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The LIHEAP Formula

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The LIHEAP Formula

February 17, 2017Updated May 2, 2019 (RL33275)
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Contents

Summary

The Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) provides funds to states, the District of Columbia, U.S. territories and commonwealths, and Indian tribal organizations (collectively referred to as grantees) primarily to help low-income households pay home energy expenses. The LIHEAP statute provides for two types of funding: regular funds (sometimes referred to as block grant funds) and emergency contingency funds. Regular funds are allocated to grantees based on a formula, while emergency contingency funds may be released to one or more grantees at the discretion of the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) based on emergency need. This report focuses on the way in which regular funds are distributed.

Regular LIHEAP funds are allocated to the states according to a formula that has a long and complicated history. (Tribes and territories receive funds through set asides.) In 1980, Congress created the predecessor program to LIHEAP, the Low Income Energy Assistance Program (LIEAP), as part of the Crude Oil Windfall Profits Tax Act (P.L. 96-223). Because Congress was particularly concerned with the high costs of heating, funds under LIEAP were distributed according to a multi-step formula that benefitted cold-weather states. In 1981, Congress enacted LIHEAP as part of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (P.L. 97-35), replacing LIEAP. However, thereceive a share of state funding, while a percentage of regular funds is set aside for territories.) Prior to enactment of LIHEAP, in 1981, a series of predecessor energy assistance programs focused on the heating needs of cold weather states. This focus was in part the result of high heating oil prices throughout the 1970s. When LIHEAP was enacted, it adopted the formula of its immediate predecessor program, the Low Income Energy Assistance Program (LIEAP). Funds under LIEAP were distributed according to a multi-step formula that was more favorable to colder-weather states. The LIHEAP statute specified that states would continue to receive the same percentage of regular funds that they did under the LIEAP formula (this. This is sometimes referred to as the "old" LIHEAP formula).

WhenAfter several years, when Congress reauthorized LIHEAP in 1984 as part of the Human Services Reauthorization Act (P.L. 98-558), it changed the program's formula by requiring the use of more recent population and energy data and requiring that HHS consider both heating and cooling costs of low-income households (a change from what had largely been a focus on the need for heating assistance)(data were not updated under the "old" formula) and reducing the emphasis on heating needs. The effect of these changes meant that, in general, some funding would be shifted from coldcolder-weather states to warm-weather states. warmer-weather states. (Using FY2019 formula data, the figure below shows which states receive a greater share of funds under the "new" and "old" formulas.) To prevent a dramatic shift of funds, Congress added two "hold-harmless" provisions to the formula. The percentage of funds that states receive under the formula enacted in 1984 is sometimes referred to as the "new" formula.

The result of these provisions is a current law, three-tiered formula, the application of which depends on the amount of regular funds that Congress appropriates. When appropriations are at or below the equivalent of a hypothetical FY1984 appropriation of $1.975 billion, states receive the "old" formula percentage of funds. If appropriations exceed this level, then funds are allocated according to the "new" formula percentage of funds, with certain states held harmless at the level of funds they would have received at an appropriation of $1.975 billion in FY1984. Finally, when appropriations are at or above $2.25 billion, there is a second hold-harmless provision in place, a hold-harmless rate that ensures that certain states receive a set percentage of funds.

For many years after Favorability of the "New" and "Old" LIHEAP Formulas by State (FY2019) Source: Based on Department of Health and Human ServicesData New formula data is used to calculate state allotments when appropriations for LIHEAP regular funds exceed approximately $2 billion. In the years following the enactment of the "new" LIHEAP formula, appropriations did not exceed the equivalent of an FY1984 appropriation of $1.975 billion, so funds were reach this level, so until the mid-2000s funds were largely distributed according to the "old" formula percentages. However, in FY2006, and in FY2009 through FY2016FY2019, regular fund appropriations have ranged from $2.5 billion to $4.5 billion, and the "new" formula has been incorporated into the way in which funds are distributed to the states. Notably, however, since FY2009 Congress has limited the operation of the "new" formula by requiring that the majority of regular funds be distributed using "old" formula percentages. For distributionsFor allocations to the states from FY2009-FY2019, see Table C-1.


The LIHEAP Formula

Introduction

to LIHEAP

The Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) is a block grant program administered by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) under which the federal government gives annual grants to states, the District of Columbia, U.S. territories and commonwealths, and Indian tribal organizations to operate multi-component home energy assistance programs for needy households.1 Established in 1981 by Title XXVI of P.L. 97-35, the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act, LIHEAP has been reauthorized and amended a number of times, most recently in 2005, when P.L. 109-58, the Energy Policy Act, authorized annual regular LIHEAP funds at $5.1 billion per year from FY2005 through FY2007.2

1

The federal LIHEAP statute has very broad guidelines, with many decisions regarding the program's operation made by the states. Recipients may be helped with their heating and cooling costs, receive crisis assistance, have weatherizing expenses paid, or receive other aid designed to reduce their home energy needs. Households with incomes up to 150% of the federal poverty income guidelines or, if greater, 60% of the state median income, are federally eligible for LIHEAP benefits. States may adopt lower income limits, but no household with income below 110% of the poverty guidelines may be considered ineligible. The most recent HHS data show that an estimated 6.3 million households received winter heating or winter crisis assistance in FY2014 (the largest share of LIHEAP funds pay for heating assistance).3

The LIHEAP statute provides for two types of program funding: regular funds—sometimes referred to as block grant funds—and emergency contingency funds. Regular funds are allotted to states on the basis of the LIHEAP statutory formula, which was enacted as part of the Human Services Reauthorization Act of 1984 (P.L. 98-558).42 The way in which regular funds are allocated to states depends on the amount of funds appropriated by Congress. The second type of LIHEAP funds, emergency contingency funds, last appropriated in FY2011, may be released and allotted to one or more states at the discretion of the President and the Secretary of HHS.53 The funds may be released at any point in the fiscal year to meet additional home energy assistance needs created by a natural disaster or other emergency.6

4 For more information on LIHEAP more generally, see CRS Report RL31865, LIHEAP: Program and Funding, by Libby Perl. The remainder of this report discusses only the history and methods of distributing regular LIHEAP funds to the statestates. Funds for tribes are included in each state's formula allocations and are distributed at the state level based on eligible tribal members. Territories receive funds separately as a percentage set aside of regular funds, so neither tribes nor territories are included in the formula discussion.

Predecessor Programs to LIHEAP

The mid- to late-1970s, a time marked by rapidly rising fuel prices, also marked the beginning of federal energy assistance funding for low-income households. The first national program to help low-income households was created in early 1975 to assist families with energy conservation primarily through home weatherization. This assistance was provided through a new Emergency Energy Conservation Program (EECP), enacted as part of the Headstart, Economic Opportunity, and Community Partnership Act of 1974 (P.L. 93-644). The funds were administered by the Community Services Administration (CSA), the successor agency to the Office of Economic Opportunity, which was responsible for many of the programs created as part of the 1964 war on poverty. Beginning in 1977, funds were also made available through the CSA to help families directly pay for fuel (as opposed to weatherization expenses) via a variety of programs. Each of these programs had in common a focus on the need for heating assistance (versus cooling assistance).

Congress continued to appropriate funds for energy assistance programs through FY1980, at which point a new program, the Low Income Energy Assistance Program (LIEAP), was enacted as part of the Crude Oil Windfall Profits Tax Act of 1980 (P.L. 96-223). LIEAP, which was administered by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), was funded for one year, FY1981, before the creation of LIHEAP. Like the CSA programs, LIEAP emphasized heating over cooling needs. This preference was reflected in both the CSA program formulas and the LIEAP set of formulas, which used variables that benefitted cold-weather states to determine how funds would be distributed. The LIEAP set of formulas continues to have relevance for the way in which LIHEAP funds are distributed. This section of the report describes these predecessor programs to LIHEAP and their distribution formulas.

Community Services Administration Energy Assistance Programs

On January 4, 1975, President Ford signed into law the Headstart, Economic Opportunity, and Community Partnership Act of 1974 (P.L. 93-644), which contained funds for a new program, called the Emergency Energy Conservation Program (EECP). The program was to be administered by the Community Services Administration (CSA), and its purpose was

to enable low-income individuals and families, including the elderly and the near poor, to participate in energy conservation programs designed to lessen the impact of the high cost of energy ... and to reduce ... energy consumption.

The law governing EECP listed a number of eligible activities in which states could participate, including energy conservation and education programs; weatherization assistance; loans and grants for the purchase of energy conservation technologies; alternative fuel supplies; and fuel voucher and stamp programs. Despite the variety of activities that could be funded through the program, the first CSA funding notice regarding the program limited eligible activities to "winterizing" homes and to giving emergency assistance "to prevent hardship or danger to health due to utility shutoff or lack of fuel."7 During the four years the EECP was funded, the majority of funds were used for weatherization expenses.8

EECP funds were distributed to states via a formula that benefitted those states with high heating costs. One formula variable in particular, a measure of "coldness" called heating degree days, benefitted cold-weather states. Heating degree days measure the extent to which a day's average temperature falls below 65° Fahrenheit. For example, a day with an average temperature of 50° results in a measure of 15 heating degree days. Because heating degree days are higher in cold-weather states, including the heating degree day variable in a formula favors states with greater heating needs. Squaring the heating degree days magnifies this effect.9 The EECP formula took the number of population-weighted heating degree days in each state, squared them, and multiplied the result by the number of households in poverty that owned their homes to determine how funds would be allocated.10 The CSA acknowledged the emphasis on heating needs in its formula, stating that the FY1975 allocation "was heavily weighted to the coldest areas."11 In the three fiscal years that followed the first appropriation for the EECP, from FY1976 through FY1978, the CSA changed somewhat the way in which it allocated funds to the states; however, the factors continued to favor cold-weather states through use of either heating degree days or heating degree days squared.12

The first year that Congress specifically appropriated funds for direct assistance to help low-income households (those at or below 125% of poverty) pay their energy costs (instead of funds that went primarily for weatherization and conservation activities) was FY1977. The FY1977 Supplemental Appropriations Act (P.L. 95-26) provided $200 million for a Special Crisis Intervention Program to be administered by CSA. States could use funds to make direct payments to fuel providers on behalf of low-income families lacking the financial resources to pay their energy bills. The CSA directed states to target households where utilities had been shut off (or were threatened with shut off) or who could prove "dire financial need" as the result of paying large energy bills.13 Although the law did not reserve funds exclusively for heating costs, the way in which funds were allocated to the states emphasized heating need. Funds were distributed to the states based on a formula that used (1) heating degree days squared, (2) the number of households in poverty, (3) the number of persons above age 65 with incomes below 125% of poverty, and (4) the relative cost of fuel in the region.14 Congress again appropriated $200 million for crisis intervention in both FY1978 and FY1979.15 In FY1978, funds were available to households with the need for assistance as the result of an energy-related emergency such as lack of fuel, a natural disaster, fuel shortages, and widespread unemployment.16 In FY1979, funds were made available to assist families facing "substantially increased energy costs and/or life- or health-threatening situations caused by winter-related energy emergencies."17

In FY1980, Congress appropriated a total of $1.6 billion for energy assistance. Of this amount, $400 million was appropriated for the Energy Crisis Assistance Program (ECAP, a CSA program similar to the Special Crisis Intervention Program) through two separate appropriations.18 The remainder, $1.2 billion, was appropriated as part of the FY1980 Department of the Interior Appropriations Act (P.L. 96-126) to the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (HEW, the predecessor to HHS) for cash assistance and crisis intervention due to high energy costs. This appropriation to HEW is sometimes referred to as Low Income Supplemental Energy Allowances. Of this $1.2 billion, $400 million was to be distributed specifically to recipients of Supplemental Security Income (SSI). The rest of the funds appropriated to HEW, approximately $800 million, as well as the ECAP funds, were distributed to states on the basis of three factors: heating degree days squared, the number of households below 125% of poverty, and the difference in home heating energy expenditures between 1978 and 1979. The formula used to distribute the $400 million for SSI recipients used these same factors but also included the number of SSI recipients in each state relative to the national total.

Table 1. Factors Used in Select Energy Assistance Formulas, FY1975-FY1980

Emergency Energy Conservation Program:a
FY1975
(P.L. 93-644)

Special Crisis
Intervention Program:b
FY1977
(P.L. 95-26)

Low Income Supplemental Energy Allowances:c
FY1980
(P.L. 96-126)

(Heating degree days)2

(Heating degree days)2

(Heating degree days)2

Number of homeowners in poverty

Number of households in poverty

Number of households below 125% of poverty

 

Number of persons over age 65 with income less than 125% of poverty

Difference in home heating expenditures between 1978 and 1979

 

Relative cost of fuel

 

Sources: For the formula under P.L. 93-644, see Community Services Administration, "Emergency Energy Conservation Program: Submission of Funding Plans," Federal Register, vol. 41, no. 208, October 27, 1976, p. 47096. For the formula under P.L. 95-26, see Senate Appropriations Committee, report to accompany H.R. 4877, the FY1977 Supplemental Appropriations Act, 95th Congress, 1st session, S.Rept. 95-64, March 24, 1977. The formula for P.L. 96-126 is contained within the law.

a. Of the funds appropriated for the Emergency Energy Conservation Program, 90% were distributed via the formula, while the remaining 10% were divided among the 12 coldest states as measured by heating degree days. The formula involved multiplying heating degree days squared by the number of homeowners in poverty to arrive at the percentage share for each state.

b. The Special Crisis Intervention Program did not specify a weight for each of the four variables used to determine allocations.

c. The Low Income Supplemental Energy Allowances arrived at states' shares of funds through the formula ½ (heating degree days2 * number of households below 125% of poverty) + ½ (difference in home heating expenditures between 1978 and 1980). Of the $1.6 billion appropriated for energy assistance in FY1980, $400 million was set aside for SSI recipients. The formula to distribute those funds was ⅓ (heating degree days2 * number of households below 125% of poverty) + ⅓ (difference in home heating expenditures between 1978 and 1979) + ⅓ (SSI recipients in each state relative to the national total).

