Utility bill struggles: Federal programs exist, but how easy are they to access?

How to Apply for Utility Assistance Guide


Dealing with a mounting utility bill or shut-off notice can be scary, especially during the winter months, and especially during a deadly pandemic that has caused many to need to shelter at home. 

There are programs out there to help, but navigating them can be
frustrating because of the amount of paperwork you need to provide. Plus, many
agencies where you can sign up are closed to the public, and most applications must be completed entirely remotely.

To help make the process less daunting, FreshWater Cleveland and the Northeast Ohio Solutions Journalism Collaborative (NEO SoJo) have created the How to Apply For Utility Assistance guide for residents of Cuyahoga and Summit counties, and made it available to the public for free.

Struggling to get help with other bills, or have other needs? Consider dialing 2-1-1 in Cuyahoga or Summit Counties to speak with a trained navigator, who can help you find the right assistance to fit your circumstances. 

Did you find this guide helpful? Consider tweeting about it, and tag us @neohiosojo! Questions or concerns? Please email NEO SoJo project manager Sharon Broussard, or reporter Conor Morris.

Rashidah Abdulhaqq worries her electricity and heat will be shut off. 

These are vital services during normal times, but especially during the winter and early spring—and especially when Abdulhaqq cart around the portable oxygen tank to keep herself alive.

<span class="content-image-text">Rashidah Abdulhaqq has relied on several medical waivers to keep her electricity on in her Glenville home because she relies on it to power the oxygen tank that keeps her alive.</span>Rashidah Abdulhaqq has relied on several medical waivers to keep her electricity on in her Glenville home because she relies on it to power the oxygen tank that keeps her alive.Flanked by several windows wrapped in plastic to better insulate her drafty Glenville home, Abdulhaqq said she’s been trying for almost three months to get an application in for several programs to help her with her utility bills.

But despite her efforts, it’s been slow to get assistance from Cleveland nonprofit CHN Housing Partners, one of two agencies in Cuyahoga County where residents can apply for the Home Energy Assistance Program (HEAP) and the Percentage of Income Payment Plan (PIPP)–two utility bill assistance programs. 

HEAP provides a once-per-season emergency payment for low-income people who are behind on utility bills, while PIPP provides discounted bills to the same population.

“They have this number that you call, and it is constantly busy, and you can never get through the line,” Abdulhaqq says. “Plus, I can’t even schedule the appointments online. The online appointment scheduler constantly says all appointments are taken.”

Abdulhaqq did recently get an appointment for late March through CHN Housing Partners, but only after roughly three months of effort. Meanwhile, she received disconnection notices for most of her utilities in February.

Abdulhaqq is one of many residents in Cuyahoga County who have sought help to pay their utility bills in winter but have been unable to get through the bureaucracy to actually receive assistance. Extensive paperwork that must be resubmitted every year, not enough available appointments, and difficulty calling anyone directly who can help are some of the barriers.

A mother of four, Abdulhaqq isn’t currently working because she has lupus, an autoimmune disease, so she relies on her daughters who are old enough to work to help her out. She requires an oxygen tank—which makes her electric bill even higher—because the disease attacks her lungs.

Editor’s note: Abdulhaqq is the daughter of Rashidah Abdulhaqq, a freelance reporter who worked on a NEO SoJo story last year.

<span class="content-image-text">Robin Turner</span>Robin TurnerStockyards resident Robin Turner is also far behind on her bills. Turner, a mental health specialist, has received disconnection notices for both her gas and electric. She says she’s been trying for several months to re-verify her enrollment in the PIPP program through CHN and get any other help they offer. So far, she’s run into similar issues. 

Turner submitted paper copies of her applications and documents on multiple occasions over the last several months, but she was told she didn’t provide the correct paperwork. It took her almost a month to finally correct those issues and get an appointment to be put on the program, which is now set for early this month.

“When you go and ask for help, the system is intentionally set up so that they take people through all these loopholes and nothing ever happens,” Turner says. “All I needed to do is be reverified. No one reaches out to you, no one says ‘Hey, this is what we can do, just fax over this’”

To CHN’s credit, when approached about these issues by a reporter, a representative did reach out to both Turner and Abdulhaqq to help them through the process.

Garfield Heights resident Tony Millsaps has run into similar issues with Step Forward, a Cleveland nonprofit where people can apply for the same utility assistance programs. Millsaps quit his job as a mental health professional last year because his pay was reduced due to the pandemic, among other reasons. His bills are racking up, with disconnection notices for electric and gas recently hitting his mailbox.

Millsaps says he’s tried since the middle of last year to get applications in for energy bill assistance—to little avail. 

“I’ve mailed [an application], I’ve gone online, I’ve faxed it, I even took it personally down there and talked to them,” he said.

Millsaps did recently get a breakthrough: He was approved for Step Forward’s emergency COVID-19-related assistance. But he was given no word on when the help would arrive.

Taylor Wilson, a spokesperson for Step Forward, declined to comment on Millsaps’ case directly, but says winter is the “busy season'' for her agency. She suggested applicants check the online scheduling system “as often as possible” for HEAP and PIPP appointments, with new appointments usually available at the top of each hour.

Why is this happening?
CHN Spokesperson Laura Boustani says the biggest reason applications can be delayed is because of missing paperwork. Programs for utility assistance often require extensive documentation from applicants, including birth certificates for all household members and pay stubs from everyone in the house who’s working. 

Boustani explains that between Step Forward and CHN, which share an online application system for HEAP and PIPP, there are about 90 appointments available each day for those programs in Cuyahoga County, but they can be taken quickly each hour. CHN has also been understaffed in recent months, and with demand high for these services, Boustani says it can be hard to keep up.

