COMMONWEALTH
OF MASSACHUSETTS
DEPARTMENT OF TELECOMMUNICATIONS AND ENERGY
RE: INCREASING
THE PENETRATION RATE
FOR DISCOUNTED ELECTRIC, GAS AND
TELEPHONE SERVICE ..................................................................DTE
01-106
COMMENTS
OF THE MASSACHUSETTS COMMUNITY ACTION PROGRAM DIRECTORS ASSOCIATION AND
THE MASSACHUSETTS ENERGY DIRECTORS ASSOCIATION
January
31. 2002
1. INTRODUCTION
In this proceeding, the Department of Telecommunications and Energy ("Department")
is addressing important public policy issues: the chronic inability of
low-income households to pay for essential gas, electricity and telephone
services on their own and, therefore, the crucial role of discounted utility
rates in helping these families to live with dignity. Despite recent declines
in electric and gas prices from last year's unprecedented peaks, the average
low-income family continues to pay 15% (and often much more) of household
income on basic utility service.1 Due to last year's
price increases, the number of households in arrears and the cumulative
amounts they owe has skyrocketed.2 At the same time,
benefit levels for the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program ("LIHEAP"),
the key program that helps people pay their bills, have been cut more
than 40% in Massachusetts.3 A declining economy only
exacerbates these problems. Between December 2000 and December 2002, the
unemployment rate in Massachusetts jumped from 2.3% to 4.2%. Some 65,000
people lost their jobs during this period.4 Not surprisingly,
applications to LIHEAP continue to rise, on the heels of a 20% increase
last year.5
The Department's investigation
into the penetration rates for discounted utility rates is thus timely
and potentially quite beneficial to the tens of thousands of Massachusetts
households eligible for but not yet enrolled on these rates. Recent data
prepared by the Division of Energy Resources show that slightly less than
one-third of the estimated number of eligible households have enrolled
for electric and gas discounts.6 An analysis recently
completed by the National Consumer Law Center (discussed infra) shows
a comparable penetration rate for the telephone Lifeline and Link-Up programs.
There is plenty of room for improvement, and the Department has wisely
chosen to take the lead in finding ways to increase penetration rates.
In these comments,
the Massachusetts Community Action Programs Directors Association and
the Massachusetts Energy Directors Association (collectively, "MASSCAPDA")
will discuss the following questions:
-
What is the legal
authority for these programs?
-
What is the current
status of outreach efforts and penetration rates for the discount
rates?
-
How many people
are eligible for the discounts, and through which benefits programs?
-
What problems
or obstacles limit enrollment currently, and how can they be best
addressed?
-
What administrative
and practical problems have arisen, and how can they be best resolved?
The Massachusetts Community Action Programs Directors Association is a
non-profit organization that includes all of the community action programs
("CAPs") in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. CAPs run a broad
range of anti-poverty programs in the areas of energy, housing, early
childhood education, nutrition, and senior services. In most areas of
the state, the CAPs operate the low-income fuel assistance and weatherization
programs. In a few areas, other non-profit or governmental agencies operate
these energy programs. The Massachusetts Energy Director Association is
a voluntary association of the energy directors of all of the local programs
operate fuel assistance and weatherization in Massachusetts, including
the CAP agencies and the other non-profit/governmental agencies just referenced.
Drawing on federal weatherization funds,7 federal fuel
assistance funds,8 and utility-sponsored programs, MASSCAPDA's
members insulate houses; tune-up, repair and replace old or inoperative
furnaces; replace outmoded and inefficient appliances; and help educate
low-income households in energy conservation. Low-income discounts play
an important role in MASSCAPDA's efforts. By bringing down the unit costs
of energy, these programs make it possible for many low-income families
to maintain utility service that would otherwise be terminated for non-payment.
Many low-income families simply cannot afford to keep up with their energy
bills without a combination of discounted prices, fuel assistance payments,
and living in homes that use energy efficiently. MASSCAPDA thus sees the
discounts as vital to the success of its efforts in keeping people warm
and keeping their utilities connected. MASSCAPDA is grateful to the Department
for opening a proceeding that can significantly increase the penetration
rate for the discount programs.
2. LEGAL AUTHORITY
FOR DISCOUNTS
1. Electric and
Gas Discounts
In 1979, the Department
approved the first discount rate for low-income electricity or gas consumers.
In response to a voluntary proposal by Massachusetts Electric Company,
the Department approved "a reduced rate for certain elderly poor
customers," those over age sixty-five and receiving Supplemental
Security Income. American Hoechest9 v. Dep't of Public
Utilities, 379 Mass. 408 (1979). In overturning the appellant's challenge
to the Department's authority to approve such a rate, the Supreme Judicial
Court emphasized that the company offered the rate voluntarily and that
the rate was available only to a defined group of needy customers. Id.,
at 411-413.
Subsequently, other
utilities in the Commonwealth adopted low-income discount rates, voluntarily
or in response to directions from the Department. In Western Massachusetts
Electric Co., DPU 87-260 (1988), the Department stated its reasons for
supporting low-income rates:
As a matter of policy,
the Department recognizes that electricity is a basic necessity of life
in modern society. Rigid application of cost-based ratemaking principles
in this case could jeopardize the ability of those with poverty-level
incomes to retain electric service. A subsidized rate for low-income
individuals should be available if the impact of the subsidy on non-participants
is reasonable. . . .Accordingly, the Department finds that the Company
should implement a subsidized low-income rate available to low-income
residential customers.
By the mid-1990's
almost every regulated gas and electric company offered a discount rate,10
although the amount discounted and the rules governing eligibility varied
by company.
In 1997, the legislature
mandated that electric companies, all of which had discounts at that time,
must continue to offer those discounts to a defined group of low-income
households:
The department shall
require that distribution companies provide discounted rates for low-income
customers comparable to the low-income discount rate in effect prior
to March 1, 1998. . . . Eligibility for the discount rates established
herein shall be established upon verification of a low-income customer's
receipt of any means tested public benefit, or verification of eligibility
for the low-income home energy assistance program, or its successor
program, for which eligibility does not exceed 175 per cent of the federal
poverty level based on a household's gross income.
