Record demand for heating assistance in US

Antid Oto aorta at HOME.NL
Wed Feb 24 09:56:17 CET 2010


REPLY TO: D66 at nic.surfnet.nl

With social crisis mounting
Record demand for heating assistance in US
By Tom Eley
24 February 2010

With the number of US households requesting home heating assistance
reaching a record for the third consecutive year, state officials have
warned that they may begin to refuse further applications unless
Congress allocates more money for the Low Income Home Energy
Assistance Program, or LIHEAP.

Over 8.8 million households will have received heating assistance by
winter’s end, up from 7.7 million last year and 5.7 million in 2008,
according to a new report from the National Energy Assistance
Directors’ Association (NEADA). About 4.3 million households had
utilities disconnected in 2009, up from 4.1 million the previous year.

In spite of mounting unemployment, Congress this year approved the
same amount of money as it did last year for heating assistance,
allocating $5.1 billion for the states to administer LIHEAP—a figure
substantially less than several Wall Street banks paid their
executives in 2009.

The difficulties families face in procuring heat and other utilities
lead to tragic deaths each year. “This is more than an energy issue
and needs to be acknowledged for what it is: a serious public health
matter,” Jerry McKim, LIHEAP director for Iowa, told the WSWS.

“In an effort to better afford their utility bills, many elderly
households cut back on prescribed medicine and/or set their
thermostats too low risking their

already insecure health and families with young children sacrifice
their children’s nutritional needs,” McKim explained. “Disconnected
households use unsafe methods of heating that increase the risk of
carbon monoxide poisoning, and those who live by candlelight increase
the likelihood of a house fire tragedy.”

LIHEAP grants are about $500 on average, but vary by state, and mostly
go to the elderly and families with young children. Grants are
typically awarded to households that subsist below the official
poverty level—about $22,000 for a family of four—but some states
provide assistance to households at 150 percent of the official
poverty threshold.

As demand has soared, a few states have already cut back on the amount
of money they give to households in need. Now state energy directors
warn that they may soon cut off further applications.

At least 35 states have seen an increase in home heating cases of more
than 10 percent, and in ten states the increase has been over 25
percent. The states with the largest increases are scattered across
the country, indicating the breadth of the social crisis: Mississippi
(68 percent), Washington (42 percent), Michigan (38 percent), Nebraska
(34 percent), New Jersey (31 percent), West Virginia (28 percent),
Colorado (26 percent), and Kansans (25 percent), New Hampshire (25
percent), and Wisconsin (25 percent).

New York, which saw a 10 percent increase in applications, by itself
accounts for 15 percent of all home heating assistance cases in the
US. It is followed by Michigan, a cold-weather state with the highest
jobless rate in the country, with about 10 percent of all cases.

Demand is likely to increase next year again. Because a number of
states prohibit utilities to suspend service in the winter, many
households forgo paying bills. A sharp increase in shut-offs is
therefore anticipated for the spring. In order to get their utilities
back before next winter, these households will be required to pay off
their backlog in bills.

The sharp increase in LIHEAP applications this year came in spite of a
modest decline in energy prices.

Behind the record numbers of those seeking home heating assistance is
the unemployment crisis. Mark Wolfe, director of NEADA, told the New
York Times the increase is at least partly attributable to steady
growth in long-term joblessness.

Chronic mass unemployment differentiates the current economic crisis
from every other downturn since the Great Depression. More workers
have been without a job for six months or longer since record-keeping
began in 1948—6.3 million in all. The average duration of unemployment
also surpassed 6 months late last year, another record.

>From the 1950s through the 1970s, the US economy added private sector
jobs at a rate of 3.5 percent per year, according to an analysis by
the Economic Cycle Research Institute. In the 1980s and 1990s, annual
private sector expansion was 2.4 percent. But since 2000, it has
declined .9 percent annually.

“The pace of job growth has been getting weaker in each expansion,”
said study author Lakshman Achuthan. “There is no indication that this
pattern is about to change.”

To have kept pace with population growth, the economy would have had
to generate between 12 and 15 million jobs since 2000. Instead the
economy has shed 8.7 million jobs since December 2007, and there are
officially 15 million jobless Americans.

There is no expectation that joblessness will subside significantly in
the near future. Janet Yellen, head of the San Francisco Federal
Reserve Bank, said in a Monday speech she expects “unemployment to
remain painfully high for years.” Even if the current crisis follows
the patterns of recovery charted by recent recessions, unemployment
will be about 8 percent in 2014, according to Heidi Shierholz of the
Economic Policy Institute.