The Low Income Energy Assistance Program (LIEAP) Formula

In April 1980, Congress replaced the patchwork energy assistance programs of the late 1970s with one program, the Low Income Energy Assistance Program (LIEAP). LIEAP, the direct predecessor program to LIHEAP, was established as part of the Crude Oil Windfall Profits Tax Act of 1980 (P.L. 96-223). The program was introduced in the Senate as the Home Energy Assistance Act (S. 1724) and was incorporated into H.R. 3919, the bill that would become the Crude Oil Windfall Profits Tax Act, on the Senate floor.19 Like the energy assistance programs of the late 1970s such as the Special Crisis Intervention Program and the Low Income Supplemental Energy Allowances, LIEAP allocated funds to states in order to help low-income households pay their home energy costs. Also like these predecessor programs, LIEAP allocated funds to states using a method that put more emphasis on the heating needs of cold-weather states than it did on cooling needs.

The formula developed under LIEAP continues to be relevant in several ways: (1) it has been used to distribute LIHEAP funds as recently as FY2007, (2) the percentage shares of funds that states received continue to be the benchmark for the way in which states are held harmless under the current LIHEAP formula, and (3) from FY2009 through FY2012, Congress has distributed the bulk of LIHEAP funds using the LIEAP formula percentages (for more information, see Appendix C). As a result, the variables used are important in understanding the current formula and the way in which it is used to distribute funds.

Ultimately, Congress developed the LIEAP formula through two different laws: P.L. 96-223, the law that authorized LIEAP, and P.L. 96-369, a continuing resolution enacted six months later. The following two subsections describe the elements of the formula developed through each.

Formula Under P.L. 96-223

The formula developed as part of S. 1724, and subsequently incorporated into P.L. 96-223, reflected, in part, the concern that the problem of rising energy costs were "most critical in areas with high home heating costs."20 The formula for LIEAP arose from a Senate compromise over three different proposals. The debate centered around the degree to which heating should be emphasized over energy expenditures generally. Some Members wanted a formula that accounted for all energy uses and was not based solely on geographic location,21 while others saw the program's purpose as solely to provide heating assistance.22 The debate on the Senate floor was, at times, contentious, with Senator Edmund Muskie (Maine) resolved to filibuster in order to support the heating needs of northern states.23 Primarily at issue was the measure of heating degree days, particularly the extent to which they would be weighted and whether they would be squared.

Under the final compromise LIEAP formula in P.L. 96-223, states received funds under one of four different alternatives used to measure home energy need, depending on which one benefitted a state the most. Three of the four options contained different combinations of several formula factors: residential energy expenditures; heating degree days or heating degree days squared; and the number of low-income households in the state.

  • Under the first formula alternative, 50% of the allocation was based on residential energy expenditures and 50% on heating degree days squared multiplied by the number of households at or below the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) lower living standard.24
  • Under the second formula alternative, 25% of the allocation was based on residential energy expenditures and 75% based on heating degree days squared multiplied by the number of households at or below the BLS lower living standard.
  • Under the third formula alternative, 50% of the allocation was based on residential energy expenditures and 50% based on heating degree days (not squared) multiplied by the number of households with incomes at or below the BLS lower living standard.
  • The fourth option guaranteed states a minimum benefit of $120 for each household that received Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC), SSI, or Food Stamp benefits. The option was added to S. 1724 at the Finance Committee level in recognition of the fact that (in general) funds were not being provided for cooling costs.25

(See Table 2 for a breakdown of these formulas.)

While the focus of the formula was on heating assistance, the LIEAP law did allow states to provide for cooling when households could demonstrate medical necessity.26 Congress authorized LIEAP for one year, FY1981, at $3 billion, but funds were not appropriated as part of P.L. 96-223.

Formula Under P.L. 96-369

Before the formula in P.L. 96-223 could be used to allocate funds, Congress introduced an alternative method for computing the state distribution rates. It did so when it appropriated $1.85 billion in LIEAP funds for FY1981 in a continuing resolution (P.L. 96-369), in October of 1980, six months after enactment of the Crude Oil Windfall Profits Tax Act. The new allocation method was not described in P.L. 96-369, however. Instead, the continuing resolution referred to a House Appropriations Committee report (H. Rept. 96-1244) accompanying another bill—the FY1981 Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services and Education Appropriations Act. It was in this committee report that the additional formula components for LIEAP were laid out.27 The additional formula components appeared to be intended to act as a counter to the formula developed in P.L. 96-223, which some argued benefitted warmer weather states more than was necessary.28

The first step in the new set of formulas was to determine each state's share of funds using two calculations set out in H. Rept. 96-1244 and assign states the greater of the two amounts.

  • Under the first formula alternative, 50% of the allocation was based on the increase in home heating expenditures, and 50% was based on the number of heating degree days squared times the population with income less than or equal to 125% of poverty. This was the same formula used for the Low-Income Supplemental Energy Allowances Program.
  • Under the second formula alternative, 25% of the allocation was based on total residential energy expenditures, and 75% was based on heating degree days squared multiplied by the number of low-income households in the state.

The greater of the two percentages calculated using the formula in H. Rept. 96-1244 was then assigned to each state. After adjusting state allotments proportionately so that the total allocation reached 100% of funds available, the second step in the amended formula was to compare these state allotments to 75% of the amount each state would receive under the formula in P.L. 96-223. States would then receive the greater of these two amounts. To see the percentage of funds that each state received under the LIEAP formula, see Table 3, column (a).

Although the alternative formulas under H.Rept. 96-1244 used factors similar to those in P.L. 96-223, the original set of formulas was somewhat more favorable to warm-weather states. For example, the BLS lower living standard, used in all of the P.L. 96-223 formulas but only one of those in H.Rept. 96-1244, was higher than 125% of poverty for most household sizes, which benefitted the South, where the low-income population was higher.29 The original set of formulas in P.L. 96-223 also provided for a minimum benefit to states on the basis of the number of AFDC, SSI, and Food Stamp recipient households, unconditioned on their household heating expenditures. In addition, the inclusion of the increase in home heating expenditures in H. Rept. 96-1244 benefitted Northeastern states, where heating oil prices had increased substantially.30

Table 2. Distribution of Funds Under LIEAP

P.L. 96-223

P.L. 96-369

Assign each state the option under which they receive the greatest proportion of funds. If Options 2 and 3 both result in a greater proportion than Option 1, assign the state the lesser of Option 2 or 3.

Each state receives the greater of 75% of the amount under P.L. 96-223 or Option 1 or Option 2 under P.L. 96-369.

Option 1:

½

Residential energy expenditures

Option 1:

½

Increase in home heating expenditures from 1978-1980a

 

½

(Heating degree days)2 * Households with income ≤ BLS lower living standard

 

½

(Heating degree days)2 * Population with income ≤ 125% of poverty

Option 2:

¼

Residential energy expenditures

Option 2:

¼

Total residential energy expenditures 1980

 

¾

(Heating degree days)2 * Households with income ≤ BLS lower living standard

 

¾

(Heating degree days)2 * Households with income ≤ BLS lower living standard

Option 3:

½

Residential energy expenditures

 

 

 

 

½

Heating degree days * Households with income ≤ BLS lower living standard

 

 

 

Option 4:

 

Funds sufficient for a minimum benefit of $120 per AFDC, SSI, and Food Stamp- recipient household

 

 

 

Source: The Crude Oil Windfall Profits Tax Act (P.L. 96-223) and the House Appropriations Committee Report to Accompany H.R. 7998, the FY1981 Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education Appropriations Bill, H.Rept. 96-1244, August 21, 1980.

Notes: * Multiplied by.

≤ Less than or equal to.

a. H.Rept. 96-1244 did not specify which years would be used to determine residential energy expenditures; 1978 and 1980 were the years used by HHS.

Enactment of LIHEAP

In August 1981, the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act, P.L. 97-35, created LIHEAP, replacing its predecessor, LIEAP. The new program was not substantially different from the previous program. Some of the changes to the program included less restrictive federal rules and more state flexibility in determining how to operate their LIHEAP programs. The program was authorized at $1.85 billion for FY1982-FY1984. In FY1982, Congress appropriated $1.875 billion for LIHEAP; in FY1983, it appropriated $1.975 billion; and in FY1984, $2.075 billion.

Continued Use of the LIEAP Formula

When the formula for LIEAP was initially created in 1980 under the Crude Oil Windfall Profits Tax Act (P.L. 96-223), it brought about a good deal of debate on the floor of the Senate, where the formula provisions were added to the legislation.31 Discussion over the formula also occurred leading up to the enactment of P.L. 96-369, the FY1981 continuing resolution that funded LIEAP and amended the formula.32 Despite these earlier disagreements over formula allocations, the process to enact LIHEAP in 1981 did not engender the same level of debate or result in a different formula. Instead, the law creating LIHEAP provided that the allotment percentages for each state would remain the same as they had been in FY1981 under the LIEAP formula as amended by P.L. 96-369. From FY1982 through FY1984, then, states continued to receive the same percentage of funds that they received under the LIEAP formula.

The 1984 LIHEAP Reauthorization: A New Formula

Formula Discussions

When Congress began to consider reauthorizing LIHEAP in 1983, two aspects of the formula were debated. First, some legislators recognized that the multi-step LIEAP formula benefitted cold-weather states relative to warm-weather states.33 The second debated aspect of the formula centered on the appropriateness and timeliness of the data used in formula calculations. In 1983, the energy information used to calculate state allotments was not the most current data available.34 For example, the most recent data the formula used were the change in the cost of energy between 1978 and 1980, or the cost of energy in 1980, depending on the sub-formula one chose to apply. No aspect of the formula took account of increased costs after 1980.35

Legislative sentiment in favor of changing the formula was evident, when, in September 1983, the House adopted an amendment to the Emergency Immigration Education Act (H.R. 3520) that would have adjusted the LIHEAP formula and resulted in a change in allocations to the states. The amendment's formula took into account the energy expenditures of poor families, which, according to the amendment's sponsor, Representative Carlos Moorhead (California), would result in lower percentage allocations for 23 states, mostly in the Northeast and Midwest, gains for 27, primarily in the South, and the same allocation for one state.36 The amendment was eventually dropped from H.R. 3520 in conference with the Senate.

Introduction of a Hold-Harmless Level

Efforts to reauthorize LIHEAP began in April 1983 with the introduction of the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Amendments of 1984 (H.R. 2439). The bill was referred to two committees: Education and Labor and Energy and Commerce. Within the Energy and Commerce committee, two subcommittees held markups: Fossil and Synthetic Fuels and Energy Conservation and Power.

As introduced, H.R. 2439 did not contain changes to the LIHEAP formula. The Subcommittees on Fossil and Synthetic Fuels and Energy Conservation and Power worked together to arrive at a formula change, which had the effect of shifting funds from states in the Northeast to the South and West. Unlike the previous set of formulas developed under LIEAP, the new formula directed the Department of Health and Human Services to determine states' allotments "using data relating to the most recent year for which data is available." Because the cost of heating oil remained steady between 1981 and 1983, and the price of natural gas rose 33%, this meant that states in the Northeast—where heating oil was the primary source of energy—would lose LIHEAP dollars, while states in the South and the Midwest would gain under this provision.37 In addition, population growth in the South (as well as its higher poverty rates) meant that southern states would benefit from the use of more recent population data.

To offset the losses to certain states resulting from the use of current data, H.R. 2439 also included a hold-harmless provision, or hold-harmless level; this provision ensured that if appropriations were less than or equal to $1.875 billion, states would receive no less than their allotment would have been under the old formula at this appropriations level. The bill additionally increased the LIHEAP authorization level to $2.075 billion for FY1984, $2.26 billion for FY1985, $2.5 billion in FY1986, $2.625 billion for FY1987, and $2.8 billion for FY1988.

Introduction of a Hold-Harmless Rate

After the House Energy and Commerce Committee reported H.R. 2439 to the House floor—but before the full House could act on the bill—the Senate passed its version of LIHEAP reauthorization as part of the Human Services Reauthorization Act (S. 2565) on October 4, 1984.38 The Senate bill contained language very similar to H.R. 2439, but made several changes and additions to the formula.

  • S. 2565 specified that states' shares of LIHEAP funds would be based on the home energy expenditures of low-income households, not on expenditures of all households.
  • The hold-harmless level was altered. S. 2565 directed that no state in FY1985 would receive less funding than it received in FY1984, and for FY1986 and thereafter, no state would receive less than the amount they would have received in FY1984 if the appropriations level had been $1.975 billion.
  • A second hold-harmless provision, or hold-harmless rate, was created. The provision maintained the percentage allocated rather than a total funding level allocated to each affected state.

The hold-harmless rate provision guaranteed that certain states would receive increased allotments when appropriations reached $2.25 billion. States would qualify for this increase if their total allotment percentage at an appropriation of $2.25 billion were less than 1%. These states would instead receive the allotment rate they would have received at an appropriation of $2.14 billion if that allotment rate were higher than the rate at $2.25 billion. In their debate about S. 2565, Senators referred to the hold-harmless rate as the "small States hold harmless," as the intent was to protect the small (population) states' shares of LIHEAP funds.39 Otherwise, the concern was that appropriations might have to increase significantly before small state allotments would increase above their hold-harmless levels, with the states' percentage shares of funds declining even as total appropriations increased.

The Senate bill also included different authorization amounts for LIHEAP, $2.14 billion for FY1985 and $2.275 billion for FY1986. After S. 2565 passed the Senate, the House debated and passed the bill on October 9, 1984, retaining all the provisions included in the Senate version. The bill became P.L. 98-558, the Human Services Reauthorization Act, on October 30, 1984.

LIHEAP Formula Statutory Language

Unlike the allocation formulas under LIEAP and the other energy assistance programs that preceded LIHEAP, which dictated the use of specific variables to determine allotments to the states, the LIHEAP formula as drafted by Congress gives more general guidance to HHS. The LIHEAP statute, as enacted in P.L. 98-558 and codified at 42 U.S.C. Section 8623(a)(2) provides as follows.

(A) a State's allotment percentage is the percentage which expenditures for home energy by low-income households in that State bears to such expenditures in all States, except that States which thereby receive the greatest proportional increase in allotments by reason of the application of this paragraph from the amount they received pursuant to P.L. 98-139 [the FY1984 appropriation] shall have their allotments reduced to the extent necessary to ensure that—

(i) no State for fiscal year 1985 shall receive less than the amount of funds the State received in fiscal year 1984; and

(ii) no State for fiscal year 1986 and thereafter shall receive less than the amount of funds the State would have received in fiscal year 1984 if the appropriations for this subchapter for fiscal year 1984 had been $1,975,000,000, and

(B) any State whose allotment percentage out of funds available to States from a total appropriation of $2,250,000,000 would be less than 1 percent, shall not, in any year when total appropriations equal or exceed $2,250,000,000, have its allotment percentage reduced from the percentage it would receive from a total appropriation of $2,140,000,000.

