Power Cutoffs Soar As Americans Struggle To Pay Bills

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MICHAEL HILL | October 6, 2008 02:36 PM EST | AP

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Marie Williams, right, helps her daughter Richelle with homework at their home in Cohoes, N.Y., Wednesday, Sept. 10, 2008. Williams' power was cut off this summer for about a week, forcing her girls to do homework by candlelight. (AP Photo/Mike Groll)

COHOES, N.Y. — The number of Americans whose electricity or gas has been shut off for nonpayment of their bills is up sharply in many parts of the country as people struggle to cope with higher prices and a shaky economy.

Shut-offs have been running 17 percent higher than last year among customers of New York state's major utilities, and 22 percent higher in economically hard-hit Michigan. They are up in all or part of dozens of other states, including Pennsylvania, Florida and California, according to an Associated Press check of regulators and energy companies.

Despite stepped-up efforts by state and federal governments, utilities and private groups to help people avoid shut-offs this winter, some worry the problem will only get worse in the coming months, particularly with the downturn on Wall Street.

"I just didn't have the money to pay," said Marie Williams, a single mother raising four daughters in Cohoes, N.Y., a former mill city on the Hudson River. "Rent had to be paid, and food for the girls."

Williams' power was cut off this summer for about a week, forcing her girls to do homework by candlelight. She became one of more than 230,000 residential customers of New York's 10 major utilities to have their service shut off for nonpayment through August of this year.

At the same time, people who rely on heating oil instead of gas or electricity to warm their homes are pleading for relief from high fuel prices.

Southern California Edison Co., with 4.5 million residential electric customers, reported residential terminations were up 10 percent through August of this year to 228,000; Westar Energy Inc. of Topeka, Kan., said it saw a 19.5 percent increase in residential shut-offs over the same period. Tampa Electric Co. reported a 19 percent climb in disconnect orders through June for residential and commercial customers.

Michigan regulators reported a 7 percent increase in residential natural gas shut-offs through June and a 39 percent rise in residential electricity terminations.

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Shut-offs often are brief and the numbers can include customers whose service was shut off more than once.

"Because of high gasoline prices, many families at the lower incomes have really been squeezed," said Mark Wolfe, executive director of the National Energy Assistance Directors' Association. "It's like triage: You pay the most important things, and the last thing you pay is your utility bill."

In Boston, Jaqueta Oliver works at a program for the mentally disabled but was not able to keep up with her gas bills after three months of unemployment last year. She said her bill snowballed to $1,271 before the gas was shut off in late September. Heating was not yet a problem, but cooking for her two boys, ages 5 and 8, was.

"I had food to reheat in the microwave and I have a toaster oven," she said, "so I used the toaster oven for some chicken breast to make sure they were able to eat."

A $600 grant from a nonprofit organization helped her regain gas service last Tuesday.

Utilities, by policy and regulation, cut the power only as a last resort, and generally only after customers have run up hundreds of dollars in past-due bills. Many utilities instead offer extensions and payment arrangements.

Laws across the country protect the elderly and the ailing, and many states have cold-weather rules that make it hard or impossible to shut off service in winter.

In rare cases, shut-offs can lead to tragedy.

In Toledo, Ohio, last November, three children and their mother died in a fire started by a candle after their power was turned off. In New York last summer, a Long Island teenager was killed and members of his family were sickened by carbon monoxide from a gasoline-powered generator fired up after a shut-off. And in Michigan last December, a social worker found a 90-year-old woman and her 63-year-old daughter wrapped in coats and blankets on the floor of their Kalamazoo-area home four days after their electricity was shut off. The older woman later died after suffering what a relative called exposure, frostbite and pneumonia.

Congress recently approved a measure to nearly double the federal money available to help poor people cope with home heating costs, whether they use oil, gas or electricity. But advocates say the $5.1 billion is unlikely to be enough.