“We haven’t seen anything like this before: a really deep recession
combined with a really extended period, maybe as much as eight years,
all told, of highly elevated unemployment,” Shierholz told Don Peck of
the Atlantic. “We’re about to see a big national experiment on stress.”

“There is unemployment, a brief and relatively routine transitional
state that results from the rise and fall of companies in any economy,
and there is unemployment—chronic, all-consuming,” Peck warns. “The
latter is a pestilence that slowly eats away at people, families, and,
if it spreads widely enough, the fabric of society. Indeed, history
suggests that it is perhaps society’s most noxious ill... Ultimately,
it is likely to warp our politics, our culture, and the character of
our society for years.”

Layoffs and job cuts continue, an increasing number coming in the
public sector.

New York City’s Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) announced
on Tuesday that it will cut more than 1,100 jobs, including as many as
500 subway station agents and more than 600 administrative positions.

The San Francisco Public Schools system is expected to announce it
will lay off 900 teachers and staff this week. The Los Angeles city
council just approved a plan to eliminate 3,000 jobs this year.
Detroit Public Schools announced that it will privatize the remainder
of its student transportation system. All 345 drivers will be
dismissed and forced to apply for the newly privatized positions at
sharply reduced wages and benefits.

Airplane manufacturer Boeing announced this week that it will lay off
527 workers in Washington state, and ABC News is expected to announce
large scale job cuts and buyouts on Wednesday.

The jobs crisis goes far beyond unemployment as traditionally
understood. According to a new Gallup Poll, 19.9 percent of the US
workforce reports being “underemployed.” One if five, or about 30
million Americans, are jobless or are working fewer hours than they
would like, according to the survey, which interviewed a sample of
over 20,000 people in the US workforce.

Only a quarter of the underemployed say they can afford “a major
purchase,” and just over half, 56 percent, say they can “buy the
things they need.” Among underemployed respondents, 37 percent said
that within the last year they had to forgo health care or medicine,
36 percent said there were times when they could not buy food, and 19
percent said they were unable to provide themselves shelter within the
past year.

The data from the Gallup polls was substantiated by Tuesday’s release
of the Conference Board’s Consumer Price Index (CPI), which plummeted
to 46.0 in January from 56.5 in February, its lowest reading since
April, 2009. Economists had anticipated only a slight decline. A
reading of 90 or above indicates economic stability.

The Conference Board’s present situation index for February produced
an even worse reading. It fell to a 27-year low of 19.4, meaning
“consumers feel things are worse now than they were during the throes
of the financial crisis in the fall of 2008,” according to
CNNMoney.com. And the expectation index, which measures consumers’
views on the near future, also fell. The number of those who expect
job availability to decline rose to nearly 25 percent in February, and
those expecting to see an increase in their incomes fell to 11 percent.

“While other indicators are showing that the recession is over, to the
consumer it still feels like we’re still mired in the recession,” said
Lynn Franco of the Conference Board. “This recovery has been driven
more by business than by the consumer. The fact that we’re not adding
jobs but are still shedding them is doing very little to comfort
consumers.”

The fall in the CPI caused a sell-off on Wall Street. The Dow Jones
Industrial Average fell by .97 percent to close the day at 10,282, the
NASDAQ fell by 1.29 percent and the S&P 500 declined by 1.21 percent.
Investors flocked to the “safe haven” of US government debt, driving
down yields on Treasury bonds to their lowest level in two months.

Home values, the major source of wealth for most US families, also
continued their fall in 2009, according to a new Case-Shiller index of
20 leading metropolitan areas released on Tuesday. Home prices were
down 3.1 percent in 2009 from 2008, and have fallen 29 percent since
their peak in 2006.

It is likely that home values will continue to fall in 2010.
Economists anticipate a flood of 2.4 million foreclosed homes onto the
market in the coming months, and the Federal Reserve will next month
end its purchases of mortgage-backed securities—which has cost $1.25
trillion since the end of 2008—a move that will likely increase
mortgage interest rates.

http://wsws.org/articles/2010/feb2010/heat-f24.shtml

**********
Dit bericht is verzonden via de informele D66 discussielijst (D66 at nic.surfnet.nl).
Aanmelden: stuur een email naar LISTSERV at nic.surfnet.nl met in het tekstveld alleen: SUBSCRIBE D66 uwvoornaam uwachternaam
Afmelden: stuur een email naar LISTSERV at nic.surfnet.nl met in het tekstveld alleen: SIGNOFF D66
Het on-line archief is te vinden op: http://listserv.surfnet.nl/archives/d66.html
**********



More information about the D66 mailing list