Health
and Human Services Fiscal Year 2001 Appropriations for the Low Income Home Energy
Assistance Program (LIHEAP)
April21, 2000
by:Olivia B. Wein, Staff Attorney
National
Consumer Law Center
1629
K Street, N.W., suite 600
Washington,
DC 20006
202-986-6060
I. Introduction
Mr. Chairman
and Members of the Committee, the National Consumer Law Center appreciates the
opportunity to submit written testimony regarding appropriation of funds for
the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program for FY 2001.This testimony is submitted on behalf of our low income and elderly clients
who face going without food or medicine to avoid disconnection due to an inability
to afford utility service.
The National
Consumer Law Center (NCLC) is a nonprofit corporation dedicated to the interests
of low-income consumers.Founded
in 1969, NCLC provides specialized legal support and consulting services to
low-income consumers, their advocates, government agencies and private attorneys
in all aspects of consumer and utility law.NCLC has helped utilities, regulatory commissions and advocates design
low-income affordability programs and has published leading manuals and reports
on related law.[1]
NCLC is
a strong supporter of the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP),
as it is the primary safety net between low-income consumers and disconnection
of utility service.LIHEAP is designed to target energy assistance to households
most in danger of losing that vital service.However, without adequate regular appropriations, LIHEAP cannot get the
job done.On behalf of our low-income
clients, we urge the restoration of LIHEAP funding to at least $1.5 billion
in regular appropriations for FY 2001.This level of funding is slightly less than the level appropriated for
this program in FY 1988 and far from the $2 billion level authorized to be appropriated
for this program in prior and upcoming years[2].
We also
support additional emergency contingency funding of $300 million and advance
LIHEAP appropriations for FY 2002 of at least $1.6 billion.This amount is still below the pre-1987 regular appropriations levels,
but would enable states to cover a larger portion of the energy burden for eligible
customers and increase energy efficiency efforts to move households closer to
energy self-sufficiency.
While
emergency funds are critical for responding to life-threatening, brutal winters
and summer heat waves, increasing the regular appropriations for LIHEAP will
allow the states to design more solid programs for the upcoming year.This includes proactive, timely and appropriately designed responses
to crisis situations, as opposed to reactive and potentially ill-timed responses
due to the lag time that comes with the dependence on the release of emergency
contingency funds.Delays
in responding to heating and cooling crisis needlessly jeopardize the health
and safety of those Americans eligible for assistance.
II. The Need for Restored Regular LIHEAP Funding
Those
that cannot afford to pay their winter heating bill often face desperate choices.A 1999 survey of LIHEAP recipients in Iowa revealed that when the heating
bills were unaffordable, almost 21% went without medical care, 12.3% went without
food and 19% went to bed early with lots of blankets.[3]Analysis of recent data from the US Department of Energy, Energy Information
Administration show that in 1997, about 2.1 million households suffered from
loss of heat.All but 154,000
of the households were LIHEAP eligible.[4]The average period without heat was 3.3 days.[5]The consequences of disconnections include, health and safety risks associated
with alternative heat and lighting sources, such as kerosene and candles; hunger
and malnutrition; hyperthermia and hypothermia and eviction and increased homelessness.
Census
statistics also show a widespread need for the LIHEAP program.
Households
Eligible for LIHEAP
out of 91,993,582 Total Households in the US
Poverty
level
Number
of Households
%
Total Households
Greater
of 60% SMI* or 150% of poverty
24,136,925
26%
150%
poverty or below
18,718,748
20%
125%
poverty or below
14,796,445
16%
110%
poverty or below
12,335,430
13.4%
* State
Median Income
Source:compiled from U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Service, LIHEAP
Division of Energy Assistance/OCS/ACF table on number of all low-income households,
by census region and state based on 1990 Census data.
At its
peak, regular, non-emergency, funding for LIHEAP was $2.1 billion in 1985.Since then, regular block grant funding has been cut back to $1.1 billion
in FY 1999 and 2000.Consistent
with the cutback in funding is the reduction of the number of households served.According to the Administration for Children and Families, U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services, the number of federally eligible households using
LIHEAP assistance dropped from 7.5 million households in 1981 to 4.4 million
households in 1996.[6]
At the
same time, the percent of LIHEAP recipients’ home heating bills covered by LIHEAP
has been diminishing as the amount of recipients’ total heating bills has been
increasing.In 1981, LIHEAP covered around 23% of the total bills
and since 1987, this percentage has steadily dropped from 19% in 1987 to 8%
in 1996.[7]At the same time total home heating bills have increased in current dollars
from $7.0 billion in 1981 to $7.9 billion in 1987 to $10.6 billion in 1996.[8]
Who is
hit hardest by the reduction in LIHEAP funding?It is estimated that 43% of LIHEAP eligible households have children.[9]A recent survey by the National Energy Assistance Directors Association
released in September 1997, showed that of the 1.2 million households that lost
LIHEAP assistance between FY 1995 and FY 1997, 313,000 had at least one elderly
member and 156,000 had at least on disabled member.