G.L. c. 164, §1F(4)(i).11
The legislature also required utilities to conduct substantial outreach
and to consider use of automatic matching as a means to facilitate outreach
and enrollment:
Each distribution
company shall conduct substantial outreach efforts to make said low-income
discount available to eligible customers and shall report to said division
[of energy resources], at least annually, as to its outreach activities
and results. Outreach may include an automated program of matching customer
accounts with lists of recipients of said means tested public benefits
programs and based on the results of said matching program, to presumptively
offer a low-income discount rate to eligible customers so identified.
. . .
Id.
Thus, prior to 1997,
the Department had implemented low-income gas and electric discount rates
as part of its inherent regulatory authority over distribution companies,
an authority affirmed in at least one instance by the Supreme Judicial
Court.12 Since 1997, low-income discount rates for electric
customers are required by statute. In implementing the statute, the Department
adopted companion regulations that require electric companies to file
low-income discount rates and to make those rates available to those on
"the low-income home energy assistance program" or to a customer
receiving benefits from "any means-tested public benefit program
for which eligibility does not exceed 175% of the federal poverty level."
220 C.M.R. 11.04(5). Based on its inherent regulatory authority under
G.L. c. 25 and G.L. c. 164, the Department promulgated similar regulations
that apply to gas distribution companies. 220 C.M.R. 14.03. MASSCAPDA
is not aware of any legal challenge to the Department's inherent or statutory
authority to require companies to adopt low-income discount rates, other
than the unsuccessful challenge by industrial customers in American Hoechest.
MASSCAPDA notes that
the Department is explicitly authorized to "establish service quality
standards for each distribution, transmission and gas company, including,
but not limited to, standards for universal service." G.L. c. 164,
§1F(7). This acts as yet another source of authority for adopting
discount rates that help to make service more universally available.
2. Telephone Discounts
Qualified telephone
companies offer their low-income customers discounts on monthly service
charges and on initial installation charges through, respectively, the
Lifeline and Link-Up programs. The lifeline programs were initiated by
the Federal Communications Commission in 1985, but later embodied in federal
Telecommunications Act. 47 U.S.C. §254; 47 C.F.R. §§54.401
et seq. Massachusetts offers the most generous assistance in the country:
$13.85 off of the monthly bill.13 Telephone companies
are directly and fully compensated for the cost of offering these programs
through a dedicated charge on telephone bills.
3. OUTREACH EFFORTS,
PENETRATION RATES AND ELIGIBLE POPULATIONS
The Department's first
question seeks comments "describ[ing] outreach efforts to identify
eligible discount customers." MASSCAPDA will address outreach efforts,
eligible populations and penetration rates as a set of closely related
topics.
Electric and gas companies14
vary in their outreach efforts but, in general, all of the companies insert
periodic messages in their bills about the availability of the discounts;
train their Customer Service Representatives ("CSRs") so that
they can discuss the discount programs with customers; distribute relevant
brochures, newsletters, or hand-outs; use media (but to widely varying
degrees); and coordinate their outreach efforts with community-based organizations,
governmental agencies, churches, schools, etc. MASSCAPDA is sympathetic
to the difficulty of reaching many low-income people, a disproportionate
percentage of whom do not speak English as their primary language or suffer
from various disabilities that impede their ability to learn about the
discount program and to fill out the required applications.15
However, these outreach challenges should be turned into opportunities
for the companies to focus more on community-based outreach and some of
the outreach tools included in the Division of Energy Resources ("DOER")
outreach guidelines: coordination with the Department of Revenue Child
Support Division; use of point-of-purchase displays with the state and
federal agencies that offer qualifying benefits; and working with schools
to reach families in Head Start and the National School Breakfast and
Lunch programs.16 MASSCAPDA encourages the Department
to insure that companies translate written materials into languages that
are widely spoken in their service territories and that companies engage
in face-to-face community meetings in order to reach customers who are
more likely to learn about discount rates through churches, schools and
community organizations than from written materials. MASSCAPDA also encourages
the Department, DOER and the gas, electric and telephone companies to
include information about discount rates on the home page (or a clearly-worded
link on the home page) of their respective web sites. At the present,
customers who have Internet access and wish to learn about discount rates
in Massachusetts would have very hard time doing so whether they browse
the web sites of the Department, DOER or most of the companies.17
While relatively few low-income households have regular access to the
Internet, this is an inexpensive means of providing useful information
to customers.
Outreach efforts geared
toward reaching a "typical" potential participant cannot effectively
reach all groups of eligible participants. For example, radio advertisements
targeted toward English-speaking, elderly populations will likely not
be effective in expanding participation among Hispanic households that
include adults and children. Further, "points of contact" with
low-income households vary widely between urban and rural communities.
Because of this diversity,
effective outreach strategies must include components that are decentralized,
and geared toward meeting unique needs of sub-groups within the low-income
population. Some of the utility companies in the Commonwealth have made
strong efforts to increase low-income program participation. However,
these companies do not have the kinds of ties to local communities that
are necessary to maximize participation among those eligible to do so.
Community-based approaches to outreach are necessary to reach the broadest
possible population.
Community-based outreach
may take a variety of forms, but should entail utilizing the skills and
contacts of local service delivery organizations. Such organizations should
be capable of identifying appropriate points of contact to reach specific
groups within a contained geographic area, and of coordinating the efforts
and procedures of benefit program agencies and intake workers within that
area. Further, a community-based approach should entail increasing the
points within a community where a customer may apply for utility payment
assistance.
