AG’S OFFICE AWARDS GRANT FUNDING TO ORGANIZATIONS ACROSS THE STATE TO HELP LOW-INCOME RESIDENTS PAY HEATING BILLS
AG Encourages Residents Who Are
Facing Financial Difficulty to Contact their Utility for Assistance
BOSTON
– With the cold weather season approaching, Attorney General Maura
Healey announced today that she has awarded nearly $570,000 in grant funding to
14 organizations across the state to help low-income households pay off or
lower their natural gas heating bills.
“Each winter, thousands of Massachusetts households struggle to come up with
the funds to pay their monthly heating bills, and we expect many more to be in
need this year amid the COVID-19 public health crisis,” AG Healey said. “This
grant program will help us ensure that families have the financial support they
need to stay warm during the cold months.”
This year, AG
Healey’s Natural Gas Fuel Assistance Grant program is providing
approximately $569,000 to programs run through state agencies, municipalities,
and nonprofit organizations that currently assist residents in paying for gas
service. Approximately one-in-four low-income eligible households in
Massachusetts currently receive assistance on their heating bills, and many
more are expected to need help this year with the COVID-19 pandemic. This grant
program aims to close that gap by providing assistance to families who are in
need but are not currently receiving assistance or not receiving enough help in
paying their monthly bills.
The
grant program utilizes funds from a settlement the AG’s Office reached with National
Grid for improperly charging customers reconnection fees. Since
2018, the grant program has awarded more than $2 million to programs and
initiatives that provide fuel assistance.
The AG’s Office is awarding grant funding to the following organizations:
·
Casa Myrna
Vazquez (Greater Boston and Boston
Harbor Communities in Middlesex and Norfolk Counties): The organization
will provide funds to survivors of domestic and dating violence who need
assistance paying their natural gas bills.
·
The Massachusetts
Association for Community Action (MASSCAP) (Statewide): MASSCAP
will provide 22 statewide organizations with additional funds to help natural
gas customers who participate in the federal Low
Income and Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP), as well as
those who do not qualify for the program but make less than 80 percent of the
state median income.
·
City of Marlborough: The municipally-run heating assistance program will
use the funds to enhance its current fuel assistance program to assist more
families.
·
Lend a Hand
Society (Greater Boston): The organization
will use the funding to enhance its current program to assist more households
in need in Greater Boston with paying their heating bills.
·
Town of Norton: The municipally-run program will expand its outreach
to senior and veteran populations who need assistance in paying their heating
bills.
·
United Way (Bristol, Essex, Middlesex, Norfolk and Suffolk Counties): The emergency heating assistance program will expand
its outreach to families in need.
·
Springfield
Partners for Community Action: The
organization will use the funds to increase the reach of its current program
which helps residents in need who do not qualify for LIHEAP.
·
The Towns of
Palmer, Weymouth, and Dartmouth: The
towns will expand the reach of their current fuel assistance programs.
·
The Southeast Asian
Coalition of Massachusetts (Essex,
Plymouth, Suffolk and Worcester Counties): The
organization will use the funds to enhance its current program that is geared
toward assisting Southeast Asian and Arabic-speaking households gain access to
fuel assistance programs.
·
The Spanish
American Center (Northern Worcester
County): The organization will use
the funding to expand its current program that provides assistance to Latinx
families.
·
REACH (Greater Boston Communities in Middlesex County): The organization will provide funds for survivors of
domestic violence in need of assistance in paying their gas heating bills.
·
Cambodian Mutual
Assistance Association (Greater
Lowell): The organization will use
the funds to help those in the Cambodian American community in Greater Lowell
who are in need.
The grant program began on November 1, 2020 and will run through
October 31, 2021.
AG Healey is also encouraging residents who are experiencing financial hardship
due to the COVID-19 pandemic to contact their utility company to learn about
the available assistance programs. The state’s utility companies are offering
financial assistance to residents impacted by the pandemic, including flexible
payment plans and balance forgiveness plans for those who are eligible. Utility
companies are authorized to provide payment plans for up to 12 months for
residents who are behind in their payments.
The AG’s Office urges residents
who are experiencing a loss of income to consult with their utility to see if
they may qualify for the utility’s low-income rate, arrearage management
programs (AMP), or the federal Low-Income
Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP). Customers may qualify for
low-income assistance, even if they haven’t in the past, as eligibility is
based on the last four weeks of gross household income. The AMP provides for an
individualized payment plan that, if followed, allows the customer to have
forgiven all or a portion of an outstanding unpaid balance. In order to qualify
for LIHEAP, customers must have a household income that does not exceed 60
percent of the state median income. The office also urges residents who are
struggling to pay their bills to contact their local Community Action Network to
determine if they qualify for available financial assistance. Some recipients
of the AG Healey’s Natural Gas Fuel Assistance Grant program will supplement LIHEAP
funding at Community Action Networks.
As the state’s ratepayer
advocate, AG Healey works to ensure that customers do not pay more for their
natural gas service than they should.
For more information about gas utilities during the COVID-19 pandemic visit the AG’s
resource page, which includes contact information for Massachusetts
utility companies. Customers who have concerns about their utility rights
during the public health crisis should contact the AG’s consumer assistance
hotline at 617-727-8400 or file a complaint
online.
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