HARRISBURG, Pa. — Homeowners already pinched by high food and gas prices have grown increasingly anxious about staying warm this winter.
At state assistance offices and at community organizations, phones are ringing off the hook as homeowners and renters seek help with what are expected to be punishing heating bills. Legislators and governors from Alaska to Maine are watching the gap between surging need in their states and assistance that may or may not be coming from Washington.
Aid agencies fear they may have to turn more people away or give less cash assistance to individual families.
“People are very worried about this winter,” said Ann Heidenreich, executive director of the nonprofit Community Energy Services in Canton, N.Y. “We’re not going to deal with all that needs to be done; there’s no way. We’re going to have to deal with emergencies this winter.”
The Energy Information Administration, a statistical division of the U.S. Department of Energy, projected last month that natural gas and heating oil will be at record highs this winter. In some cases, home heating oil, propane and kerosene are already twice as high as they were two years ago, meaning that a dollar of federal aid will not travel nearly as far this winter.
Making things worse is an economy that has left many more people without jobs and left state treasuries bare.
Vermont budgeted $4 million to buttress federal Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program funds this winter, but that money has eroded along with the state economy, one official said.
In Congress, members from the Northeast pressed unsuccessfully this summer to add billions to the LIHEAP program, which helps poor families with one-time fuel costs or a heating emergency, like a broken furnace. Last year, the federal government set aside $2.6 billion; this year, President Bush has proposed $2 billion, and it is unclear when Congress will act or how much it will approve.