MASSCAPDA understands
that a group that includes the human service delivery network serving
Cape Cod and the Islands has developed a proposal to conduct community-based
outreach. MASSCAPDA encourage the Department and commenting parties to
work together to test the application, perhaps on a pilot basis, of such
an approach, and to determine the participation and program administration
benefits that may be derived in the process.
In order to craft
outreach efforts that more effectively reach the broadest possible range
of populations, it is necessary to understand more about the composition
of participant and eligible non-participant groups, and about the factors
that lead to participation.
For example, if there
were better information about the ethnic composition of program participants
and eligible non-participants in a geographic area, new outreach efforts
could be geared toward reaching specific, under-served populations. Similarly,
if large proportions of participants in a particular means-tested government
benefits program do not participate in utility discount rate programs,
interested parties could work with the agency dispensing those benefits
to alter intake procedures or take other steps that would increase discount
rate participation. MASSCAPDA understands that Western Massachusetts Electric
Company is conducting a new survey to develop better information about
discount rate participants. MASSCAPDA applauds this effort and encourages
other companies to engage in similar efforts in their own service territories.
In addition to the
need for information regarding discount rate participation by different
categories of government assistance recipients, the Department and interested
parties would benefit from having better, more consistent data regarding
utility arrearages, issuance of termination notices, terminations for
non-payment and duration of terminations for non-payment. MASSCAPDA applauds
the recent efforts of the Department to obtain such information from companies,
and notes that regular, consistent reporting is required to identify new
trends in disruptive, costly service terminations. MASSCAPDA recommends
that the Department continue to gather information regarding arrearages
and terminations for non-payment, and that the information be made readily
available to the public through postings on the Department's web site.
Finally, outside of
the reports DOER has prepared and that Verizon files, there appears to
be very little available information either on the number of customers
receiving the discounts (either by month quarter) or the percentage or
dollar value for typical customers getting the discount. MASSCAPDA believes
that the Department should require companies to report this information
in a simple and accessible format.
MASSCAPDA strongly
supports the efforts of utilities to train their CSRs to handle inquiries
about discount rates. Utilities are not human services agencies, and CSRs
are not fluent with the terminology and rules of government assistance
programs. MASSCAPDA therefore asks the Department to make sure that companies
continue to train all CSRs on a routine basis. With proper training, CSRs
will be far more likely to identify customers who may be in need of and
eligible for the discount rates and to answer any questions that customers
may raise.
To date, the combined
outreach efforts of the companies, relevant government agencies and MASSCAPDA's
own members have resulted in approximately one-third of eligible electric
customers enrolling in the discount program, based on partial-year 2001
data collected by DOER and MASSCAPDA's own estimates of the number of
low-income household eligible:
| 2001 |
NGrid
|
NStar
|
Unitil
|
WMECo
|
Total
Disc
|
Total
Cus
|
%
(Disc/Tot)
|
| Jan |
60427
|
51889
|
1571
|
15720
|
129607
|
2231662
|
5.8%
|
| Feb |
63785
|
51073
|
1670
|
16629
|
133157
|
2198146
|
6.1%
|
| Mar |
65708
|
52847
|
1857
|
16937
|
137349
|
2208460
|
6.2%
|
| Apr |
68392
|
53079
|
1865
|
17324
|
140660
|
2202742
|
6.4%
|
| May |
69947
|
53822
|
2032
|
17877
|
143678
|
2205234
|
6.5%
|
| June |
71105
|
51943
|
2066
|
18011
|
143125
|
2202092
|
6.5%
|
| July |
71635
|
50857
|
2060
|
17797
|
142349
|
2191668
|
6.5%
|
| Aug |
71711
|
50446
|
2015
|
17607
|
141779
|
2184771
|
6.5%
|
| Sep |
71929
|
52507
|
1989
|
17255
|
143680
|
2467641
|
5.8%
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Avg |
68293
|
52051
|
1903
|
17240
|
139487
|
2232491
|
6.3%
|
| LI
Cus |
167058
|
179262
|
21882
|
41150
|
409352
|
|
|
%
|
40.9%
|
29.0%
|
8.7%
|
41.9%
|
34.1%
|
| |
| Sources |
DOER (except
# of LI cus: NCLC from 1990 Census)
|
DOER calculated the
statewide 1999 penetration rate at 27%, based on projections by the Massachusetts
Institute for Social and Economic Research of the growth in eligible low-income
households since 1990. The penetration rate for the Lifeline and Link-Up
programs is also in the range of 30%, based on an analysis by the National
Consumer Law Center ("NCLC") of data compiled by the Universal
Service Administrative Company.18 NCLC's analysis (attached)
places Massachusetts seventh in the country for telephone discount penetration
rates. With the exception of California, all of the states with higher
penetration rates are in the New York-New England region, and most utilize
variants of the automatic enrollment/electronic enrollment techniques
that MASSCAPDA recommends below.
The percentages mentioned
above are rough estimates, in the sense that no up-to-date source provides
a firm number for the denominator of the calculation: the number of low-income
families at or below 175% of poverty, receiving public assistance and
using a particular utility service. As just noted in the context of telephone
penetration rates, however, these percentages can offer useful information
about a particular state's or utility's relative success in reaching eligible
households and can also help identify trends over time.
The raw numbers of
people on the discount rates show some seasonal or cyclical trends that
merit further attention by the Department and parties interested in this
docket. The DOER's "Electric Discount Rate Outreach and Eligibility
Report" shows a series of peaks and valleys in the numbers of households
enrolled on the discount rates:
|
YEAR
|
Total
# Enrolled
|
%
change, from prior year
|
|
1997
|
129,526
|
|
|
1998
|
118,912
|
-8.19
|
|
1999
|
130,081
|
+9.39
|
|
2000
|
126,851
|
-2.48
|
The year-to-year swings
are neither insignificant nor easily explained. It is possible that these
swings reflect purging of lists of households considered ineligible but
who then re-certify their eligibility and re-enroll (a point discussed
below), but there are also other possible explanations, include the cyclical
nature of LIHEAP and its effects on discount rate enrollment, changes
in outreach activities by utilities, or random factors. The Department
should explore these swings further, as there are similarly unexplained
declines in telephone discount enrollment19:
|
DATE
|
Total
# Enrolled
|
%
change, from prior period
|
|
Jan.-Mar.