The next section of this report describes how funds are allocated to the states according to this statutory language.

Determining LIHEAP Regular Fund Allotments Using the "New" Formula

Current law as enacted in P.L. 98-558, sometimes referred to as the "new" LIHEAP formula, provides for three different methods to calculate each state's allotment of regular LIHEAP funds. The calculation method used to determine state allotments depends upon the size of the appropriation for that fiscal year.

  • If the annual appropriation level is at or below the equivalent of a hypothetical FY1984 appropriation of $1.975 billion, then the allocation percentages under the "old" LIHEAP formula apply.
  • If appropriations exceed a hypothetical FY1984 appropriation of $1.975 billion, then new formula percentages apply and are used to calculate state allotments. To calculate the new formula percentages, HHS uses the most recent data available to determine the heating and cooling costs of low-income households. When appropriations exceed the $1.975 billion level, but are less than $2.25 billion, the new formula percentages are used together with the hold-harmless level.
  • Finally, if appropriations equal or exceed $2.25 billion, the new percentages apply and both the hold-harmless level together with the hold-harmless rate are in effect.

This section describes the steps involved in allocating LIHEAP funds to the states under each of the appropriations triggers.

Calculating the New Formula Rates

As mentioned previously, when Congress considered a new formula for distributing LIHEAP funds in 1983 and 1984, one of its concerns was the appropriateness and timeliness of the data used in formula calculations. At the time, the energy information used to calculate state allotments under the LIEAP formula did not use the most current data available.40 In fact, the formula allocations were fixed percentages, and the LIHEAP statute at that time had no provision for allowing newer information to be incorporated into the determination of state allotments. For example, the formula used the change in cost of energy between 1978 and 1980, but did not take account of increased costs after 1980. The LIHEAP formula as created by P.L. 98-558 requires HHS to use the most recent data available. HHS updates these data periodically. The most recent data were provided to CRS in November 2016.

As directed by the statute as enacted in 1984, the LIHEAP formula uses the home energy expenditures of low-income households in each state as a first step in determining the proportion of total regular funds that each state will receive.41 Specifically, this means estimating the amount of money that all low-income households (as defined by the LIHEAP statute)42 in each state spend on heating and cooling from all energy sources. This method accounts for variations in heating and cooling needs of the states, the types of energy used, energy prices, and the low-income population and their heating and cooling methods. The process for capturing the expenditures of low-income households for the most current year possible involves the following steps.

  • LIHEAP Formula Basics

    The current statutory LIHEAP formula was enacted in 1984 as part of P.L. 98-558, the Human Services Reauthorization Act. The statutory formula replaced a formula from a predecessor program to LIHEAP, the Low Income Energy Assistance Program (LIEAP), which was active for one year (FY1981) prior to enactment of LIHEAP. The LIEAP formula emphasized the heating needs of cold-weather states. When Congress changed the LIHEAP formula in 1984, there were two primary differences from the previous formula: home heating needs were not emphasized to the same degree, and the law provided that HHS use the most recent data available to calculate allotments (the LIEAP formula used static data to distribute funds to the states).

    For more information about both the history of energy assistance formulas from the 1970s through enactment of LIHEAP as well as the enactment of the statutory formula, see Appendix D. What Is the "Old" LIHEAP Formula? The term "old" LIHEAP formula refers to the way in which regular funds were distributed using the formula under LIEAP, which was then adopted by LIHEAP when it was enacted. Congress directed that LIEAP state allocations be determined using a complex combination of alternate formulas and factors that included residential energy expenditures, a measure of "coldness" called heating degree days, and household income. Further, as specified in law, the data for each factor were either from a particular year or measured a change over a particular period of time, so the data inputs did not change. See Table D-2 for LIEAP formula data. The result of the LIEAP combination of formulas was that each state was assigned a static percentage of funds that did not change from one year to the next. For example, Minnesota received approximately 4.0% of total LIHEAP funds under this formula, and Florida received not-quite 1.4% of the total. See column (a) of Table 1 for each state's share of funds under the "old" LIHEAP formula. What is the "New" LIHEAP Formula?

    The term "new" LIHEAP formula refers to the way in which funds are to be distributed via the statutory formula enacted as part of P.L. 98-558. The statute provides that each state's share of funds is to be based on low-income household expenditures on home energy in the state. See the statutory language in the text box, below.

    Based on the statutory language, HHS calculates heating and cooling consumption and expenditures by low-income households in each state, with the numbers updated each year. (See "Calculating the New Formula Percentages," later in this report, for more details about how the formula rates are calculated.) Each state's share is then based on the ratio of low-income household expenditures on home energy for the state to all expenditures of low-income households in the country. For example, when formula data were updated in FY2019, Minnesota's share of funds under the "new" formula was approximately 1.9% of the total and Florida's was about 4.4%. See column (b) of Table 1 for FY2019 formula shares.

    However, unlike under the "old" formula, states do not necessarily receive their "new" formula percentage share of funds. As can be seen from the Minnesota and Florida examples, the implementation of the "new" LIHEAP formula meant that some states saw their share of funding reduced, while others saw their share increased. As a result, Congress included in the statutory formula two "hold harmless" provisions to make sure that states that saw their shares of total funds decrease were prevented from dramatic drops in funding. The hold harmless provisions operate so that states that gain the most funding have their share reduced to compensate states that lose funding. See "Using the "New" Formula Percentages to Allocate Funds to the States," later in this report, for a more detailed description about how the hold-harmless provisions operate.

    LIHEAP Formula Statutory Language

    Unlike the allocation formulas under LIEAP and the other energy assistance programs that preceded LIHEAP, which dictated the use of specific variables to determine allotments to the states, the LIHEAP formula as drafted by Congress gives more general guidance to HHS.5

    (A) a State's allotment percentage is the percentage which expenditures for home energy by low-income households in that State bears to such expenditures in all States, except that States which thereby receive the greatest proportional increase in allotments by reason of the application of this paragraph from the amount they received pursuant to P.L. 98-139 [the FY1984 appropriation] shall have their allotments reduced to the extent necessary to ensure that—

    (ii) no State for fiscal year 1986 and thereafter shall receive less than the amount of funds the State would have received in fiscal year 1984 if the appropriations for this subchapter for fiscal year 1984 had been $1,975,000,000, and

    (B) any State whose allotment percentage out of funds available to States from a total appropriation of $2,250,000,000 would be less than 1 percent, shall not, in any year when total appropriations equal or exceed $2,250,000,000, have its allotment percentage reduced from the percentage it would receive from a total appropriation of $2,140,000,000.

    The LIHEAP Formula and Congressional Appropriations In the 25 years after the enactment of the "new" LIHEAP formula, Congress, with few exceptions, did not appropriate sufficient regular funds to require use of "new" formula data. Because of the hold-harmless provisions in the statutory formula, appropriations must exceed approximately $2 billion before the "new" formula percentages are used. During these years, the "old" formula percentages (found in column (a) of Table 1) were used to distribute LIHEAP funds to the states. Starting in FY2009, appropriations for LIHEAP regular funds have exceeded $2 billion, ranging from $3.3 billion to $4.5 billion over the last 10 years. However, the "new" formula has not operated as is provided for in the statute. Instead, Congress has directed, in appropriations language, that a portion of funds be distributed using the "new" formula, and the remainder using the "old" formula. For example, in FY2019 P.L. 115-245 provided that $716 million be distributed according to the "new" formula, and the remainder, about $2.96 billion (after deducting funds for the territories and training and technical assistance), distributed using the "old" formula percentages. For allocations to the states from FY2009-FY2019, see Appendix C. The next section of this report ("Determining State LIHEAP Allotments Using the "New" Formula") goes into additional detail about how the "new" formula operates, while Appendix D explains more about the history of the "old" LIHEAP formula. Determining State LIHEAP Allotments Using the "New" Formula

    The LIHEAP statutory formula provides for three different methods to calculate each state's allotment of regular LIHEAP funds. The calculation method used to determine state allotments depends upon the size of the appropriation in a particular year.

    • If the annual appropriation level is at or below the equivalent of a hypothetical FY1984 appropriation of $1.975 billion, then the "old "LIHEAP formula percentages apply.
    • If appropriations exceed a hypothetical FY1984 appropriation of $1.975 billion, then "new" formula percentages apply and are used to calculate state allotments. To calculate the new formula percentages, HHS determines the heating and cooling costs of low-income households in each state. If the appropriation is less than $2.25 billion, the new formula percentages are used together with a hold-harmless level that prevents states from falling below the amount they would have received at the hypothetical FY1984 appropriations level.
    • Finally, if appropriations equal or exceed $2.25 billion, the "new" percentages apply, as does the hold-harmless level, and, in addition, a hold-harmless rate increases the "new" formula percentage for certain states.

    This section describes the steps involved in allocating LIHEAP funds to the states under each of the appropriations triggers.

    Calculating the New Formula Percentages

    The LIHEAP formula uses the home energy expenditures of low-income households in each state as a first step in determining the amount of total regular funds that each state will receive.6 Specifically, this means estimating the amount of money that all low-income households (as defined by the LIHEAP statute)7 in each state spend on heating and cooling from all energy sources. This method accounts for variations in heating and cooling needs of the states, the types of energy used, energy prices, and the low-income population and their heating and cooling methods. Further, as mentioned in the previous section, the "new" formula requires HHS to determine allocations "on the basis of the most recent satisfactory data available to the Secretary."8 HHS updates these data annually. The most recent data were provided to CRS in 2019.

    The process for capturing the expenditures of low-income households involves the following steps:

    Total Residential Energy Consumption.
    The first step in calculating new formula rates is determining total residential energy consumption for each heating and cooling source in every state. Residential energy consumption is usually measured in terms of the total amount of British Thermal Units (Btus) used in private households and generally captures energy used for space and water heating, cooling, lighting, refrigeration, cooking, and the energy needed to operate appliances. The most recent data used in calculating LIHEAP formula rates come from the 20142016 Energy Information Administration (EIA) State Energy Data System consumption estimates.
  • Temperature Variation. The next step in determining the formula rates involves adjusting the amount of energy consumed for each fuel source by temperature variation in each state. This is done by using a ratio consisting of the 30-year average heating and cooling degree day data to each state's share of the most recent year's average heating and cooling degree days. A heating degree day measures the extent to which a day's average temperature falls below 65°F and a cooling degree day measures the extent to which a day's average temperature rises above 65°F.439 For example, a day with an average temperature of 50°F results in a measure of 15 heating degree days; a day with an average temperature of 80°F results in a measure of 15 cooling degree days. The purpose of the adjustment to fuel consumption is to account for abnormally warm or cool years, where energy usage might attain extreme values. This information is collected by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The most recent year's average heating and cooling degree day data are from 20142016, and the 30-year average was computed from 1971 to 2000.
  • Heating and Cooling Consumption. As mentioned above, total residential energy consumption encompasses other uses in addition to heating and cooling (e.g., operation of appliances). So the next step in calculating LIHEAP formula rates is to derive the portion of fuel consumed specifically to heat and cool homes as opposed to other uses. The EIA, as part of the Residential Energy Consumption Survey (RECS), uses an "end use estimation methodology" to estimate the amount of fuel used for heating and cooling (among other uses). The most recent information on heating and cooling consumption comes from the 2009 RECS.4410 HHS adjusts the EIA heating and cooling consumption estimates using heating degree day and cooling degree day data.
  • Low-Income Household Heating and Cooling Consumption. After estimating heating and cooling consumption for all households, the next step is to calculate heating and cooling consumption in Btus for low-income households. HHS uses Census data to determine fuel sources used by low-income households. The most recent information on low-income households and the fuel sources they use comes from the American Community Survey five-year estimates for 2010-20142012-2016. In addition, low-income consumption data are adjusted to account for the fact that low-income households might use more or less of a fuel source than is used by households on average. This is done using consumption data from the 2009 RECS.
  • Total Spending on Heating and Cooling. To arrive at the amount of money that low-income households spend on heating and cooling, the number of Btus used by low-income households that were estimated in the previous step are multiplied by the average fuel price for each fuel source. The total amount spent on heating and cooling by low-income households for each fuel source is then added together to arrive at total spending for each state. Regional energy price variation can be significant, and the formula takes expected expenditure differences into account. This information is collected by the EIA and published in the State Energy Data System Consumption, Price, and Expenditure Estimates.4511 The most recent price data used to calculate formula rates are from 20142016.
  • New Formula Percentage. Finally, these expenditure data are used to estimate the amount spent by low-income households on heating and cooling in each state relative to the amount spent by low-income households on heating and cooling in all states. The calculated proportion becomes the new formula percentage for each state. Table 31 at the end of this section shows both the percentages under the "old" formula (column (a)) and the most recent "new" formula percentages (column (b)), received by CRS from HHS in November 20162019. To see how the formula rates for each state have changed in recent years, see Table 42.

These new formula percentages are used to allocate LIHEAP funds to the states if the annual appropriation exceeds the equivalent of a hypothetical FY1984 appropriation of $1.975 billion. However, they do not represent the exact percentage of funds that all states will receive under the new formula. The ultimate allotments are determined after application of both the hold-harmless level and hold-harmless rate, described in the next section. The new percentages are the starting point for determining how funds will be allocated to the states.

Using the New"New" Formula Percentages to Allocate Funds to the States

The LIHEAP new"new" formula percentages that HHS calculates using the most currentrecent satisfactory data available do not necessarily represent the percentage of funds that states will receive. State allotments depend upon the application of the two hold-harmless provisions in the LIHEAP statute. Some states must have their share of funds ratably reduced in order to hold harmless those states that would, but for the hold-harmless provisions, lose funds. Other states see a gain in their share of funds because they benefit from the hold-harmless provisions. The application of the hold-harmless provisions depends upon the size of the appropriation for a given fiscal year. These appropriation level triggers are described below.

