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The trickle-down effect of homeownership in tough times - you can make a difference

This past weekend I paid my gas bill. Not a big deal, except for a review of my past winter’s bill made me call the gas company and get on a budget plan. Sarah, the customer service representative at my local gas company, was open to answering some general questions about the state of heating homes and how the economy is affecting the ability for people to pay their gas bill.

Sarah’s frank conversation opened my eyes to the trickle-down effect of homeownership in tough times.

I live in Wisconsin, which has been feeling the economic pain from an induced shot of a troubed national economy. Last Monday, General Motors announced it will cease production of SUVs in its Janesville, Wisconsin plant by December 23, affecting 1,200 workers. Additionally, rumors of a Mercy Hospital consolidation in surrounding towns has people talking and worried.

It’s easy to look at the big picture when we take the financial perspective to Wall Street. That’s where the media eye is trained to go. What about the truly hyper-local picture - where one or both incomes of a two-family household might be in danger on Main Street? How do you pay for the mortgage/rent, car loan, gas for the car, daycare, senior care, health insurance, groceries - the true basics?

How do you pay to heat your home? In Wisconsin, where the weather is not yet cold enough to mandate the heat as necessary for living conditions, homeowners’ inability to pay has increased, according to Sarah. If you are shut off before the weather mandates your heat remains on, you will be required to pay a deposit, even with heating assistance, before your heat can be turned back on.

In September, I wrote about LIHEAP (Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program) funding. It was created to help low-income and elderly families with their heating bills. My September 19 post, “Baby, it’s gonna be cold outside … keep heating assistance for low-income families alive”, was an update to a post I wrote last year about LIHEAP funding.

In that post, LIHEAP was trying to raise funding and the President had recently proposed a 22 percent cut in fiscal year 2009 for LIHEAP funding. I am happy to share this news from the LIHEAP website:

“September 30, 2008: President Signs FY09 CR with $5.1 Billion in LIHEAP Funding … This evening, the President signed a Continuing Resolution that increases funding for the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program to the Congressionally authorized level of $5.1 billion. This historic decision is the result of tireless work by the program’s champions in the House and Senate who recognized the vital need for more money in this program and refused to accept ‘no’ for an answer. ”

The website also recognizes the countless folks who continued to raise their voice in support of LIHEAP. The program will probably need an increase in funds as more people find themselves in a position where they are unable to pay their heating bill - but the first victory has come.

If you are in need of heating assistance, you can download an application by state or receive your state’s contact information at the LIHEAP Clearinghouse website.

I urge those who are not in need to lend their voice to support this effort, as I believe it will be needed. In the meantime, if you know of a neighbor in need, help by pointing them in the direction of this resource and by checking in. Use your knowlege to empower another.

Posted by Rebecca D. Levinson

Rebecca Levinson

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One Response to “The trickle-down effect of homeownership in tough times - you can make a difference”

Stacey Derbinshire Says:

Hello.

I would like to put a link to your site on my blog roll if you want to do the same for mine. It would be a good way to build up both of our readerships.

thank you.

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