Delegation Announces $3.9 Million For Vermont
Home Heating Assistance
BURLINGTON, January 16 – U.S. Senators Bernie Sanders and
Patrick Leahy and Congressman Peter Welch announced the
release of $450 million in home heating emergency funds,
including $3.9 million for Vermont.
As prices for home heating fuel soar to record highs this
winter, Sanders has introduced legislation, cosponsored by
Leahy, which would increase funding for the Low Income Home
Heating Assistance Program by another $800 million. Welch
introduced companion legislation in the U.S. House.
“The outrageously high price of home heating fuel is
stretching the budgets of millions of families across the
country,” Sanders said. “Federal funding to help the most
vulnerable people, including many seniors, is running out
across Vermont. While I welcome this release of funds, the
president should release $160 million remaining in the
emergency fund immediately. People in Vermont and across
this country must not go cold this winter. When the Senate
reconvenes this month, I will bring to the floor legislation
which has bipartisan support which will increase LIHEAP
funding by $800 million. Vermonters cannot afford to go any
longer this winter without this necessary support.”
Leahy said, “This release of these emergency funds is
welcome news that we have been asking and waiting for. With
high heating costs pressing down on thousands of Vermont
households this winter, we already know that additional
funds from the LIHEAP reserve will be needed in our state
after this.”
Welch said, “This critical funding is long-overdue. The high
cost of heating fuel is crippling family budgets,
threatening the well-being of many Vermonters already
struggling to get by. Congress shouldn’t have to continue to
drag this President into recognizing the emergency so many
Americans in cold-weather states face.”
The U.S. average retail price for home heating oil soared
5.4 cents in one week in mid-January to a record $3.40 a
gallon. The national heating oil price was up 98 cents from
a year ago, the U.S. Energy Information Administration said
in its weekly survey of heating fuel costs. It was the
fourth week in a row that heating oil hit a record.
In Vermont, community action programs on the front line of a
severe heating crisis this winter already are running out of
money. As of last week, for example, the Central Vermont
Community Action Council had exhausted its entire $206,000
LIHEAP budget, and is negotiating with the state for more
money. An additional $400,000 in LIHEAP funding is needed to
make it through the rest of the winter, the council
projected.
The number of households receiving home heating assistance
under the federal and state partnership program increased by
26 percent from 4.6 million in 2003 to about 5.8 million in
2007. During the same period, federal support for the
program went up by only 10 percent. As a result, the average
grant declined from $349 to $305 while energy prices
continued to rise. The result has been a significant
decrease in the program’s purchasing power.
According to the energy assistance directors, states plan to
reduce the number of households served by about 15 percent
in the absence of additional federal and supplemental state
funding. The result would be a decline in the number of
households served from about 5.8 million in 2007 to 4.9
million during the coming year.
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