“We had gone to the state last year and said we need more resources to open up more appointments,” she says. “And we got that. What we’re finding now is that it’s still an issue because the need continues to grow.”

Michelle Graff has studied the HEAP program extensively. She’s an assistant professor at the Maxine Goodman Levin College of Urban Affairs at Cleveland State University.

In Ohio, typically only about 20% to 25% of the income-eligible population participates in HEAP. Other federal assistance programs like SNAP—the program often known as “food stamps”—typically boast a 65% participation rate. For Medicare, it’s even higher, almost 100%, Graff says.

As to why that is, Graff said she’s studying that issue. She does think it might have something to do with the concept of “administrative burden.” That refers to the burden placed on people to prove they are eligible for programs. CHN and Step Forward ask people to come up with pay stubs and birth certificates, for example.

“[Those] applications have you jump through these hoops and overcome these hurdles to access them,” she says.

Meanwhile, the PIPP program requires people to reverify their income each year—and report if they have a change in income—in order to keep participating in the program. If they fail to do so, participants can be dropped from the program. They must pay any missed PIPP bills, plus any missed non-PIPP utility bills before they can be put back on the program. 

According to public records provided by the Ohio Department of Development, there were about 55,000 enrollments and reverifications for the PIPP program in Cuyahoga County alone in 2018, but also 8,616 people who were dropped from the program because they failed to reverify.

Graff and other researchers with the Energy Justice Lab at Indiana University conducted a national survey of low-income people (below 200% of the poverty line) about their energy bills, and found one in four people were unable to pay one or more energy bills between 2020 and 2021.

That translates to potentially 23.5 million Americans. That statistic was even higher for Black (38%) and Hispanic respondents (34%).

<span class="content-image-text">obin Turner opens up a past-due notices she received from the Illuminating Company.</span>obin Turner opens up a past-due notices she received from the Illuminating Company.Why does it matter?
Turner, the Stockyards resident, said it’s hard for her to take care of her family on one salary, especially when her energy bills are typically through the roof. She said her utility bills totaled almost $600 in January. That could partly be due to faulty wiring in her home, in addition to increased costs to heat the home during the winter.

Turner also faced a shut-off notice from the Illuminating Company last summer, when she owed upward of $1,000 on her electric bill, and a worker came by her home to shut her service off.

“The guy said I’m here to disconnect your service,’” she recalls. “Right at that moment I had to pay him [the company] $500 to keep my electricity on.”

That’s company procedure, says Lauren Siburkus, a spokesperson for the Illuminating Company. Technicians always give customers a last-minute chance to pay their past-due balance before shutting off their power.

But it’s a last resort after making phone calls and sending letters in the mail with instructions about the company’s payment plan options. Even Siburkus acknowledges that getting assistance usually isn’t easy. 

“There's a lot of work and a lot of wait times that go into securing those assistances and those funds,” she says. “It is a challenge and unfortunately, really the only answer to that is that you just have to, unfortunately, endure those long waits.”

For those with health issues, enduring long waits may not be an option. 

People who rely on medical devices—like Abdulhaqq—can get medical certificates filled out by their doctors to push back a utility shutoff, but the forms are only valid for one month each. Abdulhaqq says she’s had to rely on multiple medical waivers over the last year to keep her power on (you can use a maximum of three waivers per year).

“It probably doesn’t do very much because they get a month to come up with the money,” says Constance Magoulias, a MetroHealth doctor who frequently fills out medical certificates for patients. “If they don't have the money, then I don't know how well it helps you,” she says.

Losing electricity makes storing fresh fruits and vegetables nearly impossible, over time leading to nutritional deficiencies and poor health, Magoulias says. That’s of particular concern for people with diabetes because they need refrigeration to store insulin and specific foods to survive.

Additionally, people on blood pressure medication, which can cause dizziness, are particularly vulnerable to fainting on hot summer days, and losing power makes staying cool much harder. And those with asthma may need a special electronic device called a nebulizer to take their medicine.

These conditions all disproportionately impact Black residents on the city’s East Side, according to The Center for Community Solutions

Abdulhaqq, the Glenville resident, suggested one possible solution: Create a different building or department within local utility assistance providers to specifically serve people with serious health conditions.

“That would make it a lot easier… and faster,” she says. 

Meanwhile, U.S. President Joe Biden signed an executive order in December meant to improve the experience of people applying for government assistance programs. That order specifically mentions SNAP, Medicare, and Social Security. There is no reference to the energy assistance programs HEAP and PIPP, however.

Struggling with bills? Check out this guide created to help by the Northeast Ohio Solutions Journalism Collaborative (NEO SoJo) and Black Girl Media. You can find physical copies at your local library branch in Cleveland and Cuyahoga County soon.

This story is a part of the Northeast Ohio Solutions Journalism Collaborative’s Making Ends Meet project. NEO SoJo is composed of 16-plus Northeast Ohio news outlets including FreshWater Cleveland. Conor Morris  is a corps member with Report for America; Michael Indriolo is a reporting fellow for The Land.

Conor Morris
Conor Morris

About the Author: Conor Morris

 Conor Morris is a corps member with Report for America. Morris covered Appalachian southeast Ohio for the weekly newspaper The Athens News for six years. He reported on Athens County, but especially local government, the campus of Ohio University (his alma mater), cops and courts, and the social and economic issues facing the residents of Ohio’s poorest county. Morris helped guide The News toward two Newspaper of the Year awards in its division of the annual Ohio News Media Association Hooper Contest. Morris himself won six first-place Hooper awards for his reporting over the years, including for a story series about police and hospital failures in a sexual- assault investigation in Athens. Morris was born in Marietta, Ohio.