Traderji.com - Discussion forum for Stocks Commodities & Forex

Millions of Americans Can't Pay Their Electricity Bills

Discuss Millions of Americans Can't Pay Their Electricity Bills at the Current Affairs within the Traderji.com - Discussion forum for Stocks Commodities & Forex; Millions of Americans are behind on electric and gas bills April 25, 2008 After struggling ...


Go Back   Traderji.com - Discussion forum for Stocks Commodities & Forex > COMMUNITY CENTRE > Current Affairs

Notices

Current Affairs Discuss the latest happenings in the world of trading and investing here.


Advertise Here

Reply
 
Thread Tools
Sponsored Links
  #1  
Old 27th April 2008, 02:44 AM
Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 59
Thanks: 0
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
yuvrajjj is on a distinguished road
Reputation: 20
Default Millions of Americans Can't Pay Their Electricity Bills

Millions of Americans are behind on electric and gas bills

April 25, 2008

After struggling with soaring heating costs through the winter, millions of Americans are behind on electric and gas bills, and a record number of families could face energy shut-offs over the next two months, according to state energy officials and utilities around the country.

The escalating costs of heating oil, propane and kerosene, most commonly used in the Northeast, have posed the greatest burdens, officials say, but natural gas and electricity prices have also climbed at a time when low-end incomes are stagnant and prices have also jumped for food and gasoline.

In New Hampshire, applicants for fuel subsidies under the federal Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program received an average of $600 in a one-time grant and up to $975 for the extremely poor who rely on heating oil or propane, the costliest fuels. But those grants, which in recent years have covered 60 percent of heating costs, covered only about 35 percent of those costs this winter, said Celeste Lovett, director of the state’s energy aid program. The state will have given aid to about 34,500 people by the end of April, Ms. Lovett said, a 5 percent increase over last year and the highest number ever.

The most immediate challenge is to help the high number of consumers who are far behind in electric and gas payments, said Mark Wolfe, director of the National Energy Assistance Directors’ Association, which represents state aid officials in Washington.“Based on discussions with major utility companies around the country, we will see record numbers of families facing shut-offs,” Mr. Wolfe said. Rhode Island officials, for example, expect shut-offs in 2008 to surpass the record of 30,000 set in 2007.

In Pennsylvania, applications for “crisis grants” for those whose oil tanks are empty or who face an imminent utilities cutoff totaled about 133,000 in each of the last two years but have already reached 166,000 this year, said Linda Blanchette, deputy secretary of income maintenance. And in New York, the number of households that received aid increased by 5 percent in the last year, to 895,000. Under the federal aid program, at least 5.8 million households will have received grants to help with heating bills in this fiscal year, ending Sept. 30, which is an increase of 3.7 percent from last year, according to figures to be issued Friday by the Energy Assistance Directors’ Association.

This is the highest number in 16 years, Mr. Wolfe said. And the numbers would have been higher if some states had not been forced to reduce the number of aid recipients by increasing grants or tightening eligibility requirements — in effect choosing to provide more aid to fewer people.
Christopher Powden, a jewelry repairer in Goffstown, N.H., with a family of five, managed to pay his electric bills but fell behind on heating oil. “It was a long winter and the cost of oil was exorbitant, and when you add in the cost of electricity it’s impossible to keep up,” Mr. Powden said. Refilling his oil tank this winter cost nearly $3,000, he said, but his grant from the aid program was only $365 and he owes the oil company $535, plus interest.Mr. Powden needs the tank refilled this spring because the same furnace provides hot water. But the company will not make another delivery until he pays off the arrears.

The federal assistance program, known as Liheap, was started in 1980, to help families cope with sharply rising oil prices and energy deregulation, and it has become a routine part of the safety net. Unlike food stamps, which the government must automatically provide to eligible applicants, the program relies on annual Congressional appropriations that have not risen as much as the cost of energy.

Many states are calling on Congress to quickly add a $1 billion supplement to the federal aid program, which has provided $2.6 billion to low-income families in the current fiscal year.