New York is spending an extra $49 million on household energy efficiency programs. Connecticut approved $44 million to help with heating costs and weatherization. Officials in Maine want to distribute 2,000 to 3,000 "warm kits" that will include caulk, low-flow shower heads and high-efficiency light bulbs. Alaskans in their annual oil-royalty checks from the state this year are seeing an additional $1,200 to help offset high fuel prices.

Utilities and private groups are also chipping in, helping customers make payments and winterize their homes. In hard-hit Detroit, DTE Energy matches money spent by a local group called The Heat and Warmth Fund and meets with customers at churches to work out payment arrangements.

___

On the Net:

Action for Boston Community Development: http://www.bostonabcd.org/about

National Energy Assistance Directors' Association: http://www.neada.org

COHOES, N.Y. — The number of Americans whose electricity or gas has been shut off for nonpayment of their bills is up sharply in many parts of the country as people struggle to cope with higher ...
COHOES, N.Y. — The number of Americans whose electricity or gas has been shut off for nonpayment of their bills is up sharply in many parts of the country as people struggle to cope with higher ...
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Utilities, heat, gasoline, groceries and just about everything else has doubled in the last three years and I have received two small pay raises of 3%. I now waitress on the weekends to help pay the bills, I have no days off anymore.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:33 PM on 10/06/2008
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I hear ya sadducee. To better times...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:27 PM on 10/06/2008
- wordvarc I'm a Fan of wordvarc 31 fans permalink

Hey w, Palin, and McSame!

Lets send more billions to wall street and lower taxes for the rich!

Some pennies might "trickle down" to Ms. Williams so she and her four daughters can buy a warm blanket at the Salvation Army Thrift store!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:23 PM on 10/06/2008

Not much trickling down here in Georgia. We even have a drought.

Where are all the jobs the Bush tax cuts created?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:45 PM on 10/06/2008
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China!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:38 AM on 10/07/2008
- OkayLady I'm a Fan of OkayLady 19 fans permalink
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What country do i live in? What century is this? When did America become the largest debtors prison on Earth.

We ignore the swelling ranks of the homeless and the hungry. Those poor and newly poor families still with homes sit in the dark and shiver inside them. Their illnesses untreated. The phone call for comfort unmade for worries of expense and the shame of needing it.

It makes my heart ache.

Please. We need to wake up from this long national nightmare. Talk to your friends. Ignore the propaganda & get out and vote.

Obama/Biden 08

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:22 PM on 10/06/2008
- nellie I'm a Fan of nellie 493 fans permalink
    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:17 PM on 10/06/2008
- zanbama I'm a Fan of zanbama 13 fans permalink
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Those rich CEO's should be giving, back helping people as much as they can. That CEO for Lehman couldn't answer the question why it was fair for him to earn so much $$. Half a billion and he can't help at all. They stink big time.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:10 PM on 10/06/2008

Energy costs should become progressive, not regressive - i.e., those on the upper end of our economic caste system that have huge houses use much, much more energy compared to those on the lower end of the economic system. Energy bills should reflect this; rates should be based on how much energy one consumes. This would mean decreased rates for those who are struggling to pay these bills. I don't think this is unfair, it is like what the tax system should be.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:00 PM on 10/06/2008

Well I'm on Permanent Disability & I live from cut off notice to cut off notice on all the utitlities. My small CA town has it's own water dept & will only allow you to slide a week to pay an overdue notice once in 2yrs & only 3times in a lifetime! I have had to cut bathing to 1-2 times a week, & then I save the water to flush the toilet & all my laundry water is saved & bailed to the plants. Not to mention it's undreakable from all the chemicals so you have to buy water to drink.

I only cook a couple times a week [gas] & do not heat the house with gas until hitting under 50 at night for short times but bundle in sweaters & blankets. As for electricity I don't watch TV nor listen to Radio so all my electric is to read & the computer - to read. Maybe if people stop spending $$ on electricity to be sold stuff on TV advertisers will think about getting electric costs down.

