Austin American-Statesman

Federal home heating assistance program is safe, for now

- By Wilson Ring

The federal program that helps lowincome people heat their homes in the winter and, in some areas, cool them in the summer has been saved from eliminatio­n in the just-passed federal budget.

While that’s good news for people who used the program in the just-finished heating season, next year’s funding will have to be negotiated by Congress as part of next year’s federal spending.

Hundreds of thousands of people across the United States rely on the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program to help heat and cool their homes and make their homes more energy efficient.

In Vermont, known for its frigid winters that challenges many low-income residents to heat their homes, this year’s federal block grant of $18.9 million is helping about 20,000 people heat their homes or make renovation­s so their homes will be more energy efficient, which in the long run saves money.

Todd Alexander, 55, a disabled painting contractor from Milton, Vermont, has been a LIHEAP recipient for years, both for heating assistance and upgrades to the insulation and heating system of his 1979 mobile home, where he has lived for 22 years.

“I try to get across to these people that this helps low-income people that are working. This isn’t just about people, as they say ... doing nothing on welfare, and that’s what really upsets me,” said Alexander, who noted he burned the 125 gallons of kerosene he used courtesy of LIHEAP this winter, but his assistance has been decreasing for several years.

Bobby Arnell, the director of Vermont’s LIHEAP program, said, “It did come as a surprise that Trump’s proposed budget proposed to eliminate the program completely, since we had been adjusting to significan­t decreases in funding over the last few years.”

For homes in the Northeast, which rely heavily on heating oil, the average heating cost this winter was $1,227, federal statistics show.

The National Energy Assistance Directors’ Associatio­n says that nationwide, the average heating cost for low-income households was $783 this winter, and the average LIHEAP grant was about $458 and was available only to about 20 percent of eligible households.

In March, President Donald Trump proposed cutting about 10 percent from the current fiscal year’s LIHEAP payment, money that had not yet been delivered to the states.

He also proposed eliminatin­g the program entirely for the federal budget that begins Oct. 1, which would include the 2017-2018 heating season.

But in the spending plan for the remainder of this fiscal year approved by Congress this week, lawmakers restored the final 10 percent, or about $3.4 billion nationwide, of LIHEAP funding for the current fiscal year.

Lawmakers are beginning the process of preparing the fiscal year 2018 budget that would include LIHEAP funding for next winter.

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