Without extra aid, people who still owe large sums to oil vendors will not be able to get deliveries next fall, Ms. Lovett said, and many who did not pay electric and gas bills during New Hampshire’s winter moratorium on shut-offs may soon lose those services.

http://bull18.blogspot.com/

Last edited by yuvrajjj; 23rd July 2008 at 02:33 AM.
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old 27th April 2008, 08:38 PM
Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Bangalore
Posts: 40
Thanks: 0
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
rajakrsnan is on a distinguished road
Reputation: 20
Default Re: Millions of Americans Can't Pay Their Electricity Bills

Rising cost of the inputs are putting millions of end users to problems. So is it causing problems of the user industries.
there are two scenarios in this case.
1.Provide subsidy.
2.Stop the service.

Providing subsicy puts pressure on already pressurised financial systems.
stopping service puts the end user and the service provider into problems.

what is the next alternative? find new alternative solutions to current inputs which are not the preserve of few producing countries which are in limited quantity and can be used as coercive weapon. time has come for all governments to see the reality and channel thier resources for new renewable resources which are cheap and available around the year and not at the whims and fancies of a few producers.
Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 22nd July 2008, 04:34 PM
Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: mangalore/bangalore
Posts: 680
Thanks: 909
Thanked 164 Times in 107 Posts
learn2trade08 has a spectacular aura aboutlearn2trade08 has a spectacular aura about
Reputation: 174
Angry Re: Millions of Americans Can't Pay Their Electricity Bills

Isnt it ironic,that millions of consumers are ready to pay extra for uninterrupted power in our country,yet there is no power...from past 1 week there is no such thing as uniterrupted power supply in bangalore...each trading day for me is now cut down to 1 hour thanks to scarcity of power...planning to get a good ups back up for my home...but still,my question is how on earth can India be a growth story without power and then we have everyother politician who are against indo american nuclear deal....
lord save us!


Quote:
Originally Posted by yuvrajjj View Post
Millions of Americans are behind on electric and gas bills

April 25, 2008

After struggling with soaring heating costs through the winter, millions of Americans are behind on electric and gas bills, and a record number of families could face energy shut-offs over the next two months, according to state energy officials and utilities around the country.

The escalating costs of heating oil, propane and kerosene, most commonly used in the Northeast, have posed the greatest burdens, officials say, but natural gas and electricity prices have also climbed at a time when low-end incomes are stagnant and prices have also jumped for food and gasoline.

In New Hampshire, applicants for fuel subsidies under the federal Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program received an average of $600 in a one-time grant and up to $975 for the extremely poor who rely on heating oil or propane, the costliest fuels. But those grants, which in recent years have covered 60 percent of heating costs, covered only about 35 percent of those costs this winter, said Celeste Lovett, director of the state’s energy aid program. The state will have given aid to about 34,500 people by the end of April, Ms. Lovett said, a 5 percent increase over last year and the highest number ever.

The most immediate challenge is to help the high number of consumers who are far behind in electric and gas payments, said Mark Wolfe, director of the National Energy Assistance Directors’ Association, which represents state aid officials in Washington.“Based on discussions with major utility companies around the country, we will see record numbers of families facing shut-offs,” Mr. Wolfe said. Rhode Island officials, for example, expect shut-offs in 2008 to surpass the record of 30,000 set in 2007.

In Pennsylvania, applications for “crisis grants” for those whose oil tanks are empty or who face an imminent utilities cutoff totaled about 133,000 in each of the last two years but have already reached 166,000 this year, said Linda Blanchette, deputy secretary of income maintenance. And in New York, the number of households that received aid increased by 5 percent in the last year, to 895,000. Under the federal aid program, at least 5.8 million households will have received grants to help with heating bills in this fiscal year, ending Sept. 30, which is an increase of 3.7 percent from last year, according to figures to be issued Friday by the Energy Assistance Directors’ Association.

This is the highest number in 16 years, Mr. Wolfe said. And the numbers would have been higher if some states had not been forced to reduce the number of aid recipients by increasing grants or tightening eligibility requirements — in effect choosing to provide more aid to fewer people.
Christopher Powden, a jewelry repairer in Goffstown, N.H., with a family of five, managed to pay his electric bills but fell behind on heating oil. “It was a long winter and the cost of oil was exorbitant, and when you add in the cost of electricity it’s impossible to keep up,” Mr. Powden said. Refilling his oil tank this winter cost nearly $3,000, he said, but his grant from the aid program was only $365 and he owes the oil company $535, plus interest.Mr. Powden needs the tank refilled this spring because the same furnace provides hot water. But the company will not make another delivery until he pays off the arrears.

