Title: NEADA National Energy Assistance Survey
1NEADA National Energy Assistance Survey NEADA
Annual Meeting June 7, 2004 Jacqueline
Berger Donnell Butler
2Survey Goals
- Interview a nationally representative sample of
LIHEAP-recipient households - Document the choices that LIHEAP-recipient
households make when faced with unaffordable home
energy bills - Compare and contrast the findings from this study
with other low-income energy research studies - Furnish data and tables that can be used by
policymakers and researchers
3Survey Design
- Random selection of 20 states to represent LIHEAP
recipients around the country - 7 states unable to participate, substitutes
chosen - Telephone interviews conducted between November
and December 2003 (1978 respondents) - Mail follow-up conducted in January and February
2004 (183 respondents) - Total of 2,161 completed interviews
4States Surveyed
California Colorado Georgia Delaware
Iowa Louisiana Maine Massachusetts
Minnesota Montana New Mexico New York
North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Pennsylvania
Rhode Island Virginia Washington Wisconsin
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23Summary of Findings
- Households with elderly and disabled members are
more likely to receive LIHEAP every year - Almost all LIHEAP-recipient households take
constructive actions to reduce their energy bills
24Summary of Findings (continued)
- In the past five years
- 28 did not make a rent or mortgage obligation
- 22 went without food for at least one day
- 38 went without medical or dental care
- 30 went without full prescription
- 21 became sick because home was too cold
- 7 became sick because home was too hot
25Summary of Findings (continued)
- In the past year
- 8 had electricity shut off due to non-payment
- 17 were unable to use main source of heat due to
discontinued utility service or inability to pay
for fuel
26Summary of Findings (continued)
- Energy Insecurity scale
- Developed with Roger Colton
- Measures all aspects of low-income energy
affordability - Can measure incremental change in circumstances
27Summary of Findings (continued)
- Energy Insecurity scale
- Crisis definition the household has lost energy
service or faced unsafe situations due to
inability to pay the energy bill - 62 of LIHEAP-recipient households are in crisis
- Households with elderly members are less likely
to be in crisis and households with young
children are more likely to be in crisis - Households with the highest energy burden are
most likely to be in crisis
28Summary of Findings (continued)
- LIHEAP Impact
- 62 said it helped restore heat
- 54 said would have kept home at unsafe
temperature if LIHEAP had not been available - 48 said would have had electricity or home
heating fuel discontinued if LIHEAP had not been
available - 88 said LIHEAP has been very important in
helping meet needs
29Key Findings
- Low-income households have high energy burdens
- LIHEAP only serves a small fraction of eligible
households - Households that receive LIHEAP still face
significant hardship in attempting to pay energy
bills - Some of the vulnerable groups show greater need
for LIHEAP assistance - LIHEAP makes a significant difference for
recipient households
30Potential Future Research
- Comparison of state LIHEAP procedures and
low-income energy programs - Survey research and technical assistance
- Survey conducted with additional states
- Tracking study repeat the 2003 survey
- New survey module on program administration
- Research on non-recipients