San Francisco Chronicle

White House offers more aid for heat, utility bills

- By Josh Boak Josh Boak is an Associated Press writer.

WASHINGTON — The Biden administra­tion is taking steps to help distribute several billion dollars in aid for winter heating and utility bills, an unpreceden­ted sum that comes largely from its $1.9 trillion coronaviru­s relief package.

The package provided an additional $4.5 billion for the government’s Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program, which typically has funding of $3 billion to $4 billion annually. Aid for renters can also cover utility costs, while the money provided to state, local and tribal government­s can help families that face high heating bills and are ineligible for other programs.

“It’s another example of where the American Rescue Plan included extra precaution­s to ensure we would be prepared,” said Gene Sperling, who oversees coronaviru­s relief for the White House. “These new programs and funding were designed to ensure that if the weather was colder or the prices were higher, we would have the highest resources ever to help as many hard-pressed families as possible.”

The White House sent out invitation­s for a call Thursday afternoon with representa­tives from governors’ offices to discuss ways to distribute the funds and coordinate across programs. Speakers on the call included Sperling, Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm, Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra and the governors of Connecticu­t,

Maine, Michigan and Minnesota.

The aid helps to create a cushion that limits the shock of higher energy costs ahead of winter. Republican lawmakers have said the relief package, which became law in March, caused higher levels of inflation, with prices in October 6.2% higher than a year ago. The GOP argument is that the Biden relief package sent too much money into the economy, sending prices up and hurting middle-class and lower-income families.

“The Democrats’ inflation is functionin­g like an ultra-punitive tax on the American families who can least afford it,“Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky said Wednesday.

But in this instance, the spending from the aid package is already helping to insulate millions of households from higher utility bills and reducing strains on household budgets.

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