"Old" Formula: Appropriations Atat or Below $1.975 Billion

The LIHEAP statute does not contain an explicit trigger for the "new" formula rates to be used. However, the statute specifies that states must receive no less than "the amount of funds the State would have received in fiscal year 1984 if the appropriations for this subchapter for fiscal year 1984 had been $1,975,000,000." As a result, up to this appropriation level, states receive the same percentage of funds that they would have received at a given appropriation level under the "old" LIHEAP formula.4612

The FY1984 appropriation of $1.975 billion referred to in the LIHEAP statute is hypothetical because this was not the amount actually appropriated in FY1984. The actual FY1984 appropriation was $2.075 billion. In addition, the current year appropriation that is "equivalent to" a hypothetical FY1984 appropriation of $1.975 billion is not exactly $1.975 billion. In FY1984, with the exception of funds provided to the territories, all LIHEAP regular funds were distributed to the states. Since then, two other funds have become part of the regular fund distribution. These are funds for training and technical assistance (TTA) and for the leveraging incentive (LI) grants (which includes REACH grants) to the states. This means that an appropriation that is equivalent to a hypothetical FY1984 appropriation of $1.975 billion must account for these new funds. Assuming that funds for leveraging incentive/REACH grants would be $27 million and training and technical assistance would be $3 million (amounts that have typically been set aside in the appropriation), thenFor example, in FY2019, Congress appropriated $2.988 million for TTA and no funding for LI /REACH, so the equivalent of an FY1984 appropriation of $1.975 billion is approximately $2.0051.978 billion.47

13

The LIHEAP formula in FY1984 distributed funds by giving states the same percentage of funds that they received in FY1981 under the predecessor program, the Low Income Energy Assistance Program (LIEAP). Table 3 (later, following the "Implementation of the "New" LIHEAP Formula" section),1 shows rates under the old formula in column (a). For example, at an appropriation at or below the equivalent of a hypothetical FY1984 appropriation of $1.975 billion, Alabama would receive 0.86% of total funds, Alaska would receive 0.55% of total funds, and so on. Table A-1, column (a), reports the dollar amount of funds that each state would have received in FY1984 had the regular fund appropriation been $1.975 billion. For comparison purposes, the dollar amounts also assume that funds for the territories would be 0.5% of the total, a change made by HHS beginning with the FY2014 appropriation.48

14

"New" Formula with Hold-Harmless Level: Appropriations Between $1.975 Billion and $2.25 Billion

If the regular LIHEAP appropriation exceeds the equivalent of a hypothetical FY1984 appropriation of $1.975 billion for the fiscal year, all funds are to be distributed under a different methodology, using the new set of percentages described earlier. In addition, a hold-harmless level applies to ensure that certain states do not fall below the amount of funds they would have received at the equivalent of a hypothetical FY1984 appropriation of $1.975 billion.

Table 31 shows whether a state benefits from the hold-harmless level. This is indicated by a "Y" in column (c), while the dollar amount of funds those states receive by being held harmless appears in column (d). For example, Alabama is not held harmless, while Colorado is held harmless. The dollar amount of funds that Colorado receives pursuant to the hold-harmless level is $31.613 million. But for the hold-harmless level, Colorado would receive less than this dollar amount at its new formula percentage at certain appropriation levels. Eventually, when appropriations increase sufficiently, the percentage of funds under the "new"new formula for hold-harmless states will exceed their hold harmless amounts and they will begin to receive their "new"new percentage of funds. This appropriation level varies for each state. For example, at lower appropriation levels, the $31.613 million hold-harmless level for Colorado exceeds the state's "new"new percentage share of 1.484438% of total funds. However, by the time appropriations reach $2.25 billion, Colorado's new percentage share exceeds $31.613 million and the state begins to receive funds at the "new"new percentage. Eventually, many states will receive the percentage of funds at their "new"new percentage.49

15

The hold-harmless level is achieved by reducing the allocation of funds to states with the greatest proportional gains under the new formula percentages.5016 For example, under the most recent LIHEAP formula percentages, states with the greatest proportional gains were Nevada, Arizona, and Texas. Depending on the appropriation level, these states (and others with the greatest gains) may then have their allotments reduced to hold harmless the states that would otherwise see reduced benefits. So although these states with the greatest proportional gains will see their LIHEAP allotments increase under the new formula, their allotments may not increase to reach their new formula rates (column (b) of Table 31).

Columns (b) and (c) of Table A-1 show estimated allotments to the states at hypothetical appropriations levels between $1.975 billion and $2.25 billion. Column (b) shows the estimated allotment of funds that each state would receive when the regular fund appropriation is at $2.14 billion and column (c) shows the estimated allotment of funds when the regular fund appropriation is just under $2.25 billion ($2,249,999,999).

"New" Formula with Hold-Harmless Level and Rate: Appropriations At or Above $2.25 Billion

The LIHEAP statute stipulates additional requirements in the method for distributing funds when the appropriation is at or above $2.25 billion. At this level, the hold-harmless level still applies, but, in addition, a new hold-harmless rate is applied. Specifically, for all appropriation levels at or above $2.25 billion, states that would have received less than 1% of a total $2.25 billion appropriation must be allocated the percentage they would have received at a $2.14 billion appropriation level.5117 (This assumes the percentage at $2.14 billion is greater than the percentage originally calculated at the hypothetical $2.25 billion appropriation; this is not true for all states that receive less than 1% of the $2.25 billion appropriation.) Then that state will receive the percentage share of funds it would have received at $2.14 billion for all appropriation levels at or above $2.25 billion. This hold-harmless rate ensures a state specific share of the total available funds.

As with the hold-harmless level, the allocations to the states with the greatest proportional gains are then ratably reduced again until there is no funding shortfall. Column (e) of Table 31 shows which states benefit from the hold-harmless rate, indicated by a "Y," while column (f) shows the proportion of funds that those states receive. For example, Idaho benefits from the hold-harmless rate and receives 0.587580% of the total appropriation when appropriations are at or above $2.25 billion.

The application of the hold-harmless rate creates another layer of discontinuity in the allocation rates. States that are ratably reduced see their allocations at $2.25 billion fall below the amount they would receive at $2.249 billion, while states that benefit from the hold-harmless rate see their funding jump up slightly. Columns (d) through (i) of Table A-1 in Appendix A show estimated allotments to states at various hypothetical appropriations levels at or above $2.25 billion. Column (d) shows the estimated allotment of funds that each state receives when the regular appropriation is at $2.25 billion after the hold-harmless rate is applied. Columns (e) through (i) show the estimated allotment each state would receive at $2.5 billion, $3.0 billion, $3.39 billion (the amount appropriated from FY2014 through FY2016), $4.0 billion, and $5.1 billion (the amount at which LIHEAP was last authorized).

Implementation of the "New" LIHEAP Formula

Until FY2006, appropriations for regular LIHEAP funds had only exceeded the equivalent of a hypothetical FY1984 appropriation of $1.975 billion in 1985 and 1986; thereafter, from FY1987 through FY2005, and again in FY2007, states continued to receive the same percentage of LIHEAP funds that they received under the program's predecessor, LIEAP (see column (a) of Table 31 for these percentages). In FY2006, funds were distributed under the "new" LIHEAP formula when Congress appropriated $2.48 billion in regular funds for the program. In FY2008, perhaps due to an oversight, the new formula was again used to distribute funds. The FY2008 Consolidated Appropriations Act (P.L. 110-161) failed to authorize a set-aside called leveraging incentive grants. As a result, the funds for those grants were added to the LIHEAP regular funds, triggering theuse of new formula data.18.52 In FY2009, the Consolidated Security, Disaster Assistance, and Continuing Appropriations Act (P.L. 110-329) appropriated $4.51 billion in regular funds. However, the law further specified that $840 million be distributed according to the "new" LIHEAP formula, with the remaining $3.67 billion distributed according to the percentages of the "old" formula established by LIEAP. From FY2010 through FY2016the present, Congress has continued to appropriate funds using a version of a split between the "old" and "new" formulas. See Table C-1 in Appendix C of this report for the distribution of funds to the states from FY2009 through FY2016FY2019.

Table 31. Low-Income Home Energy Program (LIHEAP): "Old" and "New" Allotment Percentages by State, FY2017

FY2019
 

 

 

Hold-Harmless Levela

Hold-Harmless Rate

State

"Old" Allotment Percentage (%)
(a)

"New" Allotment Percentage (%)
(b)

State Held Harmless?
(c)

Hold-Harmless Level
($Millions) (d)

State Held Harmless?
(e)

Hold-Harmless Rate (%)
(f)

Alabama

0.860

1.509

719

N

N

Alaska

0.549

0.430

438

Y

10.788

828

Y

0.514

507

Arizona

0.416

1.314

543

N

N

Arkansas

0.656

0.844

904

N

N

California

4.614

5.231

991

N

N

Colorado

1.609

1.484

438

Y

31.613

729

N

Connecticut

2.099

2.411

069

N

Y

41.392

N

Delaware

0.279

0.385

383

N

N

District of Columbia

0.326

0.207

193

Y

6.405

428

Y

0.305

301

Florida

1.361

3.944

4.372

N

N

Georgia

1.076

2.911

3.312

N

N

Hawaii

0.108

0.168

148

N

N

Idaho

0.628

0.351

362

Y

12.331

376

Y

0.587

580

Illinois

5.809

4.466

361

Y

114.147

565

N

Indiana

2.630

1.795

786

Y

51.683

872

N

Iowa

1.864

1.111

0.978

Y

36.628

762

N

Kansas

0.856

1.045

053

N

N

Kentucky

1.369

1.462

546

N

N

Louisiana

0.879

1.397

587

N

N

Maine

1.360

1.062

0.936

Y

26.717

815

N

Maryland

1.607

2.408

371

N

N

Massachusetts

4.198

4.407

3.606

N

Y

82.797

N

Michigan

5.515

4.148

249

Y

108.373

770

N

Minnesota

3.973

2.044

1.855

Y

78.076

363

N

Mississippi

0.737

0.932

938

N

N

Missouri

2.320

2.140

173

Y

45.595

762

N

Montana

0.736

0.367

342

Y

14.464

517

Y

0.689

680

Nebraska

0.922

0.549

504

Y

18.114

180

Y

0.863

852

Nevada

0.195

0.713

726

N

N

New Hampshire

0.795

0.862

731

N

Y

15.672

N

Y

0.734

New Jersey

3.897

3.452

247

Y

76.584

865

N

New Mexico

0.521

0.560

595

N

N

New York

12.725

9.572

8.539

Y

250.058

974

N

North Carolina

1.896

2.779

3.000

N

N

North Dakota

0.800

0.317

242

Y

15.712

770

Y

0.748

739

Ohio

5.139

3.932

957

Y

100.980

101.350

N

Oklahoma

0.791

1.228

338

N

N

Oregon

1.247

0.817

843

Y

24.502

591

N

Pennsylvania

6.835

5.989

278

Y

134.318

810

N

Rhode Island

0.691

0.770

628

N

Y

13.629

N

Y

0.639

South Carolina

0.683

1.307

458

N

N

South Dakota

0.649

0.264

237

Y

12.761

808

Y

0.608

600

Tennessee

1.386

1.864

952

N

N

Texas

2.264

6.945

7.831

N

N

Utah

0.748

0.509

588

Y

14.691

745

Y

0.700

691

Vermont

0.596

0.526

461

Y

11.704

747

Y

0.557

550

Virginia

1.957

2.663

703

N

N

Washington

2.051

1.331

513

Y

40.302

450

N

West Virginia

0.906

0.680

793

Y

17.799

864

Y

0.848

837

Wisconsin

3.576

2.219

1.991

Y

70.280

538

N

Wyoming

0.299

0.180

194

Y

5.882

903

Y

0.280

277

Source: New allotment percentages were provided to CRS by HHS in November 20162019. Information in columns (c) through (f) are based on CRS calculations using the new allotment percentages. The calculations for the hold-harmless level assume that fundingno funds would be provided for leveraging incentive/REACH grants,allocated for training and technical assistance and that the territorial allotments are the same percentage they were in FY1984. However, in calculating whether the hold-harmless rate applies, it is assumed that approximately $3 million would be provided for training and technical assistance, and 0.5% of funds for the territories.

Notes: The actual percentage of total regular funds each state receives at funding levels above $1.975 billion may differ from the new formula percentages due to the hold-harmless provisions and the ratable reductions of some states to cover shortfall from these hold-harmless provisions.

a. The states that benefit from the hold-harmless level vary depending on the amount appropriated for LIHEAP regular funds. The states listed here benefit from the hold-harmless level when appropriations just exceed the equivalent of an FY1984 appropriation of $1.975 billion.