The federal assistance program, known as Liheap, was started in 1980, to help families cope with sharply rising oil prices and energy deregulation, and it has become a routine part of the safety net. Unlike food stamps, which the government must automatically provide to eligible applicants, the program relies on annual Congressional appropriations that have not risen as much as the cost of energy.

Many states are calling on Congress to quickly add a $1 billion supplement to the federal aid program, which has provided $2.6 billion to low-income families in the current fiscal year.

Without extra aid, people who still owe large sums to oil vendors will not be able to get deliveries next fall, Ms. Lovett said, and many who did not pay electric and gas bills during New Hampshire’s winter moratorium on shut-offs may soon lose those services.

Source: New York Times
Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old 22nd July 2008, 05:54 PM
Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 85
Thanks: 147
Thanked 17 Times in 7 Posts
dhakkan is on a distinguished road
Reputation: 33
Default Re: Millions of Americans Can't Pay Their Electricity Bills

Quote:
Originally Posted by learn2trade08 View Post
Isnt it ironic,that millions of consumers are ready to pay extra for uninterrupted power in our country,yet there is no power...from past 1 week there is no such thing as uniterrupted power supply in bangalore...each trading day for me is now cut down to 1 hour thanks to scarcity of power...planning to get a good ups back up for my home...but still,my question is how on earth can India be a growth story without power and then we have everyother politician who are against indo american nuclear deal....
lord save us!
Well said sir,
Today also no power throughout the day....God save Bangalore.
It was in NDTV also... power situation in bangalore.
Reply With Quote
  #5  
Old 23rd July 2008, 07:05 PM
Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: mangalore/bangalore
Posts: 680
Thanks: 909
Thanked 164 Times in 107 Posts
learn2trade08 has a spectacular aura aboutlearn2trade08 has a spectacular aura about
Reputation: 174
Default Re: Millions of Americans Can't Pay Their Electricity Bills

lol,now its hard to find diesel anywhere...thanks to the power crisis,now everyone wants their fill of diesel for the generators...
seriously thinking of migrating to a different country if anyone accepts me that is....
thanks

Quote:
Originally Posted by dhakkan View Post
Well said sir,
Today also no power throughout the day....God save Bangalore.
It was in NDTV also... power situation in bangalore.
Reply With Quote
  #6  
Old 24th August 2008, 11:57 AM
Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Sunny Sunrise, Florida in the USA
Posts: 1
Thanks: 0
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
stavsig is on a distinguished road
Reputation: 11
Angry Re: Millions of Americans Can't Pay Their Electricity Bills

Hello Folks,
I am new to the site and this is my first post. I am a relatively new Forex trader and will appreciate any tips you can give.

I live in America and not only can we not pay or light bills, we cannot buy gas or pay our mortgages either. We (not me personnaly for sure!) voted in a fool twice and through his arrogance, oil has gone from $20 to $120 on his watch so his friends and family get richer. The world is much worst off for this drunk, dishonest fool. (Please forgive my rant but it is all true.)

I will pass on any tips I have that may be of help to all.

Stavsig
Reply With Quote
  #7  
Old 26th August 2008, 07:30 PM
Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Pune
Posts: 615
Thanks: 169
Thanked 554 Times in 253 Posts
Smart_trade is a name known to allSmart_trade is a name known to allSmart_trade is a name known to allSmart_trade is a name known to allSmart_trade is a name known to allSmart_trade is a name known to all
Reputation: 569
Default Re: Millions of Americans Can't Pay Their Electricity Bills

Quote:
Originally Posted by stavsig View Post
Hello Folks,
I am new to the site and this is my first post. I am a relatively new Forex trader and will appreciate any tips you can give.

I live in America and not only can we not pay or light bills, we cannot buy gas or pay our mortgages either. We (not me personnaly for sure!) voted in a fool twice and through his arrogance, oil has gone from $20 to $120 on his watch so his friends and family get richer. The world is much worst off for this drunk, dishonest fool. (Please forgive my rant but it is all true.)

I will pass on any tips I have that may be of help to all.

Stavsig
Welcome to the forum my friend.People get the Governments they deserve,and America is no exception!!!!

