Massachusetts congressional delegation calls for release of additional home heating assistance funds

Chris Iellamo, from Noonan Energy in Springfield, fills an oil tank while making a delivery at a customer's home in Chicopee. (MARK M. MURRAY / THE REPUBLICAN )(Mark Murray)

With frigid temperatures and a winter storm bearing down on the Northeast, Massachusetts congressional lawmakers urged the Trump administration Thursday to release more federal funding to help low-income Americans heat their homes.

All 11 members of the state's congressional delegation penned a letter to Eric Hargan, the acting secretary and deputy secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, urging the agency to immediately release as much of the remaining 10 percent of Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program funds for the fiscal year as possible.

Contending that Massachusetts and the Northeast could face a "home heating crisis" this winter due to sustained low temperatures and high fuel prices, the lawmakers said the release of additional LIHEAP funds would help keep families from choosing between heating their homes or paying for other expenses.

"Families in the Commonwealth will soon confront a home heating emergency as LIHEAP funds are exhausted while extreme cold weather continues to strike the region. Families in the Northeast are also facing heating fuel prices that are significantly higher than last winter," they wrote in their letter. "No family should have to choose between paying their energy bills or paying for other necessities such as food or medicine during dangerously cold days, but a lack of additional LIHEAP funds means that thousands of families may soon have to face these terrible choices."

The Massachusetts delegation noted that the Department of Energy estimates consumers in the Northeast will pay significantly more to heat their homes this winter.

Those heating their homes with heating oil could face a 21 percent increase, while those heating their homes with natural gas could pay roughly 10 percent more than last year, the lawmakers said. Consumers heating their homes with electricity, meanwhile, could face a 3.5 percent increase in costs this winter.

LIHEAP provides states with federal funding to help eligible, low-income households pay for a portion of their winter heating bills.

Residents whose annual household income is up to 60 precent of the estimated state median income -- $66,115 for a family of four -- are eligible to apply for LIHEAP assistance, according to the Massachusetts Department of Housing and Community Development.

More than 180,000 Massachusetts households benefitted from the program last winter, according to state officials.

U.S. Sens. Ed Markey and Elizabeth Warren signed the letter, as well as U.S. Reps. Richard Neal, D-Springfield; Jim McGovern, D-Worcester; Michael Capuano, D-Somerville; Stephen Lynch, D-South Boston; Niki Tsongas, D-Lowell; William Keating, D-Bourne; Joe Kennedy II, D-Brookline; Katherine Clark, D-Melrose, and Seth Moulton, D-Salem.

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