Riht now it's 93 degrees outside & 2 of my neighbors have their electric dryers going because they don't pay utitlities & can't comprehend it's in their rent charge. What they will do when the rent goes up & up & up I don't know.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:41 PM on 10/06/2008
- marytny I'm a Fan of marytny 4 fans permalink

what town in CA?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:13 PM on 10/06/2008
- Carsy I'm a Fan of Carsy 17 fans permalink
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These are the real issues affect real Americans. No one gives a s*** what his middle name is, winter is coming.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:40 PM on 10/06/2008
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700 billion for wallstreet­...no mopney for the those who might freeze this winter

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:38 PM on 10/06/2008
- Grannysue I'm a Fan of Grannysue 131 fans permalink
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Just wait, it's not even winter yet, the gas company already sent us all a letter saying the rates will be going up probably 15% more this winter, nice huh. Well, it does snow pretty good here in Idaho, maybe we can start building igloos, the eskimos seem to be able to last, we may have to ask dead eye Palin if we can borrow some of her hides in order to wrap up though!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:34 PM on 10/06/2008
- MizFlagPin I'm a Fan of MizFlagPin 21 fans permalink

The New Status Symbol = Living Debt Free

We're feeling the strain in my state where food, utilities and gas have doubled and income is stagnant or declining. The most important things citizens can do right now are; vote for Obama; start dumping credit card debt; car payments; payoff our mortgage; and donate when we can to a charity that help people.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:31 PM on 10/06/2008
- John51 I'm a Fan of John51 10 fans permalink

I know what you mean. We just made our last payments on our vehicles and don't plan to buy new for several years. My wife and I live on a fixed income and we are debating whether we should pay off our mortgage with our savings and become completely debt free, or keep the funds in savings for an emergency. Our rate of return on our savings is a very low 2.75 APY and our mortgage interest rate is 6.33%. In determining if we should keep or pay off our mortgage we found ourselves considering an unusual factor and we are angry; we have to weigh if our savings will be available in the event of an emergency. We know of FDIC but it is underfunded and will its self need a Bail-Out soon. We are angry that our government has allowed this situation to develop; our representatives were lax and corrupt in their oversight of the financial system and corporations in general. We are even angrier that our representatives voted for the largest UPWARD redistribution of wealth ever in the history of civilization. We are equally as angry that we have failed in our oversight of our government and we will try to never make that mistake again.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:16 PM on 10/06/2008
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We are holding off on paying the mortgage more than a bit ahead of time (inflation will make it literally cheaper) and instead have been putting what savings can be had into solid metals.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:32 PM on 10/06/2008

ya, well I just barely paid off my utility bill from last winter because it got out of control now Ameren in illinois has raised the rates another 30%, I wonder when it is going to stop, maybe when everyone's electricity and gas is turned off because everyone defaults, then maybe the ulitity companies will have to be bailed out as well!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:18 PM on 10/06/2008

This weekend in Minneapolis, a single parent father, 12 year old son, and a friend tragically died because he had no electricity and heat. He was worried that the old generator that he had hooked up outside his home was too noisy and would bring complaints from neighbors so he moved it to the basement of his house and tried to run it from there. They died of severe carbon monxide poisoning. This is a sad statement of where we are at in this country, I hope that all of you who read this will stop and pause and feel like I do as to how senseless this was.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:13 PM on 10/06/2008
- mergina I'm a Fan of mergina 84 fans permalink
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You know, if Washington really wanted to help the economy, instead of bailing out Wall Street, they could have used 700 billion to pay utility bills of desperate americans who have been put out of work because of the greed and theft that caused those losses.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:11 PM on 10/06/2008
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Indeed! But guess what? THEY DON'T CARE!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:43 PM on 10/06/2008
- BethStuart I'm a Fan of BethStuart 13 fans permalink

In some parts of the Northeast, low-income residents are able to buy subsidized heating oil from Venezuela courtesy of Hugo Chavez of all people. Bush/McCain and the American oil companies declined to make any similar offers.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:48 PM on 10/06/2008
- Carsy I'm a Fan of Carsy 17 fans permalink
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Think what you may of Chavez, but he is popular in his country, he does help the poor.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:40 PM on 10/06/2008
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