2000
|
170,524
|
|
|
Apr.-June
2000
|
167,579
|
-1.72
|
|
July-Sept.
2000
|
162,200
|
-3.21
|
|
Oct.-Dec.
2000
|
158,140
|
-2.51
|
|
Jan.-Mar.
2001
|
160,594
|
+1.26
|
|
Apr.-June
2001
|
161,011
|
+0.26
|
The Department and
parties would benefit by knowing what efforts or activities by the companies
or by customers may be causing these ups and downs in penetration rates.
Unemployment rates have been either flat or on the rise since March 200020;
the number of households receiving fuel assistance has jumped more than
20% in the same period; and TANF and food stamps caseloads have also been
either flat or rising.21 The erratic declines and increases
in enrollment rates for the electric and telephone discount rates are
thus not easily explained by underlying economic conditions and seem contrary
to what might be expected.
In setting any new
policies for outreach and enrollment, the Department should consider the
available information regarding the number of households currently receiving
benefits under the most widely utilized benefits programs that qualify
people for the low-income discount:
|
PROGRAM
|
#
SERVED
|
NOTES
|
| LIHEAP
|
134,000
('01)
|
App's
up 14%, FY 02 to date. Source: DHCD |
| SSI |
163,000
(11/01)
|
Source:
DTA |
| Food
Stamps |
112,000
(11/01)
|
Up
10% since April 2001. Source: DTA |
| EAEDC22 |
15,000
(11/01)
|
Up
8% since Feb. 2001. Source: DTA |
| TAFDC23 |
45,000
(11/01)
|
Up
7% since March 2001. Source: DTA |
| Public
housing |
90,000
|
Source:
DHCD24 |
| Section
8 |
65,000
|
Source:
DHCD25 |
| MassHealth |
973,000
|
Individuals,
not households. Several distinct programs. Source: Div. Medical Assistance |
This table does not
include several of the programs covered by G.L. c. 164, §1F(4)(i),
including school-based food programs (National School Lunch Program and
School Breakfast Program) and income-tested programs for veterans operated
by the Massachusetts Department of Veteran Services and the U.S. Department
of Veterans Affairs.26 The cumulative enrollment for
the programs listed above well exceeds 1,000,000. While many households
are served by more than one program (e.g., many LIHEAP households are
on SSI; many public housing tenants get food stamps) or have incomes above
175% or even 200% of the poverty guideline, the Department can safely
assume that there are tens of thousands of households who can be readily
identified as income-eligible for discount rates but not yet enrolled.
To the extent that the Department can work with the utility companies
and government agencies that provide benefits to identify these households,
the discount rates will reach a much higher percentage of those in need.
MASSCAPDA discusses means for increasing enrollment below.
Before addressing
new enrollment approaches, however, MASSCAPDA will discuss "strategies
for addressing varying income requirements of public benefits programs"
(Order to Open Investigation, at 6) as this will affect the number of
people perceived as eligible, outreach efforts to particular populations,
and, ultimately, penetration rates. Among the programs listed in G.L.
c. 164, §1F(4)(i), only three programs have maximum eligibility guidelines
that exceed 175% of poverty: LIHEAP, medical care programs operated by
the Division of Medical Assistance under the umbrella of MassHealth and
the public/subsidized housing programs.27 MASSCAPDA
suggests different approaches for each program.
At the time the Restructuring
Act passed, the eligibility threshold for LIHEAP was 175% of the federal
poverty guideline. Households making above 175% of the poverty guideline
were not eligible. Thus, the statutory language that made fuel assistance
households eligible for discounts was synonymous with making households
at or below 175% of poverty eligible:
Eligibility for
the discount rates . . . shall be established upon . . . verification
of eligibility for the low-income home energy assistance program . .
.
The Department's implementing
regulations appear to make all LIHEAP households eligible for discount
rates regardless of income, as LIHEAP is discussed in a clause independent
of the clause that mentions other programs serving households at or below
175% of poverty:
Each Distribution
Company shall establish customer eligibility for its Low-income Customer
Tariff based on a Customer's eligibility for the low-income home energy
assistance program or its successor program, or a Customer's receipt
of any means-tested public benefit program for which eligibility does
not exceed 175% of the federal poverty level based on a household's
gross income or other criteria approved by the Department.
220 C.M.R. 11.04(5).
The distinction between
LIHEAP and other "means-tested public benefit program[s] for which
eligibility does not exceed 175% of the federal poverty level" became
significant at the end of the FY 00 fuel assistance program, when eligibility
was increased to 200% of poverty. Some (MASSCAPDA believes all) electric
companies began asking the agencies that distribute LIHEAP funds to identify
those households whose incomes exceed 175% of poverty and excluded those
households from the discount rate. MASSCAPDA believes that most (possibly
all) gas companies include all LIHEAP recipients in their discount programs,
even those households between 175% and 200% of poverty. MASSCAPDA recommends
that the Department should require all companies to offer their discounts
to all households receiving LIHEAP, for several reasons. As the Department
long ago recognized, "[E]lectricity is a basic necessity of life
in modern society. . . .Compan[ies] should implement subsidized low-income
rate[s]" for their low-income residential customers. Western Massachusetts
Electric Co. DPU 87-260. MASSCAPDA believes that all households
receiving LIHEAP need discount rates to obtain essential utility services.
