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Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP)
 
Would you like assistance with your heating and cooling bills? The Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) is a federally -funded program that can help low-income households with home energy bills. LIHEAP can help you stay warm in the winter and cool in the summer. Find out if you are eligible for assistance.
Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP)

Click here to learn how to apply!

If you can't afford to pay your home energy bill, your home may not be safe, and you may be at risk of serious illness or injury. The Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) is a Federally-funded program to help eligible low income homeowners and renters meet their home heating and/or cooling needs.

¡Pulse aquí para saber cómo hacer la solicitud!

Si no puede pagar su cuenta de energía, es posible que su hogar no esté seguro, y puede enfrentarse al riesgo de contraer enfermedades o ser víctima de lesiones serias. El Programa De Asistencia de Energía Para Hogares de Bajos Ingresos (LIHEAP) es un programa financiado por el gobierno que ayuda a las familias de bajos ingresos a pagar las cuentas de la calefacción o del aire acondicionado de su hogar, ya sea de su propiedad, o alquilado.

Question

What is the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP)? What does LIHEAP do?

Answer

LIHEAP is a Federal program that helps low income households pay for heating and/or cooling their homes.

In particular, LIHEAP seeks to make home energy more affordable for two groups of low income households that have the highest home energy needs:

  • vulnerable households which include frail older individuals, individuals with disabilities, and very young children. These households face serious health risks if they do not have adequate heating or cooling in their homes.
  • high energy burden households which include those households with the lowest incomes and highest home energy costs. These households face safety risks in trying to heat or cool their homes if they can not pay their heating or cooling fuel bills.

Consequently, households with the highest home energy needs are more likely to face health and safety risks.

For more information on how to apply for assistance in your state, the general public should use the public inquiry telephone number if available for their State. That number may provide the public with information about the State's program much quicker than the LIHEAP agency number. Further information about a State's LIHEAP program can be obtained from State LIHEAP web sites.

Question

What health or safety risks do households with young children face?

Answer

Health

Home Heating and Your Health

Winter brings heating bills. High heating bills can force people to lower the temperatures in their homes in order to save money. However, indoor temperatures can be lowered to unsafe levels, which can result in hypothermia (cold stress or low body temperatures). Hypothermia can cause illness or death either indoors or outdoors. Households with an elderly or disabled person, or young child are especially vulnerable to hypothermia.

Every year, hypothermia kills about 600 Americans, half of whom are 65 and older, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Hypothermia (hi-po-ther- mee-uh) occurs when a person's normal body temperature drops from 98.6 degrees to 95 degrees. Older people may be at greater risk for this condition if their body's response to cold is diminished by certain illnesses like arthritis and medications like some over-the-counter cold remedies. According to the U.S. National Institute on Aging's booklet, Staying Warm in the Winter Can Be a Matter of Life and Death for Older People. Printed copies of the booklet can be ordered from the U.S. National Institute on Aging.

The best way to identify someone with hypothermia is to look for the "umbles" - stumbles, mumbles, fumbles, and grumbles. Changes in a person's behavior may indicate that the cold is affecting how well their muscles and nerves work. If you suspect that someone is suffering from the cold, and have a thermometer available, take his or her temperature. If their body temperature is 96 degrees or lower, call 911 for emergency help.

For further information about the dangers of hypothermia, see the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's prevention guide, Extreme Cold: A Prevention Guide to Promote Your Personal Health and Safety and the U.S. National Institute on Aging's booklet, Stay Safe in Cold Weather! Learn why you need to stay warm when it’s cold.

Winter also forces households to seek alternative sources of heat. In a recent year, there were about 10,900 residential fires and about 190 deaths associated with portable or fixed local heaters. There were 15,500 fires and 40 deaths associated with fireplaces and chimneys. And there were about 100 deaths from carbon monoxide from heating systems, ranges/ovens, and water heaters.

The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) warns of hazards from heaters and fireplaces, including fire deaths and carbon monoxide poisoning. For further warnings, visit CSPC's web site.

Home Cooling and Your Health

Summer brings cooling bills. High cooling bills can force people to raise the temperatures in their homes in order to save money. Also, people may try to cope with hot spells by relying on fans in a home in which the windows are closed due to fear of crime. However, indoor temperatures can be raised to unsafe levels, which can result in hyperthermia (heat stress or high body temperatures). Hyperthermia can cause illness or death either indoors or outdoors. Households with an elderly or disabled person, or young child are especially vulnerable to hyperthermia.

For further information about the dangers of hyperthermia, see the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's prevention guide, Extreme Heat, and Tips for Preventing Heat-Related Illness. Also see the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Excessive Heat Events Guidebook.

Safety

Natural Disasters

Natural disasters can result in the loss of home energy due to fuel supply disruptions and/or damage to a home's heating or cooling system. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's National Weather Service provides warnings and forecasts of life-threatening weather, including thunderstorms, hailstorms, flooding, hurricanes, tornadoes, and climate events.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) assists the public and businesses recover from natural disasters. FEMA also provides information on what to do when natural disasters strike. FEMA has prepared publications on earthquakes, extreme heat, fire safety during or after a disaster, floods and flash floods, hurricanes, landslides and mud flows, tornadoes, tsunamis, volcanoes, wild land fires, winter driving, winter storms, winter preparedness safety tips, thunderstorms, and lightning. FEMA also provides Disaster Information.

If disaster strikes, communities need to prepared to assist people with disabilities, people who speak little or no English, and people who are frail, elderly, very young, or homeless? The PrepareNow Alliance in San Francisco has prepared information on community preparedness and response in disasters.

Fuel Disruptions/Equipment Failures

Fuel supply disruptions/home energy equipment failures can occur as a result of natural disasters, fuel shortages, and power outages. In addition to possible health problems, such disruptions or equipment failures can result in safety problems. For example, the use of makeshift heating sources such as unvented or improperly vented portable heaters, barbecue grills or gas stoves, are not only fire hazards, but also create the risk of asphyxiation. The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) warns of hazards from heaters and fireplaces and other supplemental heating devices, including fire deaths and carbon monoxide poisoning. For further warnings, visit CSPC's web site.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention offer tips to help you prepare for and cope with sudden loss of power in their publication, What You Need to Know When the Power Goes Out Unexpectedly.

Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program. DHHS/ACF/OCS. 2002. English.


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