
Low-income Vermonters who get state subsidies to pay for heat will see an increase in benefits this winter.
The Agency of Human Services and Department for Children and Families announced the increased benefits under the Low-Income Heating Assistance Program, or LIHEAP, on Tuesday.
The average benefit to the roughly 20,000 households that use the program will be $879 for winter 2017 to 2018, an increase from $831 in winter 2016 to 2017, according to the Agency of Human Services.
โThis program helps low-income Vermonters, especially seniors, people with disabilities and families with children, to stay warm during the winter months,โ Al Gobeille, the secretary of the Agency of Human Services, said in a press release. โThis assistance is critical to their health and well-being.โ
The federal government provides most of the money for LIHEAP, and the state of Vermont appropriates additional money, according to Brown, the deputy commissioner of the Department for Children and Families.
Both of those funding sources have stayed mostly stable, Brown said. The households are seeing the increased benefits in part because the LIHEAP caseload is down, and in part because fuel prices are stabilizing, so the money can be stretched further, he said.
In 2013, about 28,000 households in Vermont relied on LIHEAP, according to Brown, compared to about 20,000 in 2017. Thatโs a decrease of more than one-quarter. ReachUp, which provides cash assistance to low-income families, has seen similar caseload decreases.
โThis is good news for Vermonters who need the (LIHEAP) program to help meet their heating needs that weโre able to increase the benefit and the purchasing power,โ Brown said. He said the benefit increase โallows them to stretch their budget to other areas.โ