Further, the Department should impose a consistent approach on the currently
inconsistent practices of regulated companies regarding the eligibility
of LIHEAP households for the discount rates. The impact on the utilities
or their ratepayers will be small. According to data compiled by the Department
of Housing and Community Development ("DHCD"), only 6% to 7%
of all LIHEAP households are in the tier between 175% and 200% of the
poverty guideline. The cost of holding all companies to the same standard
(200% of poverty) will be minimal, especially because most gas companies
meet this standard already. Finally, making all fuel assistance households
eligible for the discount rates is consistent with the plain wording of
220 C.M.R. 11.04(5).
Public housing programs
present a far different challenge. First, the income eligibility rules
vary between state and federal programs, between public housing programs
(where the housing authority owns the units) and subsidized housing programs
(where a private owner or the owner's tenant receives a subsidy), and
even from site to site. Second, the income and eligibility rules are of
almost mind-boggling complexity. Third, given that housing subsidies are
tied to where people live, subsidized families do not lose their housing
as soon as their income increases above the initial eligibility level.
There are families who legally remain in public or subsidized housing
with incomes well above 175% or 200% of the poverty guideline. MASSCAPDA
does not suggest that every family in public housing should receive a
subsidy. Instead, MASSCAPDA suggests that local housing authorities,
which certify household income on an annual basis, identify those households
who are at or below 175% of poverty. These households should then
be made eligible for the discount rates.
Regarding the cluster
of programs offered by the Division of Medical Assistance ("DMA")
under the rubric of MassHealth, MASSCAPDA does not have enough detailed
information to make specific recommendations. Some of the programs have
income guidelines well below 175% of poverty, but others have guidelines
up to 400% of poverty. MASSCAPDA hopes that DMA will participate in this
docket and assist the Department and interested parties in developing
tools for identifying and enrolling DMA recipients on the discount rates.
4. MEANS OF INCREASING
ENROLLMENT AND FACILITATING PROGRAM ADMINISTRATION
The Department has
asked parties to address several topics that relate to new methods for
increasing enrollment or removing existing barriers that hinder enrollment,
including the following:
. . . . . .
(2) Describe current procedures used for subscriber eligibility verification
and enrollment.
(3) Discuss whether
current subscriber eligibility standards would permit utilities to enroll
each other's customers in discount programs.
. . . . . .
(5) Discuss whether
utilities could implement a computer matching program to verify subscriber
eligibility and enroll eligible customers in discount programs.
(6) Discuss whether
any legal impediment exists to enrolling eligible customers in all available
discount programs.
(7) Discuss privacy
concerns related to electronic sharing of financial or other confidential
information.
MASSCAPDA will begin with the practical issues of verifying eligibility
and enrolling customers. Any of the companies that file comments will
likely provide the details unique to their own circumstances. In general
terms, most electric and gas utilities enroll many of their discount customers
in connection with LIHEAP. In many areas of the state, the local fuel
assistance "sub-grantee"28 electronically
notifies the appropriate gas or electric company of those households that
have been approved for fuel assistance payments. Most electric (but not
gas) companies ask for coded files that allow them to distinguish households
above or below 175% of the poverty guideline, or lists that already exclude
those LIHEAP households with incomes between 175% and 200% of the poverty
guideline. Most gas companies place all LIHEAP households on the discount
rate. For the eligible LIHEAP households, enrollment and verification
are seamless and integrated into the LIHEAP application process. At the
time of applying for LIHEAP, the household signs a form giving the sub-grantee
permission to release information to utility companies. This simple
tool resolves questions that would otherwise arise about the sub-grantees'
right to release private information to utilities. The waiver form also
expedites the verification and enrollment process. This model should be
expanded to other government benefits programs, as discussed below.
For non-LIHEAP households,
the process is more difficult. The households must first learn about the
discount rates. This is particularly difficult for the large number of
low-income people who do not speak English as the primary language or
who suffer from various disabilities. The experience of low-income advocates
is that many of the clients they work with have no idea that their utilities
offer discount rates.29 In addition, with the advent
of welfare reform, tens of thousands of families that previously received
TANF or food stamps no longer do.30 Customers often
learn about the discount rates through the agency that provides their
benefits. The fewer people on these benefit programs, the fewer who learn
about the discounts.
Once a non-LIHEAP
customer learns about the discount rate, he or she must fill out an application
and submit documentation demonstrating receipt of means-tested government
assistance. MASSCAPDA has no quarrel with requiring applications or documentation,
but understands that any delay in completing the process works to the
customer's disadvantage. MASSCAPDA understands that there is often a lag
of one to three months between the time a customer first inquires about
being placed on the discount rate and the time the company approves the
application and actually applies the discount to current bills. Apparently,
even LIHEAP households that are added to the discount rate program through
communications between the local fuel assistance agency and the utility
face substantial delays. MASSCAPDA encourages the Department to work
out protocols that result in the discount being applied retroactively
to the date of the customer's initial inquiry, if the customer applies
directly and eventually provides all required documentation. If the customer
documents that he or she has been on the qualifying benefits program continuously
from a date preceding the date of initial inquiry, MASSCAPDA recommends
that the discount be applied retroactively for a period of up to twelve
months. For LIHEAP-qualified households, MASSCAPDA recommends that the
discount apply retroactively to the beginning of the then-current LIHEAP
program year (October 1).
LIHEAP and non-LIHEAP
households also face problems due to procedures for purging lists of enrolled
households that are no longer eligible and re-enrolling previously dropped
households. These procedures vary from company to company, but some companies
routinely drop LIHEAP-qualified households from their discount rates sometime
in the fall or early winter (e.g., around November or December). Many
households, however, are not determined eligible for LIHEAP until later
in the heating season. Because most companies do not apply the discounts
retroactively, households can face unjustified gaps in their discount
eligibility. For example, a households that applies for fuel assistance
in January 2000 may not get on the discount rate until February or March
due to processing time, then dropped in September 2000. Households on
TANF, food stamps or other benefits programs can face similar problems.
