The Guardian Australia

I have done all I can to save energy and I can barely afford the cost of existing

- Angela Finch

It is frightenin­g to hear that electricit­y bills are expected to rise by 30-50% in the next 12 months – that’s up to $1,450 for my family of three children under 14 whom support on my own. Our bill in the July–to-October winter quarter last year was about $800; this year it was $964. If electricit­y bills rise by 30% next October, I can expect a bill of about $1,250. If they rise by 50%, it will be more like $1,450.

Three hundred dollars extra over three months may not seem like a big deal to some people, but to us it’s a scary prospect. It’s more than I spend on groceries each week.

The total anticipate­d bill of $1,250$1,450 is more than two weeks’ rent. It’s about what I spend on transport and on medication for the year; and what I will pay in school fees next year for a “free education”, mainly on school uniforms for three children in January – this is based upon what these items cost now of course. We know that all these prices are going to go up.

My electricit­y bill for the same time last year was $165 cheaper. Because we try to save energy, our usage fell by over 4kWh for the same period.

We live in Hobart. I am a sole parent to three daughters. We don’t have electric blankets. We don’t have heating/ cooling in each of the bedrooms – we don’t use cooling at all. I don’t leave the hall light on during the night even though my youngest would like that. I do our washing in the evening when electricit­y is cheaper, all done in cold water. We don’t have a clothes dryer. I turn anything I can off at the power point. I don’t turn all the lights on when it gets dark, only what we need, then turn them all off when the kids are in bed. We time our showers.

I think a lot about what I cook. I like to use the oven when it’s going to be extra cold so I can use the extra warmth to help heat the house, which is also a reason I like to cook bread on cold days. I close the curtains early. We put extra layers on. I go to bed early so not to use extra electricit­y.

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My budget works in two ways: category 1 is bills where amounts are locked in, such as rent, medication­s for the kids (my medication­s go in the next category), day-to-day costs of three kids at school, our transport costs.

Then there is everything else in category 2, which is extras we need but aren’t essential. I juggle things around to cover things like shoes, clothes, underwear, kids’ birthdays, Christmas, anything else really. Two of my children have birthdays in November. I pay a bit more on the electricit­y during September and October so I can halt those payments to redirect the funds to their birthdays during November.

For the first time in two years, I was thrilled to get my electricit­y bill this month – I was $55 in credit. This is such an achievemen­t for me.

On Tuesday night that achievemen­t was made redundant. As I was listening to Jim Chalmers deliver the budget, my thoughts were, “well, my wage isn’t going up by 50% next year. Will we make it through to this time next year? Can I possibly work two jobs? Am I sure there in nothing else I can cut out of our budget? What else can I give up?”

As a renter, I can’t put solar on my roof. I can’t update my windows/doors for better insulation. I can’t better insulate my home. I’m not allowed to fill the gaps between the windows, doors and floors. I have done all I can to save energy and bring down our electricit­y bills. I am at a loss at what to do next. By this time next year, I will be working over 40 hours a quarter just to cover our electricit­y bill and I know I am one electricit­y bill away from dropping all I am juggling.

How can I secure a safe financial future for us when I can barely keep up with the cost of existing?

• Angela Finch is a Hobart mum and advocate who has had to give up tertiary studies to keep up with the rising cost of living

Can I possibly work two jobs? Am I sure there in nothing else I can cut out of our budget? What else can I give up?

 ?? Photograph: vadiar/ Getty Images/iStockphot­o ?? A woman wears extra layers indoors – something that many are forced to do to save on electricit­y bills as costs rise.
Photograph: vadiar/ Getty Images/iStockphot­o A woman wears extra layers indoors – something that many are forced to do to save on electricit­y bills as costs rise.

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