Table 42. Recent State Allotment Percentages Under the "New" LIHEAP Formula

(Fiscal years indicate when new formula rates would have beenwere used to distribute funds to states)

 

 

"New" Formula Percentages

States

"Old" Formula Percentages

FY2010

FY2012

FY2011

FY2013

FY2012

FY2014

FY2013

FY2015

FY2014

FY2016

FY2015

FY2017

FY2016

FY2018

FY2017

FY2019

Alabama

0.860%

1.582583%

1.599716%

1.583686%

1.716488%

1.686521%

1.488509%

1.521%

628

1.509%

719

Alaska

0.549

0.575

398

0.511

522

0.398

563

0.522

491

0.563

432

0.491

430

0.432

439

0.430

438

Arizona

0.416

1.018

132

1.098

326

1.132

379

1.326

424

1.379

440

1.424

314

1.440

419

1.314

543

Arkansas

0.656

0.884

899

0.852

876

0.899

876

0.876

846

0.876

891

0.846

844

0.891

931

0.844

904

California

4.614

4.479

452

4.453

433

4.452

536

4.433

5.371

4.536

5.504

5.371

231

5.504

522

5.231

991

Colorado

1.609

1.333

267

1.247

264

1.267

270

1.264

391

1.270

413

1.391

484

1.413

422

1.484

438

Connecticut

2.099

2.205

398

2.239

416

2.398

371

2.416

711

2.371

508

2.711

411

2.508

265

2.411

069

Delaware

0.279

0.375

0.373

421

0.375

427

0.421

407

0.427

409

0.407

385

0.409

412

0.385

383

District of Columbia

0.326

0.181

194

0.192

184

0.194

149

0.184

173

0.149

189

0.173

207

0.189

259

0.207

193

Florida

1.361

4.728

593

4.583

5.475

4.593

5.201

5.475

4.057

5.201

3.936

4.057

3.944

3.936

4.226

3.944

4.372

Georgia

1.076

2.620

742

2.641

3.137

2.742

3.166

3.137

068

3.166

2.924

3.068

2.911

2.924

3.120

2.911

3.312

Hawaii

0.108

0.150

205

0.150

185

0.205

230

0.185

219

0.230

196

0.219

168

0.196

149

0.168

148

Idaho

0.628

0.396

335

0.349

339

0.335

371

0.339

364

0.371

387

0.364

351

0.387

343

0.351

362

Illinois

5.809

4.843

5.243

5.014

4.655

5.243

4.510

4.655

075

4.510

245

4.075

466

4.245

128

4.466

361

Indiana

2.630

2.147

209

2.080

1.814

2.209

1.934

1.814

712

1.934

792

1.712

795

1.792

790

1.795

786

Iowa

1.864

1.028

080

1.099

001

1.080

065

1.001

005

1.065

054

1.005

111

1.054

003

1.111

0.978

Kansas

0.856

0.978

967

0.993

1.002

0.967

945

1.002

0.932

0.945

982

0.932

1.045

0.982

1.048

1.045

053

Kentucky

1.369

1.243

344

1.256

329

1.344

457

1.329

318

1.457

395

1.318

462

1.395

512

1.462

546

Louisiana

0.879

1.324

414

1.365

378

1.414

387

1.378

236

1.387

394

1.236

397

1.394

490

1.397

587

Maine

1.360

1.127

010

1.090

0.927

1.010

041

0.927

1.052

1.041

066

1.052

062

1.066

025

1.062

0.936

Maryland

1.607

1.965

2.197

2.080

344

2.197

193

2.344

206

2.193

347

2.206

408

2.347

486

2.408

371

Massachusetts

4.198

3.757

730

3.718

4.032

3.730

4.138

4.032

395

4.138

501

4.395

407

4.501

050

4.407

3.606

Michigan

5.515

5.040

4.863

4.819

966

4.863

681

4.966

535

4.681

357

4.535

148

4.357

013

4.148

249

Minnesota

3.973

2.023

047

2.025

1.849

2.047

1.921

1.849

827

1.921

869

1.827

2.044

1.869

887

2.044

1.855

Mississippi

0.737

0.974

990

0.940

955

0.990

953

0.955

825

0.953

910

0.825

932

0.910

956

0.932

938

Missouri

2.320

2.014

1.829

2.011

1.963

1.829

2.021

1.963

2.140

2.021

145

2.140

2.145

216

2.140

173

Montana

0.736

0.295

328

0.287

280

0.328

314

0.280

347

0.314

358

0.347

367

0.358

351

0.367

342

Nebraska

0.922

0.547

591

0.553

555

0.591

561

0.555

483

0.561

531

0.483

549

0.531

534

0.549

504

Nevada

0.195

0.500

498

0.526

563

0.498

537

0.563

722

0.537

718

0.722

713

0.718

750

0.713

726

New Hampshire

0.795

0.612

742

0.605

623

0.742

731

0.623

753

0.731

788

0.753

862

0.788

768

0.862

731

New Jersey

3.897

3.995

4.010

4.105

3.812

4.010

3.620

3.812

703

3.620

766

3.703

452

3.766

391

3.452

247

New Mexico

0.521

0.458

430

0.441

407

0.430

394

0.407

533

0.394

571

0.533

560

0.571

552

0.560

595

New York

12.725

9.520

10.227

10.018

9.445

10.227

9.318

9.445

10.792

9.318

477

10.792

9.572

9.477

149

9.572

8.539

North Carolina

1.896

2.766

619

2.823

954

2.619

891

2.954

817

2.891

828

2.817

779

2.828

974

2.779

3.000

North Dakota

0.800

0.246

302

0.256

215

0.302

254

0.215

251

0.254

275

0.251

317

0.275

284

0.317

242

Ohio

5.139

4.893

687

4.941

243

4.687

368

4.243

3.836

4.368

3.850

3.836

932

3.850

944

3.932

957

Oklahoma

0.791

1.236

152

1.224

207

1.152

219

1.207

186

1.219

207

1.186

228

1.207

288

1.228

338

Oregon

1.247

0.715

664

0.702

712

0.664

781

0.712

885

0.781

860

0.885

817

0.860

822

0.817

843

Pennsylvania

6.835

5.993

807

5.885

571

5.807

720

5.571

856

5.720

810

5.856

989

5.810

619

5.989

278

Rhode Island

0.691

0.635

670

0.615

753

0.670

712

0.753

857

0.712

803

0.857

770

0.803

758

0.770

628

South Carolina

0.683

1.278

201

1.260

394

1.201

403

1.394

288

1.403

323

1.288

307

1.323

374

1.307

458

South Dakota

0.649

0.249

272

0.253

233

0.272

240

0.233

242

0.240

257

0.242

264

0.257

251

0.264

237

Tennessee

1.386

1.743

700

1.717

865

1.700

848

1.865

730

1.848

771

1.730

864

1.771

899

1.864

952

Texas

2.264

7.668

135

7.349

183

7.135

6.942

7.183

6.529

6.942

870

6.529

945

6.870

7.487

6.945

7.831

Utah

0.748

0.559

413

0.508

452

0.413

494

0.452

568

0.494

526

0.568

509

0.526

534

0.509

588

Vermont

0.596

0.418

396

0.419

417

0.396

425

0.417

490

0.425

503

0.490

526

0.503

449

0.526

461

Virginia

1.957

2.428

490

2.486

581

2.490

607

2.581

588

2.607

692

2.588

663

2.692

735

2.663

703

Washington

2.051

1.225

145

1.245

244

1.145

305

1.244

443

1.305

434

1.443

331

1.434

422

1.331

513

West Virginia

0.906

0.663

638

0.639

625

0.638

631

0.625

661

0.631

707

0.661

680

0.707

743

0.680

793

Wisconsin

3.576

2.229

230

2.236

010

2.230

054

2.010

000

2.054

100

2.000

219

2.100

018

2.219

1.991

Wyoming

0.299

0.137

154

0.129

146

0.154

160

0.146

173

0.160

169

0.173

180

0.169

162

0.180

194

Source: State allotment percentage data were provided to CRS by HHS.

Appendix A. Estimated Allotments to the States Under Various Hypothetical Appropriations Levels

Table A-1, below, shows estimated allocations to the states at various hypothetical appropriations levels. In column (a) are allotments at the equivalent of a hypothetical FY1984 appropriation of $1.975 billion—under currentrecent LIHEAP practice where funds are set aside for leveraging incentive grants and training and technical assistance, the equivalent appropriation level is approximately $2.0051.978 billion. The remaining columns show estimated allotments at appropriations of $2.14 billion, just under $2.25 billion, $2.25 billion, $3.0 billion, $3.39 billion69 billion (the amount appropriated in FY2019), $4.0 billion, and $5.1 billion, the amount at which the LIHEAP program was last authorized in P.L. 109-58. In each case, the estimates assume that 0.5% would be set aside for the territories, the amount set aside by HHS starting in FY2014.

Table A-1. LIHEAP Estimated State Allotments for Regular Funds at Various Hypothetical Appropriation Levels

($ in millions)

 

"Old" Formula

"New" Formula, Hold-Harmless Level Only

"New" Formula, Hold-Harmless Level and Rate

State

Hypothetical $1.975 Billion in FY1984
(a)

$2.14 Billion
(b)

Just Under
$2.25 Billion

(c)

$2.25 Billion
(d)

$2.5 Billion
(e)

$3.0 Billion
(f)

$3.3969 Billion
(g)

$4.0 Billion
(h)

$5.1 Billion
(i)