Households that are on LIHEAP year in and year out still face gaps, often
of several months, in discount rate coverage. The Department can solve
these administrative problems by adopting reasonable and fair purging
and re-enrollment rules. At a minimum, customers that have been determined
eligible for the discount rate via their participation in LIHEAP should
not be dropped from the discount rate earlier than the subsequent February,
in order to give households adequate time to apply and the sub-grantees
adequate time to notify the utility that the customer has again been determined
eligible. Alternatively, utilities should make the discount retroactive
back to the date the LIHEAP household was dropped if the customer is in
fact determined to be LIHEAP eligible in any two consecutive years. There
should be no gap in discount coverage for households who are determined
LIHEAP eligible year in and year out.
Further, no customer
should be dropped without prior written notification from the company
and without being offered a reasonable period to document continued eligibility.
MASSCAPDA believes that some companies may drop clients after receiving
electronic data from a LIHEAP sub-grantee or government agency that the
household is no longer receiving government assistance, without providing
adequate, advance notification to the customer.
Finally, at the
time of initial enrollment, customers should be offered the opportunity
to designate other programs for which they are eligible. For example,
a LIHEAP-qualified household should be given the opportunity to note that
they are also receiving SSI. This would avoid the problem of a household
being purged because the utility determines that the family is not receiving,
e.g., LIHEAP. The household might still be able to show it is receiving,
e.g., SSI.
MASSCAPDA strongly
supports the expansion of computer matching and electronic enrollment
to identify and subscribe new discount customers. Clearly, the LIHEAP-utility
model has worked very well in moving tens of households onto the discounts
while deceasing the need for utility outreach to LIHEAP households and
minimizing paperwork. The governing statute provides that outreach efforts
by utilities may include:
establishing an
automatic program of matching customer accounts with lists of recipients
of said means tested public benefits programs and based on the results
of said matching program, to presumptively offer a low-income discount
rate to eligible customers so identified; provided, however, that the
distribution company, within 60 days of said presumptive enrollment,
informs any such low-income customer of said presumptive enrollment
and all rights and obligations of a customer under said program, including
the right to withdraw from said program without penalty.
G.L. c. 164, §1F(4)(i).
This is the precise model that New York State follows in its telephone
lifeline program. There, a single state agency compiles an electronic
file that contains identifying information on all households receiving
a broad range of public assistance benefits. Verizon, as the dominant
phone carrier, receives this list and "presumptively offer[s]"
the discount rate to each identified household. These presumptively approved
households separately receive a letter informing them of their "rights
and obligations" under the discount program, including the right
to withdraw. New York has the fifth highest penetration rate for telephone
lifeline in the country (52%, as calculated by NCLC).
The challenge before
the Department is to work with other agencies that may be willing to follow
either the LIHEAP model or the New York model just described. There are
two obstacles, each of which can be overcome in this proceeding. First,
unlike DHCD and its sub-grantees, other government programs and agencies
have not developed communications and data transfer protocols, as well
as personal ties, with utility companies. DHCD and its sub-grantees have
been paying utility bills for two decades and have developed a web of
relationships and procedures for moving information among the relevant
players. Simply by opening this proceeding and inviting other government
agencies to take part, the Department is providing those other agencies
an opportunity to learn how the LIHEAP-utility connection works and a
chance to learn from past experience. There is no reason why other agencies
cannot develop the administrative tools for transferring information to
utilities that would qualify benefits recipients for discount rates. Second,
government agencies and utility companies are legitimately concerned about
the privacy rights of low-income households. No agency or utility wants
to be in the position of releasing information about a family's income
status or receipt of government assistance unless it clearly has the legal
right to do so.31 MASSCAPDA notes, however, that G.L.
c. 164, §1F(4)(i) can be read as giving government agencies statutory
authorization for releasing information to utilities, if limited to the
purpose of presumptively qualifying households for the discount rates.
But the Department need not address this admittedly difficult legal question.
The present proceeding provides the opportunity to share the success of
the LIHEAP-utility model with others. Other government agencies should
be able to use the same effective tool that LIHEAP sub-grantees have developed:
the addition of language at the end of the benefits application form that
gives the agency explicit permission to release information to utilities
or other agencies for the purpose of qualifying the applying household
for the discount rate. While this language does not currently appear on
application forms other than the LIHEAP form, MASSCAPDA believes that
all benefits programs require recipients to re-certify their income or
status periodically (at least annually) and sometimes in-person. Thus,
for all new applicants, appropriate language can be added to application
forms, and for all current recipients, language can be added to recertification
forms. Within the course of a year, all government agencies could
obtain written permission from all recipients willing to grant permission.
This approach would practically avoid the problems "related to electronic
sharing of financial or other confidential information" (the Department's
seventh question) because those who could claim privacy rights would waive
any such rights in writing. Just like the LIHEAP sub-grantees and utility
companies now electronically match lists of LIHEAP recipients against
utility customer lists to identify and enroll customers onto the discount
rates, other government agencies could do the same (thus answering the
Department's fifth question). MASSCAPDA suggests that it is particularly
important to draw the Department of Transitional Assistance, the Division
of Medical Assistance, the Social Security Administration and the housing
side of DHCD into these proceedings because each of these agencies oversees
or directly provides assistance to a very large number of households eligible
for the discount rate. MASSCAPDA also suggest that the Department
of Education may be able to facilitate access to families participating
in the school breakfast and lunch programs. Finally, the Massachusetts
Department of Veteran Services and the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
may be able to assist in enrolling recipients of income-tested veterans
benefits. However, MASSCAPDA has no information on the number of people
on these latter programs.
The Department has
raised two other strategies for facilitating increased enrollment on the
discount rates:
(3) Discuss whether
current subscriber eligibility standards would permit utilities to enroll
each other's customers in discount programs; and
(6) Discuss whether
any legal impediment exists to enrolling eligible customers in all available
discount programs.