In this forum we welcome trading ideas,techniques,tools etc .Traders here are professional traders so we dont need tips.

Cool yourself,anger and frustration is not conducive to good trading. Concentrate on trading well and you will be able to afford all you want and desire.

Best Wishes,Trade well !!!!

Smart_trade
Reply With Quote
  #8  
Old 26th August 2008, 11:38 PM
Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: thethirdplanet
Posts: 685
Thanks: 5
Thanked 6 Times in 4 Posts
Linus will become famous soon enough
Reputation: 55
Default Re: Millions of Americans Can't Pay Their Electricity Bills

Well, the story is no different here but with a twist - millions of Indians pay for the power used by billions of Indians ! Ha ha ha

s s
Reply With Quote
The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to Linus For This Useful Post:
columbus (26th August 2008), Czar (31st August 2008), deoria (31st August 2008)
  #9  
Old 26th August 2008, 11:45 PM
Member
 
Join Date: May 2008
Posts: 115
Thanks: 91
Thanked 33 Times in 20 Posts
rkripal will become famous soon enough
Reputation: 59
Default Re: Millions of Americans Can't Pay Their Electricity Bills

Quote:
Originally Posted by Linus View Post
Well, the story is no different here but with a twist - millions of Indians pay for the power used by billions of Indians ! Ha ha ha

s s
very true
Reply With Quote
  #10  
Old 31st August 2008, 02:08 AM
Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 2,408
Thanks: 825
Thanked 1,209 Times in 563 Posts
Czar has much to be proud ofCzar has much to be proud ofCzar has much to be proud ofCzar has much to be proud ofCzar has much to be proud ofCzar has much to be proud ofCzar has much to be proud ofCzar has much to be proud ofCzar has much to be proud of
Reputation: 1264
Default Re: Millions of Americans Can't Pay Their Electricity Bills

Quote:
Originally Posted by learn2trade08 View Post
Isnt it ironic,that millions of consumers are ready to pay extra for uninterrupted power in our country,yet there is no power...from past 1 week there is no such thing as uniterrupted power supply in bangalore...each trading day for me is now cut down to 1 hour thanks to scarcity of power...planning to get a good ups back up for my home...but still,my question is how on earth can India be a growth story without power and then we have everyother politician who are against indo american nuclear deal....
lord save us!
& I was wondering why we get to see you very less in the nf thread since past few days, mystery solved...

Linus well said & unfortunately very very true....
Reply With Quote
Sponsored Links

Reply

Bookmarks


Advertise Here


Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are Off


All times are GMT +5.5. The time now is 09:21 AM.

Indemnity, Disclaimer & Disclosure Notice:
• By visiting Traderji.com you indicate your acceptance of our Forum Rules Disclaimer & Disclosure and indemnify Traderji.com, its associates and related parties of all claims howsoever resulting from the usage of the forum.
Disclaimer: Trading or investing in stocks & commodities is a high risk activity. Any action you choose to take in the markets is totally your own responsibility. Traderji.com will not be liable for any, direct or indirect, consequential or incidental damages or loss arising out of the use of this information.
Disclosure: The information in this forum is neither an offer to sell nor solicitation to buy any of the securities mentioned herein. The writers may or may not be trading in the securities mentioned.
• All names or products mentioned are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners.
General Content Disclaimer Notice:
In light of our policy of encouraging candid, open exchanges of views and the rapid distribution of information originating from many sources, Traderji.com cannot determine the accuracy of information that may be uploaded to the forum. Opinions, advice and all other information expressed by participants in discussions are those of the author. You rely on such information at your own risk. You are urged to seek professional advice for specific, individual situations and not rely solely on advice or opinions given in the discussions. Since Traderji.com is an open and free discussion forum, any comments made by members of this forum in their posts reflect their own views and not of the owner or administrator of Traderji.com. Thus the owner/administrator indemnify themselves of all claims whatsoever and will not be liable or responsible for any members comments/views in this forum Traderji.com. If you find any objectionable or offensive posts made by members of this forum which you would like to bring to our notice for removal then please Contact Us.
 


Copyright © 2001 - 2008, Traderji.com All Rights Reserved.

Recommended Websites - www.TradersEdgeIndia.com - www.TradingPicks.com - www.MasterOfTrading.com