MASSCAP Requests Additional Fuel Assistance Funds for 48,000 Vulnerable Massachusetts Families Expected to Run Out of Benefit by Mid-January

Dec 17, 2018

Association Requests $30 Million in the FY 19 Supplemental Budget to Head Off Public Health, Safety Crisis

The Massachusetts Association for Community Action (MASSCAP) is urging Governor Charlie Baker and members of the Massachusetts legislature to include $30 million for the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) in the next FY 19 Supplemental Budget.  In a letter to the governor and legislators, MASSCAP says that the issue of fuel assistance has “literally become a matter of life and death for some.”

“Prolonged bitterly cold weather and rising heating oil prices have combined to make staying warm this winter a nightmare for tens of thousands of vulnerable households who heat with oil,” said MASSCAP’s Executive Director Joe Diamond.  “Particularly at risk are children, seniors, and veterans across the Commonwealth. This is all made worse by the fact that Massachusetts is faced with a cut of $11 million in its federal fuel assistance allocation this year.”

At $3 per gallon for heating oil, the current federally-funded fuel assistance benefit will allow oil heat households to cover the cost of 1 and 3/4 tanks of oil. On average, a typical household uses 3-4 tanks of heating oil to get through cold and snowy New England winters.  Most of the close to 48,000 oil heat households who have accessed the fuel assistance benefit have exhausted it as of this week and all of them will have exhausted it by the end of January, leaving them in a perilous position for the rest of the winter. When temperatures are between 10 to 20 degrees, as the region experienced over the last few weeks, heating systems run virtually non-stop.  As a result, a household could go through 100 gallons in less than a week.

“People living in poverty are particularly vulnerable when the region experiences extreme weather, and that is especially the case when we face the kind of cold we have been experiencing,” said Birgitta Damon, MASSCAP President and Executive Director of Lynn Economic Opportunity.  “The $30 million will help to ensure that the extreme winter weather does not cause a public health and safety crisis around the Commonwealth.”

The Massachusetts Association of Community Action’s 23 private, non-profit human service and advocacy organizations work to administer key anti-poverty programs in every city and town in the Commonwealth. These organizations serve over 600,000 low-income people annually, more than half of them with incomes below 125% of the federal poverty level.  Those interested in learning more about fuel assistance can visit MASSCAP’s website on the LIHEAP program, heatinghelpma.org, where information on eligibility and the agency serving their community can be found.

For 50 years, Community Action Agencies have been on the front lines of addressing poverty — administering federal programs, federal community services and community development grants, and state funds. CAAs are economic engines in cities and towns across Massachusetts, providing communities with an annual infusion of over $500 million in total resources. CAAs generate at least twice that amount helping clients become self-sufficient and productive.

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Read Letter to the Governor