MASSCAPDA thinks that
it may prove unproductive to follow the route of attempting to get utilities
to enroll each other's customers in discount programs. The concept is
attractive. Many customers would prefer to apply to one utility (either
the telephone, gas or electric company), be determined income-eligible
for discounts by that one company, and then be enrolled in the discounts
all three companies offer. Practically, however, MASSCAPDA anticipates
that utilities will raise concerns about slight differences in their individual
eligibility rules32 or issues about differing enrollment
practices. Various parties may raise privacy concerns about one utility
sharing customer-specific information, including income status information,
with another company. If any concerns raised can be quickly resolved,
MASSCAPDA does not object in principle to the concept of easing the application
process for customers who wish to apply only once for discounts offered
by the three types of utilities.
As an alternative
to having utilities cross-enroll customers, however, MASSCAPDA believes
that there are no insurmountable legal impediments to the fuel assistance
sub-grantees facilitating the enrollment of eligible customers in all
available discount programs. The sub-grantees are in an excellent
position to facilitate that effort. The sub-grantees have long-established
relationships with the gas, electric and telephone33
companies and are seen as agencies with a specialty in certifying income
eligibility. In addition, because the sub-grantees are non-profit corporations
and not involved in selling utility services, fewer privacy concerns will
be raised if the sub-grantees are involved in transferring information
about income eligibility. The utilities themselves may well prefer to
have the sub-grantees play this role, rather than developing protocols
for one utility to directly share information with another utility. If
the Department agrees to support this approach, customers would be able
to apply only once to be determined enrolled in the electric, gas and
telephone discount programs.
MASSCAPDA also
suggests that the Department should seriously consider allowing receipt
of the Earned Income Tax Credit ("EITC") by households at or
below 175% of the poverty guideline as a means to identify and qualify
discount-eligible households. According to the General Accounting
Office, 12.9 million households received the EITC in 1999, 75% of the
17.2 million households that the GAO estimates were eligible.34
Nationally, the EITC thus serves far more households than LIHEAP (approximately
5 million households), TANF (less than 3 million households), food stamps
(approximately 7 million households) or other public assistance programs,
and also reaches a much higher percentage of its own estimated eligible
population than other programs. MASSCAPDA would be happy to work with
the Department to explore how EITC households can be identified and enrolled.
The current discount
programs only allow households receiving or determined eligible for various
government assistance programs to receive the utility discounts. There
are, however, households with very low-incomes who are not on any government
benefits program at every point in time. For example, thousands of Massachusetts
households are no longer on TANF, or will stop receiving TANF in the near
future, due to time limits imposed under welfare reform. Many of these
households also incorrectly assume that they are no longer eligible for
food stamps and, thus, no longer receive this government benefit. As another
example, many low-income households are not programmatically eligible
for fuel assistance because they are not legally responsible for the heating
bill or do not pay for their heat, indirectly, as part of the rent. This
year, DHCD has begun to address this problem in a limited way. DHCD, through
its sub-grantees, certifies households as income eligible for LIHEAP but
not currently eligible for payment of benefits in those instances when
the household is not programmatically eligible. Through this process,
the household becomes eligible for the utility discounts. MASSCAPDA encourages
the Department to support and expand on this approach, allowing the sub-grantees
to certify that a household's income is at or below 175%. At the present
time, the sub-grantees are only doing this for income-eligible households
that apply for fuel assistance believing, incorrectly, that they are also
program eligible (e.g., responsible for their heating bills). However,
there are many low-income households that know they are not programmatically
eligible and simply do not apply. MASSCAPDA would be happy to work
with the utilities and the Department to develop protocols for certifying
the income of households not programmatically eligible for other government
assistance programs but whose incomes have been determined to be at or
below 175% of the poverty guideline.
5. COST IMPLICATIONS
To the extent that
the Department's efforts in this docket succeed, the total cost of the
discount programs will increase. While telephone companies are fully compensated
for the costs of Lifeline and Link-Up even if enrollment increases, due
to the existence of a dedicated fund for these programs, gas and electric
companies face financial disincentives to increasing enrollment.
G.L. c. 164, §1F(4)(i)
unconditionally requires companies to make "substantial outreach
efforts to make said low-income discount available to eligible customers"
and specifies the automatic enrollment techniques at issue in this docket
as one such outreach effort. But utilities may resist expanding their
efforts to enroll customers because of the impact on revenues.
Gas and electric utilities
may of course recover all prudent costs of service, including the cost
of offering discounted service, in a rate case, subject to any rate caps
or freezes that are in effect. MASSCAPDA presently takes no position on
whether other mechanisms should be considered, but will respond if the
utilities propose any.
To put this issue
in context, MASSCAPDA notes that even if the Department's efforts in this
docket increased the number of people receiving discounts by 50% (from
approximately 30% of the eligible households to 45%), the discounts would
still reach less than half of the estimated eligible population. This
would be well below the penetration rate for the Earned Income Tax Credit,
which requires far more effort to complete the required paperwork. Yet
increasing the number of people on the discount rates by 50% would provide
substantial benefits to more than 60,000 electric and gas households and
80,000 telephone customers.
MASSCAPDA is not predicting
that the Department's efforts in this docket will increase participation
by 50%, but, if so, the costs would be de minimis from the view of other
ratepayers who will eventually be required to pay for the increased discounts
through their rates. MASSCAPDA estimates that the cost of expanding participation
in the electric discount rates would be in the range of .3 mills per kWh,
or between 15¢ and 20¢ per month for typical residential customers
using 500 kWh to 600 kWh per month. This is an extremely minimal cost
in comparison to the substantial social benefit of assisting 70,000 addition
low-income families.
6. CONCLUSION
MASSCAPDA appreciates
this opportunity to comment on means of increasing participation in utility
discount rate programs. MASSCAPDA encourages the Department to follow
up on this initial round of comments by setting up informal working groups
that can discuss implementation of the various ideas that parties will
offer. MASSCAPDA particularly encourages the Department to continue the
efforts it has already begun to bring government agencies that provide
means-tested assistance into this process because these agencies have
the greatest ability to identify and help enroll low-income families onto
the discount rates. MASSCAPDA looks forward to working with the Department
and other interested parties.