Alabama

16.901

963

20.978

22.387

25.452

26.851

25.052

26.423

37.085

40.879

44.592

51.260

50.453

63.067

59.607

68.364

76.123

87.178

Alaska

10.788

828

10.788

828

10.788

828

11.351

344

12.629

606

15.185

130

17.181

18.615

20.298

178

25.923

731

Arizona

8.174

203

10.145

827

12.309

985

12.116

779

18.109

19.770

29.102

32.932

34.597

43.669

41.776

47.929

53.351

61.578

Arkansas

12.896

943

16.007

17.082

18.639

20.214

18.639

20.162

20.737

22.463

24.935

26.961

28.212

33.171

33.331

35.957

42.566

45.853

California

90.669

91.001

109.822

120.099

115.548

133.942

115.548

133.942

128.560

148.844

154.584

178.649

174.899

219.797

206.632

238.258

263.886

303.828

Colorado

31.613

729

31.613

729

32.777

152

32.777

152

36.469

35.729

43.851

42.884

49.614

52.761

58.616

57.193

74.857

72.933

Connecticut

41.241

392

50.618

43.994

53.257

46.258

53.257

46.258

59.254

51.405

71.249

61.698

80.612

75.909

95.238

82.285

121.627

104.930

Delaware

5.474

494

6.794

7.251

8.244

570

8.114

558

9.456

523

11.370

430

12.864

14.062

15.198

244

19.409

439

District of Columbia

6.405

428

6.405

428

6.405

428

6.739

734

7.498

484

9.015

8.982

10.200

11.051

12.051

11.979

15.390

276

Florida

26.742

840

33.194

35.423

40.273

42.486

39.640

41.809

59.249

64.683

95.215

107.747

113.197

142.878

136.683

156.814

174.554

201.472

Georgia

21.144

221

26.245

28.007

31.842

33.592

31.342

33.057

46.845

51.142

75.282

85.191

89.500

112.967

108.069

123.986

138.012

159.295

Hawaii

2.129

137

2.643

820

3.207

309

3.156

309

4.140

3.678

4.979

414

5.633

431

6.655

5.887

8.499

7.507

Idaho

12.331

376

12.331

376

12.331

376

12.974

966

14.435

409

17.357

294

19.638

21.277

23.202

064

29.630

412

Illinois

114.147

565

114.147

565

114.147

565

114.147

565

114.147

565

131.975

130.049

149.319

160.004

176.411

173.442

225.291

221.175

Indiana

51.683

872

51.683

872

51.683

872

51.683

872

51.683

872

53.048

273

60.019

65.543

70.909

71.048

90.556

601

Iowa

36.628

762

36.628

762

36.628

762

36.628

762

36.628

762

36.628

762

37.151

36.762

43.892

38.876

56.053

49.575

Kansas

16.821

883

20.879

22.281

23.073

553

23.073

553

25.671

26.174

30.868

31.415

34.924

38.651

41.261

897

52.694

53.427

Kentucky

26.895

994

30.701

32.883

32.302

34.576

32.302

34.576

35.939

38.422

43.214

46.116

48.893

56.738

57.765

61.503

73.770

78.430

Louisiana

17.279

342

21.447

22.887

26.021

27.451

25.612

27.014

34.325

39.438

41.273

47.335

46.697

58.238

55.170

63.129

70.456

80.503

Maine

26.717

815

26.717

815

26.717

815

26.717

815

26.717

815

31.389

27.900

35.514

34.327

41.958

37.210

53.584

47.450

Maryland

31.578

693

39.195

41.827

47.555

50.168

46.807

49.369

59.174

58.906

71.152

70.702

80.503

86.987

95.110

94.293

121.462

120.243

Massachusetts

82.495

797

92.516

82.797

97.339

82.797

97.339

82.797

108.301

89.590

130.224

107.529

147.337

132.296

174.070

143.408

222.301

182.874

Michigan

108.373

770

108.373

770

108.373

770

108.373

770

108.373

770

122.567

126.693

138.674

155.875

163.836

168.966

209.231

215.467

Minnesota

78.076

363

78.076

363

78.076

363

78.076

363

78.076

363

78.076

363

78.076

363

80.739

78.363

103.111

94.066

Mississippi

14.490

543

17.986

19.193

20.593

979

20.593

979

22.913

23.313

27.551

981

31.171

34.426

36.827

37.318

47.031

588

Missouri

45.595

762

45.595

46.213

47.277

48.592

47.277

48.592

52.601

53.999

63.249

64.811

71.561

79.739

84.545

86.436

107.970

110.224

Montana

14.464

517

14.464

517

14.464

517

15.218

208

16.932

900

20.359

285

23.035

24.957

27.214

053

34.754

498

Nebraska

18.114

180

18.114

180

18.114

180

19.058

046

21.205

166

25.497

404

28.848

31.255

34.082

33.880

43.525

204

Nevada

3.839

853

4.765

5.085

5.781

6.099

5.690

6.002

8.505

9.285

13.668

15.467

16.249

20.510

19.621

22.511

25.057

28.921

New Hampshire

15.615

672

18.090

15.672

19.033

16.352

19.033

16.418

21.177

18.245

25.464

21.898

28.810

26.942

34.037

29.205

43.468

37.243

New Jersey

76.584

865

76.584

865

76.584

865

76.584

865

84.834

80.661

102.007

96.813

115.413

119.112

136.353

129.116

174.134

164.649

New Mexico

10.233

270

11.764

12.657

12.377

13.308

12.377

13.308

13.771

14.789

16.558

17.750

18.734

21.838

22.133

23.673

28.266

30.187

New York

250.058

974

250.058

974

250.058

974

250.058

974

250.058

974

282.863

254.637

320.035

313.288

378.102

339.601

482.866

433.060

North Carolina

37.266

403

46.256

49.363

56.122

59.205

55.240

58.263

68.289

74.528

82.112

89.452

92.903

110.055

109.759

119.299

140.171

152.130

North Dakota

15.712

770

15.712

770

15.712

770

16.531

521

18.393

359

22.116

035

25.023

27.111

29.563

388

37.754

475

Ohio

100.980

101.350

100.980

101.350

100.980

101.350

100.980

101.350

100.980

101.350

116.208

117.991

131.479

145.169

155.335

157.361

198.375

200.668

Oklahoma

15.535

592

19.283

20.578

23.396

24.681

23.028

24.288

30.181

33.248

36.290

39.906

41.059

49.098

48.509

53.221

61.950

67.868

Oregon

24.502

591

24.502

591

24.502

591

24.502

591

24.502

591

24.502

25.139

27.330

30.930

32.289

33.528

41.236

42.755

Pennsylvania

134.318

810

134.318

810

134.318

810

134.318

810

147.179

134.810

176.973

157.378

200.230

193.627

236.559

209.890

302.105

267.653

Rhode Island

13.579

629

16.167

13.629

17.010

14.032

17.010

14.278

18.925

15.867

22.756

19.044

25.747

23.430

30.418

25.398

38.846

32.388

South Carolina

13.423

472

16.661

17.780

20.214

21.325

19.897

20.985

29.739

32.466

38.628

43.474

43.704

53.487

51.634

57.980

65.941

73.936

South Dakota

12.761

808

12.761

808

12.761

808

13.426

418

14.938

911

17.962

896

20.323

22.019

24.010

23.868

30.663

436

Tennessee

27.245

344

33.817

36.088

41.030

43.284

40.385

42.595

45.821

48.496

55.097

58.207

62.338

71.614

73.648

77.629

94.054

98.992

Texas

44.490

653

55.223

58.932

67.002

70.683

65.948

69.557

98.570

107.611

158.407

179.256

188.322

237.702

227.394

260.887

290.400

335.183

Utah

14.691

745

14.691

745

14.691

745

15.457

447

17.197

166

20.679

603

23.396

25.348

27.641

477

35.300

039

Vermont

11.704

747

11.704

747

11.704

747

12.314

306

13.701

675

16.474

414

18.639

20.194

22.021

21.890

28.122

27.915

Virginia

38.465

606

47.744

50.950

57.927

60.441

57.017

60.137

65.438

67.165

78.685

80.614

89.025

99.182

105.178

107.512

134.321

137.101

Washington

40.302

450

40.302

450

40.302

450

40.302

450

40.302

450

40.302

45.114

44.504

55.505

52.579

60.167

67.148

76.725

West Virginia

17.799

864

17.799

864

17.799

864

18.727

715

20.836

797

25.053

24.962

28.346

30.711

33.489

290

42.768

452

Wisconsin

70.280

538

70.280

538

70.280

538

70.280

538

70.280

538

70.280

538

74.203

73.042

87.667

79.177

111.957

100.967

Wyoming

5.882

903

5.882

903

5.882

903

6.189

185

6.885

873

8.279

249

9.367

10.149

11.067

001

14.133

029

Total

1,965.125

972.33

2,099.450

126.327

2,208.900

235.777

2,208.900

235.777

2,457.650

484.527

2,955.150

982.027

3,343.502

668.879

3,950.150

977.027

5,044.650

071.527

Source: Congressional Research Service (CRS) calculations based on factors provided by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) in November 2016.

Notes: These estimates take into account current law, which allows HHS to set aside funds out of regular LIHEAP funds for territories, leverage incentive grants and Residential Energy Assistance Challenge (REACH) grants and training and technical assistance. For each estimate, 0.5% is allocated to the territories, $27 million to leveraging incentive and REACH grants, and $3 million to training and technical assistance. Differing allocations for these purposes could change state allotments2019. Notes: These estimates use recent appropriations practice in which Congress has allocated $2.988 million for training and technical assistance, but no funds for leveraging incentive and REACH grants. With the exception of column (a), it also factors in HHS practice since FY2014 to set aside 0.50% of regular funds for the territories. Differing allocations for these purposes could change state allotments. Column (a) assumes that funds for the territories would be the same percentage distributed that year – approximately 0.135%.

Appendix B. Further Depiction of How State Allotments Depend Upon Appropriation Levels

Figure B-1 graphically illustrates the interplay of the hold harmless provisions in state allotments for three "typical" types of states over a range of appropriations from $0 to $5.1 billion. Represented are (1) a hold-harmless level state, (2) a state whose increased allocations are ratably reduced in order to maintain allocations for the hold-harmless level and rate state, and (3) a state whose increased allocations are ratably reduced in order to maintain allocations for the hold-harmless level and rate statesstates, and (3) a hold-harmless level and rate state. These three states are not representative of all states in the three categories; see Table A-1 for the range of individual state allocations.

In the figure, there are three vertical areas. These areas separate the three levels of appropriations that are triggers under current law and were explained previously in this report. The figure also graphs the three basic types of states. Reading from top to bottom of Figure B-1, theseThese three types of states are as follows.

  • Hold-Harmless Level Only States. These statesState. This state is depicted with a blue line running from $0 to point G. States with "new" formula percentages that start out lower than their "old" formula percentages are subject to only the hold-harmless level provision. They do not qualify for the hold-harmless rate because each state's share of the regular funds at $2.25 billion is greater than 1%. An example of a hold-harmless level only state is represented by the line that runs from $0 to point G. The hold-harmless level is evident from point A to point F. Here, despite increases in the appropriations level, the state allotment remains fixed. In Table 31, these are the states that have a "Y" in column (c) and an "N" in column (e).
  • Ratable Reduction States. These states are subject to a ratable reduction. Their new formula percentage is greater than their old (FY1984) percentage. An example of these states is depicted by the line that runs from $0 to point HState. This state is depicted with a purple line running from $0 to point H. States with "new" formula percentages that are higher than their "old" formula percentages are subject to a ratable reduction. Their new formula percentage is greater than their old (FY1984) percentage. There is a small decrease in state allotments at point D that is attributable to the increased shortfall on the distribution of funds that the hold-harmless rate imposes. In Table 31, these are the states that have an "N" in both column (c) and column (e).
  • Hold-Harmless Level and Rate States. These states are subject to both the hold-harmless level and the hold harmless rate provisions. An example of a typical level and rate state is shown by the line that runs from $0 to point IState. This state is depicted with a red line running from $0 to point I. States have lower new formula percentages and are subject to both the hold-harmless level and the hold harmless rate provisions. The hold-harmless level is evident by the fixed state allotment from point C to point E. However, the (subtle) jump at exactly $2.25 billion (point E) signals that this state is subject to the hold-harmless rate provision. After the allotment jump at $2.25 billion, the state's allotment continues to increase (at a rate lower than the old rate, but higher than the new rate). In Table 31, these are the states that have a "Y" in column (c) and a "Y" in the column (e).

Figure B-1. Estimated LIHEAP Allocations at Various Hypothetical Appropriations Levels for Three Types of States

Source: Figure created by CRS using formula rates provided by HHS in November 2016.

2019.

Appendix C. LIHEAP RegularFormula Fund Allocations to the States, FY2010-FY2016

Table C-1, below, shows actual LIHEAP regular fund allocations to the states from FY2010 through FY2016.

The FY2016 Consolidated Appropriations Act (P.L. 114-113) provided $3.39 billion in LIHEAP regular funds. The law provided that $2.988 million be set aside for training and technical assistance. HHS transferred approximately $19 million in LIHEAP funding elsewhere within the agency, and no funds were distributed for leveraging incentive and REACH grants. Of the total distributed to the states, $491 million was distributed according to the "new" LIHEAP formula, with the remainder distributed according to the "old" formula percentages. Column (h) of Table C-1 contains allocations to the states for FY2016.

The FY2015 Consolidated and Further Continuing Appropriations Act (P.L. 113-235) provided $3.39 billion in LIHEAP regular funds. Of the total, $491 million was distributed according to the "new" formula. Approximately $3 million was set aside for training and technical assistance, but no funding was provided for leveraging incentive and REACH grants. Column (g) of Table C-1 contains allocations to the states in FY2015.

In FY2014, Congress appropriated approximately $3.425 billion for LIHEAP as part of the Consolidated Appropriation Act (P.L. 113-76). Prior to distribution of funds, HHS reduced the amount available by 1%, transferring $34.245 million within the agency. Of the $3.390 billion available, HHS increased the amount available for the territories to 0.5% of the total; this was the first time since the program's inception that the territorial allocation changed from 0.134%. Of the amount available to the states and tribes, $491 million was distributed according to the "new" formula and the remainder according to the "old" formula. See column (f) of Table C-1.

Column (e) of Table C-1 contains actual regular fund allocations to the states in FY2013. The amount appropriated for LIHEAP as part of the FY2013 Consolidated and Further Continuing Appropriations Act (P.L. 113-6) was the same as the FY2012 level—$3.472 billion for regular funds, with $497 million distributed according to the "new" LIHEAP formula. However, application of an across-the-board rescission of 0.2%, sequestration, and a transfer of funds within HHS reduced the total amount available to $3.255 billion.

Column (d) contains actual allocations for FY2012 at an appropriations level of $3.472 billion (P.L. 112-74). The law provided a total of $3.478 billion for LIHEAP regular funds, but the amount was reduced by an across-the-board rescission of 0.189% for discretionary accounts, resulting in the $3.472 billion funding level. P.L. 112-74 also provided that, of the amount appropriated, all but $497 million be distributed according to the proportions of the "old" LIHEAP formula. In addition, $3 million was set aside for training and technical assistance.

In FY2009 (P.L. 110-329), FY2010 (P.L. 111-117), and FY2011 (P.L. 112-10) Congress appropriated $4.51 billion for LIHEAP formula funds. Of this amount, $840 million was distributed according to the "new" LIHEAP formula and the remaining funds, approximately $3.67 billion, according to the "old" formula. Column (c) of Table C-1 shows the allocations to the states in FY2011, column (b) shows allocations to the states in FY2010, and column (a) shows FY2009 allocations. Note that funds were not distributed in exactly the same way in each year for several reasons. LIHEAP formula rates are updated each year, which affects the percentage of funds that states receive. In addition, two factors changed the FY2011 appropriation. The appropriations bill subjected all discretionary accounts to an across-the-board rescission of 0.2%, and HHS did not distribute leveraging incentive and REACH grants, making the total available to the states slightly more than in FY2009 and FY2010.

Table C-1. LIHEAP Actual State Regular Fund Allocations for
FY2009 through FY2016

FY2019

Since FY2009, Congress, through appropriations language, has directed that a portion of the regular funds appropriated be distributed to the states via the "new" LIHEAP formula, and the remainder using the "old" formula percentages. The portion of funds distributed via the new formula has ranged from 14% to nearly 20% of regular funds appropriated, depending on the year.

Table C-1, below, shows actual LIHEAP regular fund allocations to the states from FY2009 through FY2019. In each year, funds for the territories, training and technical assistance (TTA), and leveraging incentive grants (if appropriated) are first subtracted from the total appropriation. The remainder of funding is distributed to the states via formula as directed in appropriations language. For example, in FY2019 Congress directed that $716 million be distributed via the "new" LIHEAP formula, and the remainder via the "old" LIHEAP formula percentages. The column header in Table C-1 for each year shows the total regular funds appropriated for LIHEAP (including funds that were not distributed via the formula such as rescissions and transfers). Total funding distributed to the states via formula is in the final row of the table for each year. The table notes describe the division between "new" and "old" formulas, and any other relevant information. Table C-1. LIHEAP Actual State Regular Fund Allocations forFY2009 through FY2019

($ in millions)

54.195

18.847

29.579

30.551

205.097

75.291

12.955

11.189

96.776

5.011

21.543

172.195

76.977

54.554

136.484

166.349

116.288

80.217

31.645

13.892

21.003

372.438

27.449

154.948

43.405

36.493

45.498

22.293

161.004

20.446

91.298

60.083

31.094

104.676

3,632.161

 

 

Actual Allocations, FY2009-FY2016

FY2019

State

FY2009: $4.51
Billiona
(a)

FY2010:
$4.51 Billionb
(b)

FY2011:
$4.50 Billionc
(c)

FY2012:
$3.47 Billion
d
(d)

FY2013:
$3.26

Billion
e
(e)

FY2014:
$3.39

Billion
f
(f)

FY2015:
$3.39

Billion
g
(g)

FY2016:
$3.37

Billion
h
(h)