LIHEAP
recipients also tend to be on the low-end of the poverty scale.For example, in FY 1995, around 40% of households that received assistance
were under 75% of the poverty level.[10]The proportion of energy costs to household income is called the energy
burden.In 1995, NCLC completed
a study that illustrated the disparity in energy burden between average residential
and low-income households.We found
the burden for the average residential household is 3.8%, while low-income households
pay far more.Households receiving
welfare assistance paid an average of 26% of their income on energy, Social
Security recipients paid around 14% and minimum wage households paid around
12%.[11]
III. LIHEAP can move households toward self-sufficiency
LIHEAP
is a block grant that targets assistance to low-income households who pay a
high proportion of household income on home energy, assists eligible families
in crisis situations, and among other things, provides low-cost weatherization
to reduce household energy costs.[12]Increased funding for LIHEAP could work towards reducing dependence on
energy assistance in the first place.As noted by Vicky Mroczek, Chief of the Office of Community Services,
Ohio Department of Development and the Director of Ohio’s LIHEAP program:
Reduction
in energy assistance dependence over time is self-evident with respect to weatherization,
but I think it’s also true on the bill assistance side.When someone goes into debt to maintain utility service, there are costs
or other needs that go unmet.When
someone owes the utility money over a long period, ratepayers bear that expense,
too.An unpaid final utility bill
on a credit report impinges on a person’s ability to buy or rent housing; sometimes
it can show up when a potential employer does a background check.Loss of utility services also affects education performance due to excessive
moving or unhealthy conditions in the home.
IV.
Emergency Contingency LIHEAP Funds
Emergency
contingency funds are a critical resource in times of crisis, but should not
be counted as part of the overall amount of funding a state has to plan a program.Emergency contingency funds are released only after the emergence of
a full-blown crisis, which may arise after the program has shut down for the
season.Maintaining current funding
levels for LIHEAP regular and emergency contingency funding in lieu of restored
regular funding will continue to place vulnerable low-income and elderly households
in potentially life-threatening situations time and time again.A more rational approach would be to increase the current level of the
regular funding so that programs can effectively plan ahead for crisis situations
to mitigate the danger tosafety and health.
V.The Private Sector
Fuel funds,
a form of non-federal energy assistance, play an important role in helping those
Americans in dire need of energy assistance; however, these funds are only a
small fraction of the LIHEAP.The
National Fuel Funds Network estimates that in 1998, around $88 million in non-federal
energy assistance was raised nationally.These private sector funds are critical, but simply not large enough
to provide the amount of energy assistance to eligible Americans as the LIHEAP
and cannot fill the gap left by reduced levels of regular LIHEAP funding.
VI.Conclusion
We urge
the restoration of LIHEAP assistance to, at a minimum, $1.5 billion in regular
appropriations for FY 2001 and $1.6 billion in advance appropriation for 2002.Restored levels of regular funding will enable state agencies design
a stronger program for the upcoming fiscal year.Finally, the need for LIHEAP assistance continues, especially as states
implement welfare reform and, as demonstrated this past winter with the home
heating oil price crisis, inadequate funding levels place the health of financially
vulnerable families in jeopardy.
[1] Manuals and reports relating
to utility service include Access to Utility Service, Cap the
Gap: Assuring Residential Customers Share Benefits of Electric Industry
Restructuring, The Regulation of Rural Electric Cooperatives,
A Guide to Low-Income Energy Efficiency and Energy and the Poor:
The Crisis Continues.
[3] Preliminary results of a
survey by the Department of Human Rights, Community Action Agencies, Des
Moines Iowa. The final results are expected in May 2000.
[4] Derived from 1997 Residential
Energy Consumption Survey (RECS), database files, Energy Information Administration,
U.S. Department of Energy, Washington, DC.1999.
[6] US Department of Health
and Human Services, Administration for Children and Families, September
1999, “LIHEAP Home Energy Notebook for Fiscal Year 1997”, p 27.