Respectfully submitted,
Charles Harak, Esq.
John Howat
National Consumer Law Center
77 Summer Street, 10th floor
Boston, MA 02110
617 542-8010 (voice)
617 542-8028 (fax)
Charak@nclc.org
Jhowat@nclc.org
Jerrold Oppenheim, Esq.
57 Middle Street
Gloucester, MA 01930
978 283-0897 (voice)
jerroldopp@tgic.net
For the Massachusetts Community
Action Porgrams Directors Association and
Massachusetts Energy Directors Association
_____________________________________________________________
1 "The Winter Energy Outlook for the Poor" (Economic
Opportunity Studies, Dec. 2000), available at www.ncaf.org/eoserpt.pdf
(showing that low-income households spent 14% to 19% of total income on
household energy, for the years 1997 to 2000).
2
"Consumer Debt for Utility Bills Runs High, A Legacy of Last Winter's
Price Increases," Wall St. J., Oct. 16, 2002, at B8B ("the average
debt level is more than double what it was a year ago" at several
surveyed utilities).
3
Last year's maximum benefit for the lowest income households was $900
(excluding supplemental benefits to high consumption households); this
year's is $475. This latter figure will increase approximately $125 once
the federal government releases recently-appropriated funds.
4
Bureau of Labor Statistics, "Local Area Unemployment Statistics."
Http://data.bls.gov/cgi-bin/surveymost.
5
Department of Housing and Community Development, "LIHEAP Application
Taken Comparison," 1/11/02 (FY 2002 applications, through December
2002: 126,287. Prior year: 112,424).
6
"DOER Electric Discount Rate Outreach and Eligibility Report,"
www.state.ma.us/doer/pub_info/ drr02.pdf.
7
See 42 U.S.C. §§6861 et seq. (weatherization for low-income
households).
8
See 42 U.S.C. §§8621 et seq., especially §8624(b)(1)(C)(allowing
states to use a portion of fuel assistance funds for "low-cost residential
weatherization and other cost-effective energy-related home repair").
9
So in original. The company's actual name was "American Hoechst."
10
Blackstone Gas did not have a discount rate until the end of 2001.
11
This statute also includes a lengthy but non-exclusive list of programs
serving low-income people.
12
As noted, however, the Court's decision was limited to the specific facts
presented in American Hoechest.
13
"Lifeline Monthly Support by State or Jurisdiction (As of April 2001)",
based on data from the Universal Service Administrative Company.
14
MASSCAPDA has very little information on how Verizon conducts outreach
for its discount programs.
15
MASSCAPDA refers the Department to the attached letter of Michelle Lerner,
Greater Boston Legal Services (at 1-4), which details the problems many
of her low-income clients have in learning about and applying for discount
rates.
16
See note 6, supra.
17
The Washington Utilities and Transportation Commission includes detailed
information about the telephone discount programs on its web site, www.wutc.wa.gov.
However, even there the consumer would have to use the links to the "Consumer
Info" and "Telephone" pages to get this information.
18
MASSCAPDA has no information on the penetration rates of gas company discounts.
19
The source for all data in this table are the Reports numbered 39 to 44,
filed by Verizon with the Department, "Lifeline Telephone Assistance
Plan/Link-Up America Assistance Plan," Docket 89-57.
20
Bureau of Labor Statistics, http://data.bls.gov/cgi-bin/surveymost.
21
"DTA Today," www.state.ma.us/dtatoday/facts.
22
Emergency Aid to the Elderly, Disabled and Children.
23
Temporary Assistance to Families with Dependent Children. Also known as
"TANF," for Temporary Assistance for Needy Families.
24
www.state.ma.us/dhcd/publications/HOW_TO2K.HTM. Maximum eligibility is
80% of median income, which is greater than 175% of poverty. However,
most families earn well below 175%of the federal poverty guideline.
25
See www.state.ma.us/dhcd/publications/HOW_TO2K.HTM. Program rules require
that 75% of the units go to families earning less than 30% of median income,
which is well below 175% of poverty.
26
MASSCAPDA has not been able to compile data on enrollment in these programs.
However, MASSCAPDA will promptly forward any additional information it
receives to the Department.
27
If the Department wishes, MASSCAPDA can provide a summary table of income
eligibility by program.
28
In the parlance of LIHEAP, the Department of Housing and Community Development
("DHCD") is the "grantee" of the federal LIHEAP funds.
The two dozen local agencies (mostly community action programs) that accept
applications and make payments are known as "sub-grantees" of
DHCD.
29
See attached letter from Greater Boston Legal Services ("GBLS letter").
30
Between 1993 and 1999, TANF enrollment in Massachusetts dropped from 115,000
to 47,000, a 59%
decline. The food stamp caseload dropped from 192,000 in 1994 to 112,000
by early 2000.
31
G.L. c. 214, §1B provides: "A person shall have a right against
unreasonable, substantial or serious interference with his privacy. The
superior court shall have jurisdiction in equity to enforce such right
and in connection therewith to award damages."
32
For example, the list of programs that qualify a household for telephone
lifeline (47 C.F.R. 54.409) is somewhat narrower than the list of programs
that qualify a household for electric discounts (G.L. c. 164, §1F(4)(i)).
In addition, many gas companies allow all LIHEAP households onto their
discounts, while electric companies include only those LIHEAP households
with incomes at or below 175% of the poverty guideline.
33
While the sub-grantees do not operate any telephone assistance program,
Verizon has made arrangements with the sub-grantees to identify households
eligible for LIHEAP for the purpose of making these households eligible
for Lifeline and Link-Up.
34
Letter of James R. White, GAO's Director of Tax Issues, to Congressman
William J. Coyne (Dec. 14, 2001).
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