FY2017:$3.39Billioni FY2018:$3.64Billionj FY2019:$3.69Billionk

Alabama

60.063

58.799

59.419

47.408

48.269

48.885

44.387

43.551

44.941

51.554

Alaska

23.568

25.308

23.667

18.002

17.171

18.841

17.482

17.496

17.488

18.779

Arizona

29.047

33.729

32.922

23.852

23.343

23.641

21.581

21.062

21.734

27.972

Arkansas

36.497

35.773

34.985

28.537

26.746

27.505

26.777

27.858

26.819

31.134

California

225.894

202.749

202.843

154.574

145.410

153.592

174.086

177.168

171.344

191.855

Colorado

63.474

64.257

62.139

47.308

44.270

46.378

48.889

49.002

51.041

53.175

53.793

Connecticut

95.783

96.942

98.254

79.532

76.014

77.413

85.764

80.690

78.713

80.738

Delaware

17.384

15.189

15.172

11.957

12.573

13.016

12.547

12.574

12.036

13.653

District of Columbia

14.653

13.992

14.051

10.687

9.976

10.474

10.379

10.387

10.382

11.149

Florida

95.037

110.354

107.714

78.040

76.376

77.351

70.611

68.911

71.111

91.520

Georgia

75.141

87.252

85.164

61.702

60.387

61.158

55.829

54.485

56.224

72.360

76.517

Hawaii

4.652

6.023

6.027

6.107

5.416

6.159

5.622

5.487

5.143

5.004

Idaho

26.939

26.939

27.052

20.576

19.207

20.166

19.982

19.999

19.989

21.465

Illinois

237.236

232.865

238.712

185.684

160.191

167.458

167.396

166.270

167.396

171.008

Indiana

103.609

104.151

102.749

80.006

72.374

75.820

75.792

75.282

75.792

77.428

Iowa

67.803

67.803

68.137

54.813

51.292

53.735

53.715

53.354

53.715

54.874

Kansas

45.349

41.757

42.327

32.160

31.397

31.019

30.717

31.921

33.606

36.217

36.514

Kentucky

68.353

57.742

58.335

46.423

43.483

48.288

44.896

46.713

48.634

53.572

54.725

Louisiana

57.196

51.870

53.164

43.422

40.864

42.062

38.390

42.234

42.462

48.120

50.899

Maine

49.457

54.309

53.539

39.982

37.414

39.195

39.181

38.917

39.181

40.265

39.793

Maryland

101.296

82.002

85.523

69.790

70.390

68.513

68.854

72.255

74.051

81.680

78.971

Massachusetts

162.981

175.524

175.178

132.731

132.256

140.014

146.328

148.768

147.242

147.723

Michigan

222.412

233.524

228.294

173.450

165.582

165.444

161.827

157.859

158.928

162.357

Minnesota

144.528

144.528

145.241

116.839

109.335

114.541

114.498

113.728

114.498

116.969

Mississippi

39.011

39.661

38.834

31.591

29.313

30.120

26.996

29.051

29.746

32.594

32.271

Missouri

103.541

95.257

95.596

68.231

66.553

70.882

73.772

73.295

73.618

81.052

Montana

31.598

31.598

31.730

24.135

22.529

23.654

23.438

23.457

23.446

25.177

25.268

Nebraska

39.573

39.573

39.738

30.226

28.214

29.623

29.353

29.377

29.363

31.531

Nevada

13.643

15.841

15.462

11.203

10.964

11.104

10.136

9.892

10.208

13.138

New Hampshire

34.112

34.112

34.255

26.055

24.321

25.536

25.750

26.399

28.546

27.994

27.279

New Jersey

166.690

177.196

180.991

136.746

124.480

124.570

126.586

127.094

120.142

127.410

124.027

New Mexico

24.901

22.355

22.448

17.074

15.938

16.734

17.844

18.766

18.600

19.778

New York

475.935

479.526

495.801

375.710

350.169

366.843

381.440

364.242

366.707

374.621

North Carolina

123.243

109.339

111.263

83.011

87.702

88.271

86.504

86.702

85.848

97.447

98.542

North Dakota

34.325

34.325

34.469

26.218

24.473

25.695

25.460

25.482

25.469

27.350

Ohio

220.588

223.108

225.398

165.463

144.794

154.314

148.087

147.091

148.087

154.051

Oklahoma

49.007

47.902

47.717

36.094

35.955

37.147

36.338

36.844

37.498

41.886

Oregon

45.355

45.355

45.579

36.666

34.311

35.945

35.931

35.690

35.931

36.707

Pennsylvania

274.925

282.279

280.478

209.548

190.810

203.071

206.356

203.405

209.107

214.781

206.488

Rhode Island

30.209

29.666

29.790

23.241

23.976

23.813

27.361

26.002

25.333

26.904

23.723

South Carolina

47.702

47.311

46.909

36.270

38.335

38.825

35.442

34.588

35.693

43.107

South Dakota

27.878

27.878

27.995

21.293

19.877

20.869

20.678

20.696

20.686

22.213

Tennessee

73.723

72.092

71.595

55.405

56.856

58.040

55.161

56.101

58.666

63.972

65.651

Texas

158.110

183.593

179.200

129.832

127.064

128.686

117.473

114.645

118.304

152.258

Utah

32.094

32.094

32.228

24.513

22.882

24.025

23.806

23.825

23.814

25.572

25.665

Vermont

25.568

25.568

25.675

19.529

18.230

19.140

18.965

18.981

18.972

20.373

Virginia

118.084

100.856

102.839

80.436

78.971

81.877

81.432

83.926

83.571

91.754

Washington

74.603

74.603

74.971

60.310

56.437

59.124

59.102

58.705

59.102

60.378

West Virginia

40.584

38.884

39.047

29.700

27.723

29.108

28.842

28.866

28.852

30.982

Wisconsin

130.096

130.096

130.738

105.172

98.417

103.103

103.065

102.372

103.065

105.289

Wyoming

12.850

12.850

12.904

9.815

9.162

9.619

9.531

9.539

9.535

10.239

10.276

Total

4,476.302

4,476.302

4,494.258

3,437.068

3,248.193

3,370.409

3,370.379

3,351.004

3,370.379

3,619.129

Source: The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) provided data on final regular fund allocations for FY2009 through FY2016 (columns (a) through (h))FY2019. Allocations to the states include tribal allotments.

a. Congress appropriated approximately $4.551 billion for LIHEAP as part of a continuing resolution (P.L. 110-329). Of this amount, $4.48 billion was distributed to states and tribes, with $840 million 840 million was allocated under the "new" LIHEAP formula, with and the remainder allocated according to the proportions of the "old" LIHEAP formula.

b. In FY2010, Congress appropriated the same amount for LIHEAP regular funds as it had in FY2009—approximately $4.551 billion—with the same division of funds between "old" and "new" formulas (P.L. 111-117). Although FY2010 LIHEAP funds were divided between the "old" and "new" formula in the same way as FY2009, the awards to the states are different because the formula factors were updated in April 2009.

c. c. The FY2011 Department of Defense and Full-Year Continuing Appropriations Act (P.L. 112-10) included an across-the-board rescission of 0.2% for discretionary accounts. This reduced the LIHEAP regular fund appropriation from approximately $4.51 billion to $4.50 billion. In addition, unlike appropriations in most years, HHS did not set aside funds for leveraging incentive and REACH grants, and instead included these funds in the formula grants to the states, bringing the total distributed to $4.49 billion.

d. The FY2012 Consolidated Appropriations ActThe total distributed via formula to states and tribes was $4.49 billion, of which $840 million was distributed via the "new" formula and the remainder according to the "old" formula percentages. d. The FY2012 LIHEAP appropriation (P.L. 112-74) included an across-the-board rescission of 0.189% that reduced the total available to $3,.47 billion. Of the amount appropriatedavailable for formula funds, $497 million was distributed according to the "new" LIHEAP formula and the remainder according to the proportions of the "old" LIHEAP formula. In addition, the law provided $3 million for training and technical assistance.

e. e. In FY2013, Congress enacted a full-year continuing resolution funding LIHEAP (and most other federal programs) at FY2012 levels (P.L. 113-6). While LIHEAP was funded at $3.47247 billion in FY2012, a series of deductions meant that the total available for LIHEAP in FY2013 was $3.255 billion.

f. funding in FY2013 was reduced by an across-the-board rescission of 0.2%, by sequestration, and by a transfer of funds within HHS, resulting in just under $3.26 billion for the program. Of that amount, $3.25 billion was distributed to states and tribes, with $497 distributed via the "new" formula and the remainder via the "old" formula. f. The FY2014 regular fund appropriation for LIHEAP (P.L. 113-76) was reduced by 1% ($34.245 million) due to a transfer of funds within HHS, bringing the amount available to $3.390 billion. HHS did not distribute leveraging incentive and REACH grants, and it increased the territorial allocation from 0.134% of total funds to 0.500%. Of the amount distributed to states and tribes by formula ($3.370 billion), $491 million was distributed according to the "new" formula and the remainder according to the proportions of the "old" formula.

g. In FY2015, Congress appropriated $3.39 billion for LIHEAP regular funds as part of the Consolidated and Further Continuing Appropriations Act (P.L. 113-235). Of the total, 0.5% was distributed to the territories, approximately $3 million went to training and technical assistance, and no funds were distributed for leveraging incentive and REACH grants. Of the funds distributed to the states and tribes by formula, $491 million was distributed according to the "new" formula, and the remainder, approximately $2.9 billion, according to the proportions of the "old" formula.

h. The FY2016 LIHEAP appropriation of $3.39 billion (P.L. 114-113) was reduced by approximately $19 million due to a transfer of funds within HHS, bringing the amount available to $3.371 billion. Of the amount appropriated, 0.5% was distributed to the territories, $3 million went to training and technical assistance, and no funds were distributed for leveraging incentive and REACH grants. Of the amount distributed to the states, $491 million was distributed according to the "new" formula, and the remainder according to the "old" formula percentages.

Author Contact Information

[author name scrubbed], Specialist in Housing Policy ([email address scrubbed], [phone number scrubbed])

Footnotes

39 billion. Of the amount distributed to states and tribes by formula ($3.37 billion), $491 million was distributed according to the "new" formula and the remainder according to the proportions of the "old" formula. g. In FY2015, Congress appropriated $3.39 billion for LIHEAP regular funds (P.L. 113-235). Of the funds distributed to the states and tribes by formula, $491 million was distributed according to the "new" formula, and the remainder, approximately $2.9 billion, according to the proportions of the "old" formula. h. The FY2016 LIHEAP appropriation of $3.39 billion (P.L. 114-113) was reduced by approximately $19 million due to a transfer of funds within HHS, bringing the amount available to $3.37 billion. Of the amount distributed to the states and tribes, $491 million was distributed according to the "new" formula, and the remainder according to the "old" formula percentages. i. In FY2017 Congress appropriated $3.39 billion for LIHEAP (P.L. 115-31). Of the amount appropriated for formula funds, $491 million was distributed according to the "new" formula and the remainder according to the "old" formula percentages. j. LIHEAP appropriations increased in FY2018 to $3.64 billion (P.L. 115-141). The total available to the states and tribes was approximately $3.62 billion. Of that amount, nearly $679 million was distributed according to the "new" LIHEAP formula, and the remainder according to the "old" formula percentages. k. LIHEAP appropriations increased again in FY2019 to $3.69 billion (P.L. 115-245). As of the date of this report, all but 1% of the appropriation had been distributed via the formula to states and tribes. Of the amount appropriated, $716 million was distributed according to the "new" LIHEAP formula, and the remainder according to the "old" formula percentages. Appendix D. History of the LIHEAP Formula Predecessor Programs to LIHEAP

The mid- to late-1970s, a time marked by rapidly rising fuel prices, also marked the beginning of federal energy assistance funding for low-income households. The first national program to help low-income households was created in early 1975 to assist families with energy conservation primarily through home weatherization. This assistance was provided through a new Emergency Energy Conservation Program (EECP), enacted as part of the Headstart, Economic Opportunity, and Community Partnership Act of 1974 (P.L. 93-644). The funds were administered by the Community Services Administration (CSA), the successor agency to the Office of Economic Opportunity, which was responsible for many of the programs created as part of the 1964 war on poverty. Beginning in 1977, funds were also made available through the CSA to help families directly pay for fuel (as opposed to weatherization expenses) via a variety of programs. Each of these programs had in common a focus on the need for heating assistance (versus cooling assistance).

Congress continued to appropriate funds for energy assistance programs through FY1980, at which point a new program, the Low Income Energy Assistance Program (LIEAP), was enacted as part of the Crude Oil Windfall Profits Tax Act of 1980 (P.L. 96-223). LIEAP, which was administered by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), was funded for one year, FY1981, before the creation of LIHEAP. Like the CSA programs, LIEAP emphasized heating over cooling needs. This preference was reflected in both the CSA program formulas and the LIEAP set of formulas, which used variables that benefitted cold-weather states to determine how funds would be distributed. The LIEAP set of formulas continues to have relevance for the way in which LIHEAP funds are distributed. This section of the report describes these predecessor programs to LIHEAP and their distribution formulas.

Community Services Administration Energy Assistance Programs

On January 4, 1975, President Ford signed into law the Headstart, Economic Opportunity, and Community Partnership Act of 1974 (P.L. 93-644), which contained funds for a new program, called the Emergency Energy Conservation Program (EECP). The program was to be administered by the Community Services Administration (CSA), and its purpose was

to enable low-income individuals and families, including the elderly and the near poor, to participate in energy conservation programs designed to lessen the impact of the high cost of energy ... and to reduce ... energy consumption.

The law governing EECP listed a number of eligible activities in which states could participate, including energy conservation and education programs; weatherization assistance; loans and grants for the purchase of energy conservation technologies; alternative fuel supplies; and fuel voucher and stamp programs. Despite the variety of activities that could be funded through the program, the first CSA funding notice regarding the program limited eligible activities to "winterizing" homes and to giving emergency assistance "to prevent hardship or danger to health due to utility shutoff or lack of fuel."19 During the four years the EECP was funded, the majority of funds were used for weatherization expenses.20

EECP funds were distributed to states via a formula that benefitted those states with high heating costs. One formula variable in particular, a measure of "coldness" called heating degree days, benefitted cold-weather states. Heating degree days measure the extent to which a day's average temperature falls below 65° Fahrenheit. For example, a day with an average temperature of 50° results in a measure of 15 heating degree days. Because heating degree days are higher in cold-weather states, including the heating degree day variable in a formula favors states with greater heating needs. Squaring the heating degree days magnifies this effect.21 The EECP formula took the number of population-weighted heating degree days in each state, squared them, and multiplied the result by the number of households in poverty that owned their homes to determine how funds would be allocated.22 The CSA acknowledged the emphasis on heating needs in its formula, stating that the FY1975 allocation "was heavily weighted to the coldest areas."23 In the three fiscal years that followed the first appropriation for the EECP, from FY1976 through FY1978, the CSA changed somewhat the way in which it allocated funds to the states; however, the factors continued to favor cold-weather states through use of either heating degree days or heating degree days squared.24

The first year that Congress specifically appropriated funds for direct assistance to help low-income households (those at or below 125% of poverty) pay their energy costs (instead of funds that went primarily for weatherization and conservation activities) was FY1977. The FY1977 Supplemental Appropriations Act (P.L. 95-26) provided $200 million for a Special Crisis Intervention Program to be administered by CSA. States could use funds to make direct payments to fuel providers on behalf of low-income families lacking the financial resources to pay their energy bills. The CSA directed states to target households where utilities had been shut off (or were threatened with shut off) or who could prove "dire financial need" as the result of paying large energy bills.25 Although the law did not reserve funds exclusively for heating costs, the way in which funds were allocated to the states emphasized heating need. Funds were distributed to the states based on a formula that used (1) heating degree days squared, (2) the number of households in poverty, (3) the number of persons above age 65 with incomes below 125% of poverty, and (4) the relative cost of fuel in the region.26 Congress again appropriated $200 million for crisis intervention in both FY1978 and FY1979.27 In FY1978, funds were available to households with the need for assistance as the result of an energy-related emergency such as lack of fuel, a natural disaster, fuel shortages, and widespread unemployment.28 In FY1979, funds were made available to assist families facing "substantially increased energy costs and/or life- or health-threatening situations caused by winter-related energy emergencies."29

In FY1980, Congress appropriated a total of $1.6 billion for energy assistance. Of this amount, $400 million was appropriated for the Energy Crisis Assistance Program (ECAP, a CSA program similar to the Special Crisis Intervention Program) through two separate appropriations.30 The remainder, $1.2 billion, was appropriated as part of the FY1980 Department of the Interior Appropriations Act (P.L. 96-126) to the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (HEW, the predecessor to HHS) for cash assistance and crisis intervention due to high energy costs. This appropriation to HEW is sometimes referred to as Low Income Supplemental Energy Allowances. Of this $1.2 billion, $400 million was to be distributed specifically to recipients of Supplemental Security Income (SSI). The rest of the funds appropriated to HEW, approximately $800 million, as well as the ECAP funds, were distributed to states on the basis of three factors: heating degree days squared, the number of households below 125% of poverty, and the difference in home heating energy expenditures between 1978 and 1979. The formula used to distribute the $400 million for SSI recipients used these same factors but also included the number of SSI recipients in each state relative to the national total.

