8 North State Street | Suite 300 | Painesville, OH 44077

Community Services: 440-354-2148 | Energy Assistance: 440-350-9160

8 North State Street | Suite 300 | Painesville, OH 44077

Community Services: 440-354-2148
Energy Assistance: 440-350-9160

8 North State Street | Suite 300
Painesville, OH 44077

Community Services: 440-354-2148
Energy Assistance: 440-350-9160

News Release

Lifeline for the Empowerment and Development of Consumers, Inc.
PO Box 496, Painesville, OH 44077
Contact: Carrie Dotson | (440) 354-2148 | carried@lclifeline.org

Home Energy Assistance Program Winter Crisis Concludes with High Number of Applicants

April 20, 2015
PAINESVILLE, Ohio— The HEAP Winter Crisis Program (WCP), which began on November 1, 2014 and ran through March 31, 2015, served a high number of low-income households with emergency utility assistance.

Throughout the five months of the Winter Crisis Season, Lifeline’s staff completed applications for 1,315 households from nearly every community in Lake County for emergency utility assistance. Of those 1,315 applications, 1,148 of them were approved for emergency utility assistance with either their gas or electric or the purchase of fuel oil. Nearly $300,000 in federal dollars was expended over
the course of the season. This is on average with last year’s exceptionally cold winter and higher than normal years.

“It was definitely a busy season, especially with the record breaking cold temperatures we had in January and February. A lot of our Lake County residents needed a little extra help this year because it was such a cold winter,” said Carrie Dotson, Executive Director at Lifeline. “On our walk-in days we always had a long line at our door of folks waiting for assistance and we were always booked three or
four solid weeks out for appointments. The numbers prove what we were seeing every day.”

Dotson said that the agency staff was glad to help their neighbors in need. They were also able to help so many residents who had never before sought the help of the program.

“We saw so many new people during the 2014-2015 Heap Winter Crisis Season who had not heard about our program until they read about it in the newspaper or saw the inserts with their utility bills” said Marina Rivera, Energy Programs Coordinator at Lifeline.

HEAP is a federally funded program designed to help eligible low-income Ohioans meet the high costs of home heating. This program can only be accessed one time per season and the amount of the benefit depends on the size of the household, household income and what type of fuel is used. In most cases, the one-time benefit will be a credit applied directly to an energy bill.

The HEAP Winter Crisis Program is also available on a once per season basis for customers who have been disconnected or received a shut-off notice, or who have less than a 10-day supply of bulk fuel.

To learn more and enroll in these programs contact Lifeline, Inc.’s Energy Assistance Office at (440) 350-9160. Lifeline’s Energy Assistance Office is located at 54 S. State Street, Suite 303 in Painesville.

Lifeline for the Empowerment and Development of Consumers was founded in 1973 with the mission of helping Lake County residents by providing them assistance and life skills programming that is designed to increase self-sufficiency. In 1980 Lifeline became a participating agency of the United Way of Lake County, UWLC, and in 1987 was designated a community action agency by the Ohio Development Services Agency, ODSA. In 2008, Lifeline was designated as a mental health agency by the Ohio Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services.

Today Lifeline continues with the same mission of helping Lake County’s low-income residents break the cycle of poverty and make the transition from agency-dependency to self-sufficiency. Lifeline’s current programming includes services in the healthcare, housing & energy assistance, information & referral services and consumer education & job training areas. Our motto is ‘helping people, changing lives.’ Lifeline is currently funded by the UWLC and by grants through the ODSA, the Lake County Board of Commissioners, the Lake County ADAMHS Board, Lake County Department of Job & Family Services, the City of Mentor, the Western Reserve Junior Service League and through private donors.