Welcome back to Movement Mondays in which I typically highlight a frontline community enduring the worst of the climate crisis and then offer a quick action you can take on their behalf. Today’s frontline communities are the elderly and low-income households, especially people of color. I’m amplifying a message received from 198methods.org regarding utility companies shutting off people’s power despite the extreme heat still slamming much of the country.

Image by Claudia Engel from Pixabay
The following background info is from an email received from 198methods.org but if you’re pressed for time, click HERE to personalize a letter to your two Senators and one Representative, asking them to use their power to increase funding for the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP). If we can send billions of dollars to fight a proxy war in the Ukraine, we can certainly afford to make sure people don’t die due to the combination of extreme heat and heartless utility companies shutting off their AC.
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Even before this summer’s record breaking heatwaves utility costs were projected to increase by 11.7% from last summer. And, as always, those most impacted are the elderly, low-income households, and especially black and brown communities that suffer the worst pollution, and pay the highest utility rates, on average. The federal government provides funding to help low-income households pay for heating and utility bills through the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP). But those funds are available to les than 20% of all the households that need help, and 85% of the funding is reserved for winter heating bills. This is just one of many reasons we’ve been calling on President Biden to declare a climate emergency – and is one of the many problems he could fix through executive action once he’s declared a national emergency. But if President Biden won’t act, Congress must. The National Energy Assistance Directors Association is asking Congress for an extra $3 billion in funding to help six million households pay their utility bills this summer. Close to 20 million households are already behind on their utility bills. But only 19 states, plus Washington, D.C. have laws in place to prevent utility shut-offs during the summer. And greedy utility corporations have clearly noticed — they’ve increased shutoffs by 15% over last year and have disproportionately targeted Black and low income households. Utility shutoffs are cruel, and the fact that they’re targeting poor, black, brown, and frontline environmental justice communities is an attack on our ability to organize, as well as our human rights. Without the right to refuse payment — when service is spotty or the power company refuses to invest in clean, reliable power sources like rooftop solar or batteries — consumers are left with no recourse but to pay the bill or risk heat-related illness, or even death. Congress can help address this crisis by immediately increasing funding to LIHEAP by $3 billion, so millions of families can stay cool in their homes without having to worry about their utilities being shut off. But only President Biden can declare a climate emergency and order all utilities to provide service regardless of debt or payment, while mandating we truly build back better after each heat wave by investing in solar, storage, and publicly owned clean energy for all. Click here to send a letter to Congress urging them to increase funding for LIHEAP, now. Thanks, |
Please take two minutes to click HERE to personalize a letter to your two Senators and one Representative, asking them to use their power to increase funding for the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP).
Thank you for reading and taking action! Please, if you or someone you know is suffering extreme heat and have had the power turned off, reach out via my contact form and I will get you some help.
Solidarity! ✊🏽
Thanks for the link, Tracy. Such a terrible thing to face during this heat!
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It’s incredibly cruel to deny people the ability to keep themselves healthy and alive as they’re being crushed by oppressive heat. I hope you’re doing okay, Becky. Thanks much for reading and commenting.
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Very cruel, indeed! I’m okay, Tracy, and I hope the same is true for you.
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