide the states with the funds to effectively
plan ahead for crisis situations, thus better protecting low-income households
and fixed-income seniors in potentially life-threatening crises.
LIHEAP Works
LIHEAP is a targeted block grant that assists vulnerable low-income
households with the costs of home energy. Around a third of households receiving
LIHEAP heating and cooling assistance had an elderly member.28
Over 30 percent of households receiving heating and cooling assistance had
a member with a disability and almost a third of households receiving heating
assistance and around a fifth of households receiving cooling assistance had
young children.29 In FY 2001, LIHEAP recipient households
had a mean individual energy burden almost five times the energy burden for
non-low income households.30 While there are broad federal
guidelines for LIHEAP, states have the flexibility to tailor their programs
to best meet their needs. Administrative costs are minimal – capped
at 10 percent. This ensures that the vast majority of LIHEAP dollars are directed
to energy assistance for low-income families.
Conclusion
In light of LIHEAP’s continued demonstrated success in
helping low-income families maintain access to vital energy service, we urge
the Committee to appropriate, at a minimum, $3.4 billion for the regular LIHEAP
program in FY 2004 as well as advance appropriations for FY 2005 of at least
$3.4 billion for the regular program.
________________________________
1 The National Consumer Law Center
(NCLC) is a nonprofit organization specializing in consumer issues on behalf
of low-income people. We work with thousands of legal services, government
and private attorneys, as well as community groups and organizations from
all states, who represent low-income and elderly individuals on consumer issues.
NCLC has daily contact with low-income advocates around the nation regarding
an array of low-income energy and utility issues. NCLC has helped utilities,
regulatory commissions and advocates design low-income affordability programs
and has published leading manuals and reports on related law. This testimony
has been prepared by Olivia Wein, a staff attorney in NCLC’s Washington
Office.
2 42 U.S.C. §8621 et seq
3 Working gas in storage at the end of April 2003
was 41 percent below the previous 5-year average. Energy Information Administration,
“Short-Term Energy Outlook – May 2003” (“At the end
of April, working gas in storage stood about 52 percent below end-of April
2002 levels and 41 percent below the previous 5-year average.”); Testimony
of Robert W. Best, Vice Chairman, American Gas Association and Chairman, Atmos
Energy Corp., Before the U.S. Energy and Natural Resources Committee Hearing
on Natural Gas Supply and Prices, February 25, 2003 (the nation is experiencing
a period of tight natural gas supply resulting in high prices and higher price
volatility); Peter Behr, “No Help for Natural Gas Users: Stagnant Production
Keeps Prices High,” Washington Post, May 21, 2003.
4 Id.
5 Id.
6 Energy Information Administration, “Short-Term
Energy Outlook – May 2003”; Peter Behr, “No Help for Natural
Gas Users,” Washington Post, May 21, 2003.
7 Default service is a creation of the state’s
restructuring act to cover new customers to a service territory and customers
wishing to return to regulated service after entering into the competitive
market for electricity.
8 Massachusetts Dept. of Telecommunications and Electricity,
April 2, 2003 Order, Massachusetts Electric Co. and Nantucket Electric Co.
Default Service, DTE 99-60.
9 U.S. Department of Health and Human Services,
Administration for Children and Families, Office of Community Services, Division
of Family Assistance, “LIHEAP Home Energy Notebook for Fiscal Year 2001”
(February 2003) at 5.
10 Id.
11 EIA, “Residential Heating Oil Prices: What
Consumers Should Know,” last modified March 13, 2003 (crude oil comprises
42% of the price of home heating oil, refining 12% and marketing and distribution
46%)
12 Energy Information Administration, “Short-Term
Energy Outlook – May 2003” at page 4 , Figure 7 and Tables 4 and
4a.
13 Energy Information Administration, “Short-Term
Energy Outlook – May 2003” at Table 4. U.S. Energy Prices: Base
Case (nominal dollars).
14 Natural gas (Midwest) was 30% higher this winter
than last, heating oil (Northeast) was 60% higher, propane (Midwest) was 25%
higher and electricity was 11% higher than last year. Energy Information Administration,
“Winter Fuels Outlook: 2002-2003, Selected Table and Figure Updates
Based on the March 2003 Short-Term Energy Outlook” updated Feb. 2003.
15 Roger Colton, “Winter Payment Problems,
Price Volatility and Capped Bill Programs,” FSC’s Law and Economics
Insights, Jan/Feb 2003.
16 “Winter’s Gone; Heat Bills Aren’t,”
Des Moines Register Editorial, May 12, 2003.
17 According to Jerry McKim, Chief of Iowa’s
Bureau of Energy Assistance, over 6,000 residential customers of rate regulated
utilities have been disconnected this April.
18 Id.
19 Kirstin Downey, “More Settle In for a Slow
Job Hunt: Ranks of ‘Long-term Unemployed’ at 20-Yr High,”
Washington Post, May 8, 2003.
20 Id.
21 “Iowa’s Cold Winters: LIHEAP Recipient
Perspective,” by Mercier Associates. Commissioned by Iowa’s Department
of Human Rights Bureau of Energy (2000); “Energy Gap Study,” Energy
CENTS Coalition (Minnesota) (1999).
22 In 2000, approximately 68% of those with heat-related
deaths were 60 years old or older. Office of Climate, Water and Weather Services,
Heat Related Fatalities by Age and Gender for 2000.
23 In 1998 there were over 49,000 heating-equipment
related home fires resulting in 388 deaths and 1,445 injuries and $515 million
in property damage. National Fire Protection Association Fact Sheets on Home
Heating from the report, “US Home Heating Fire Patterns and Trends,”
John H. Hall, Jr., NFPA, June 2001
24 Robert B. Swift, “Rising Costs for Home
Heating Fuel Could Spawn More Problems,” Sunbury (PA) Item, Jan.29,
2000.
25 Pediatric Academic Societies, Publication #921,
Platform Presentation, Epidemiology Session, May 6, 2003, Seattle, WA: Children’s
Sentinel Nutrition Assessment Program: Heat or Eat: Low Income Home Energy
Assistance Program and Nutritional Risk Among Children < 3.
26 Using CPI-U Data to calculate the conversion
to 2003 dollars.
27 Nicholas Johnson, Iris J. Lav and Rose Ribeiro,
“States are Making Deep budget Cuts in Response to the Fiscal Crises,”
Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, March 20, 2003.
28 Excludes data for winter and summer crisis and
weatherization. US Department of Health and Human Services, Administration
for Children and Families, Office of Community Services, Division of Energy
Assistance, “Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program: Report to Congress
for Fiscal Year 1999,” February 2002 at pp.19-20.
29 Excludes data for winter and summer crisis and
weatherization. US Department of Health and Human Services, Administration
for Children and Families, Office of Community Services, Division of Energy
Assistance, “Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program: Report to Congress
for Fiscal Year 1999,” February 2002 at pp.19-20.
30 U.S. Department of Health and Human Services,
Administration for Children and Families, Office of Community Services, Division
of Family Assistance, “LIHEAP Home Energy Notebook for Fiscal Year 2001”
(February 2003) at Table A-2b, page 49.