Table D-1. Factors Used in Select Energy Assistance Formulas, FY1975-FY1980 Emergency Energy Conservation Program:aFY1975 (P.L. 93-644) Special Crisis Intervention Program:bFY1977 (P.L. 95-26) Low Income Supplemental Energy Allowances:cFY1980 (P.L. 96-126)
     

Sources: For the formula under P.L. 93-644, see Community Services Administration, "Emergency Energy Conservation Program: Submission of Funding Plans," Federal Register, vol. 41, no. 208, October 27, 1976, p. 47096. For the formula under P.L. 95-26, see Senate Appropriations Committee, report to accompany H.R. 4877, the FY1977 Supplemental Appropriations Act, 95th Congress, 1st session, S.Rept. 95-64, March 24, 1977. The formula for P.L. 96-126 is contained within the law.

a. Of the funds appropriated for the Emergency Energy Conservation Program, 90% were distributed via the formula, while the remaining 10% were divided among the 12 coldest states as measured by heating degree days. The formula involved multiplying heating degree days squared by the number of homeowners in poverty to arrive at the percentage share for each state. b. The Special Crisis Intervention Program did not specify a weight for each of the four variables used to determine allocations. c. The Low Income Supplemental Energy Allowances arrived at states' shares of funds through the formula ½ (heating degree days2 * number of households below 125% of poverty) + ½ (difference in home heating expenditures between 1978 and 1980). Of the $1.6 billion appropriated for energy assistance in FY1980, $400 million was set aside for SSI recipients. The formula to distribute those funds was ⅓ (heating degree days2 * number of households below 125% of poverty) + ⅓ (difference in home heating expenditures between 1978 and 1979) + ⅓ (SSI recipients in each state relative to the national total). The Low Income Energy Assistance Program (LIEAP) Formula

In April 1980, Congress replaced the patchwork energy assistance programs of the late 1970s with one program, the Low Income Energy Assistance Program (LIEAP). LIEAP, the direct predecessor program to LIHEAP, was established as part of the Crude Oil Windfall Profits Tax Act of 1980 (P.L. 96-223). The program was introduced in the Senate as the Home Energy Assistance Act (S. 1724) and was incorporated into H.R. 3919, the bill that would become the Crude Oil Windfall Profits Tax Act, on the Senate floor.31 Like the energy assistance programs of the late 1970s such as the Special Crisis Intervention Program and the Low Income Supplemental Energy Allowances, LIEAP allocated funds to states in order to help low-income households pay their home energy costs. Also like these predecessor programs, LIEAP allocated funds to states using a method that put more emphasis on the heating needs of cold-weather states than it did on cooling needs.

The formula developed under LIEAP continues to be relevant in several ways: (1) it has been used to distribute LIHEAP funds as recently as FY2007, (2) the percentage shares of funds that states received continue to be the benchmark for the way in which states are held harmless under the current LIHEAP formula, and (3) from FY2009 through the present, Congress has distributed the bulk of LIHEAP funds using the LIEAP formula percentages (for more information, see Appendix C). As a result, the variables used are important in understanding the current formula and the way in which it is used to distribute funds.

Ultimately, Congress developed the LIEAP formula through two different laws: P.L. 96-223, the law that authorized LIEAP, and P.L. 96-369, a continuing resolution enacted six months later. The following two subsections describe the elements of the formula developed through each.

Formula Under P.L. 96-223

The formula developed as part of S. 1724, and subsequently incorporated into P.L. 96-223, reflected, in part, the concern that the problem of rising energy costs were "most critical in areas with high home heating costs."32 The formula for LIEAP arose from a Senate compromise over three different proposals. The debate centered around the degree to which heating should be emphasized over energy expenditures generally. Some Members wanted a formula that accounted for all energy uses and was not based solely on geographic location,33 while others saw the program's purpose as solely to provide heating assistance.34 The debate on the Senate floor was, at times, contentious, with Senator Edmund Muskie (Maine) resolved to filibuster in order to support the heating needs of northern states.35 Primarily at issue was the measure of heating degree days, particularly the extent to which they would be weighted and whether they would be squared.

Under the final compromise LIEAP formula in P.L. 96-223, states received funds under one of four different alternatives used to measure home energy need, depending on which one benefitted a state the most. Three of the four options contained different combinations of several formula factors: residential energy expenditures; heating degree days or heating degree days squared; and the number of low-income households in the state.

  • Under the first formula alternative, 50% of the allocation was based on residential energy expenditures and 50% on heating degree days squared multiplied by the number of households at or below the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) lower living standard.36
  • Under the second formula alternative, 25% of the allocation was based on residential energy expenditures and 75% based on heating degree days squared multiplied by the number of households at or below the BLS lower living standard.
  • Under the third formula alternative, 50% of the allocation was based on residential energy expenditures and 50% based on heating degree days (not squared) multiplied by the number of households with incomes at or below the BLS lower living standard.
  • The fourth option guaranteed states a minimum benefit of $120 for each household that received Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC), SSI, or Food Stamp benefits. The option was added to S. 1724 at the Finance Committee level in recognition of the fact that (in general) funds were not being provided for cooling costs.37
(See Table D-2 for a breakdown of these formulas.)

While the focus of the formula was on heating assistance, the LIEAP law did allow states to provide for cooling when households could demonstrate medical necessity.38 Congress authorized LIEAP for one year, FY1981, at $3 billion, but funds were not appropriated as part of P.L. 96-223.

Formula Under P.L. 96-369

Before the formula in P.L. 96-223 could be used to allocate funds, Congress introduced an alternative method for computing the state distribution rates. It did so when it appropriated $1.85 billion in LIEAP funds for FY1981 in a continuing resolution (P.L. 96-369), in October of 1980, six months after enactment of the Crude Oil Windfall Profits Tax Act. The new allocation method was not described in P.L. 96-369, however. Instead, the continuing resolution referred to a House Appropriations Committee report (H. Rept. 96-1244) accompanying another bill—the FY1981 Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services and Education Appropriations Act. It was in this committee report that the additional formula components for LIEAP were laid out.39 The additional formula components appeared to be intended to act as a counter to the formula developed in P.L. 96-223, which some argued benefitted warmer weather states more than was necessary.40

The first step in the new set of formulas was to determine each state's share of funds using two calculations set out in H. Rept. 96-1244 and assign states the greater of the two amounts.

  • Under the first formula alternative, 50% of the allocation was based on the increase in home heating expenditures, and 50% was based on the number of heating degree days squared times the population with income less than or equal to 125% of poverty. This was the same formula used for the Low-Income Supplemental Energy Allowances Program.
  • Under the second formula alternative, 25% of the allocation was based on total residential energy expenditures, and 75% was based on heating degree days squared multiplied by the number of low-income households in the state.
The greater of the two percentages calculated using the formula in H. Rept. 96-1244 was then assigned to each state. After adjusting state allotments proportionately so that the total allocation reached 100% of funds available, the second step in the amended formula was to compare these state allotments to 75% of the amount each state would receive under the formula in P.L. 96-223. States would then receive the greater of these two amounts. To see the percentage of funds that each state received under the LIEAP formula, see Table 1, column (a).

Although the alternative formulas under H.Rept. 96-1244 used factors similar to those in P.L. 96-223, the original set of formulas was somewhat more favorable to warm-weather states. For example, the BLS lower living standard, used in all of the P.L. 96-223 formulas but only one of those in H.Rept. 96-1244, was higher than 125% of poverty for most household sizes, which benefitted the South, where the low-income population was higher.41 The original set of formulas in P.L. 96-223 also provided for a minimum benefit to states on the basis of the number of AFDC, SSI, and Food Stamp recipient households, unconditioned on their household heating expenditures. In addition, the inclusion of the increase in home heating expenditures in H. Rept. 96-1244 benefitted Northeastern states, where heating oil prices had increased substantially.42

Table D-2. Distribution of Funds Under LIEAP Increase in home heating expenditures from 1978-1980a                              

Source: The Crude Oil Windfall Profits Tax Act (P.L. 96-223) and the House Appropriations Committee Report to Accompany H.R. 7998, the FY1981 Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education Appropriations Bill, H.Rept. 96-1244, August 21, 1980.

Notes: * Multiplied by.

≤ Less than or equal to.

a. H.Rept. 96-1244 did not specify which years would be used to determine residential energy expenditures; 1978 and 1980 were the years used by HHS. Enactment of LIHEAP

In August 1981, the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act, P.L. 97-35, created LIHEAP, replacing its predecessor, LIEAP. The new program was not substantially different from the previous program. Some of the changes to the program included less restrictive federal rules and more state flexibility in determining how to operate their LIHEAP programs. The program was authorized at $1.85 billion for FY1982-FY1984. In FY1982, Congress appropriated $1.875 billion for LIHEAP; in FY1983, it appropriated $1.975 billion; and in FY1984, $2.075 billion.

Continued Use of the LIEAP Formula

When the formula for LIEAP was initially created in 1980 under the Crude Oil Windfall Profits Tax Act (P.L. 96-223), it brought about a good deal of debate on the floor of the Senate, where the formula provisions were added to the legislation.43 Discussion over the formula also occurred leading up to the enactment of P.L. 96-369, the FY1981 continuing resolution that funded LIEAP and amended the formula.44 Despite these earlier disagreements over formula allocations, the process to enact LIHEAP in 1981 did not engender the same level of debate or result in a different formula. Instead, the law creating LIHEAP provided that the allotment percentages for each state would remain the same as they had been in FY1981 under the LIEAP formula as amended by P.L. 96-369. From FY1982 through FY1984, then, states continued to receive the same percentage of funds that they received under the LIEAP formula.

The 1984 LIHEAP Reauthorization: A New Formula Formula Discussions

When Congress began to consider reauthorizing LIHEAP in 1983, two aspects of the formula were debated. First, some legislators recognized that the multi-step LIEAP formula benefitted cold-weather states relative to warm-weather states.45 The second debated aspect of the formula centered on the appropriateness and timeliness of the data used in formula calculations. In 1983, the energy information used to calculate state allotments was not the most current data available.46 For example, the most recent data the formula used were the change in the cost of energy between 1978 and 1980, or the cost of energy in 1980, depending on the sub-formula one chose to apply. No aspect of the formula took account of increased costs after 1980.47

Legislative sentiment in favor of changing the formula was evident, when, in September 1983, the House adopted an amendment to the Emergency Immigration Education Act (H.R. 3520) that would have adjusted the LIHEAP formula and resulted in a change in allocations to the states. The amendment's formula took into account the energy expenditures of poor families, which, according to the amendment's sponsor, Representative Carlos Moorhead (California), would result in lower percentage allocations for 23 states, mostly in the Northeast and Midwest, gains for 27, primarily in the South, and the same allocation for one state.48 The amendment was eventually dropped from H.R. 3520 in conference with the Senate.

Introduction of a Hold-Harmless Level

Efforts to reauthorize LIHEAP began in April 1983 with the introduction of the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Amendments of 1984 (H.R. 2439). The bill was referred to two committees: Education and Labor and Energy and Commerce. Within the Energy and Commerce committee, two subcommittees held markups: Fossil and Synthetic Fuels and Energy Conservation and Power.

As introduced, H.R. 2439 did not contain changes to the LIHEAP formula. The Subcommittees on Fossil and Synthetic Fuels and Energy Conservation and Power worked together to arrive at a formula change, which had the effect of shifting funds from states in the Northeast to the South and West. Unlike the previous set of formulas developed under LIEAP, the new formula directed the Department of Health and Human Services to determine states' allotments "using data relating to the most recent year for which data is available." Because the cost of heating oil remained steady between 1981 and 1983, and the price of natural gas rose 33%, this meant that states in the Northeast—where heating oil was the primary source of energy—would lose LIHEAP dollars, while states in the South and the Midwest would gain under this provision.49 In addition, population growth in the South (as well as its higher poverty rates) meant that southern states would benefit from the use of more recent population data.

To offset the losses to certain states resulting from the use of current data, H.R. 2439 also included a hold-harmless provision, or hold-harmless level; this provision ensured that if appropriations were less than or equal to $1.875 billion, states would receive no less than their allotment would have been under the old formula at this appropriations level. The bill additionally increased the LIHEAP authorization level to $2.075 billion for FY1984, $2.26 billion for FY1985, $2.5 billion in FY1986, $2.625 billion for FY1987, and $2.8 billion for FY1988.

Introduction of a Hold-Harmless Rate After the House Energy and Commerce Committee reported H.R. 2439 to the House floor—but before the full House could act on the bill—the Senate passed its version of LIHEAP reauthorization as part of the Human Services Reauthorization Act (S. 2565) on October 4, 1984.50 The Senate bill contained language very similar to H.R. 2439, but made several changes and additions to the formula.
  • S. 2565 specified that states' shares of LIHEAP funds would be based on the home energy expenditures of low-income households, not on expenditures of all households.
  • The hold-harmless level was altered. S. 2565 directed that no state in FY1985 would receive less funding than it received in FY1984, and for FY1986 and thereafter, no state would receive less than the amount they would have received in FY1984 if the appropriations level had been $1.975 billion.
  • A second hold-harmless provision, or hold-harmless rate, was created. The provision maintained the percentage allocated rather than a total funding level allocated to each affected state.

The hold-harmless rate provision guaranteed that certain states would receive increased allotments when appropriations reached $2.25 billion. States would qualify for this increase if their total allotment percentage at an appropriation of $2.25 billion were less than 1%. These states would instead receive the allotment rate they would have received at an appropriation of $2.14 billion if that allotment rate were higher than the rate at $2.25 billion. In their debate about S. 2565, Senators referred to the hold-harmless rate as the "small States hold harmless," as the intent was to protect the small (population) states' shares of LIHEAP funds.51 Otherwise, the concern was that appropriations might have to increase significantly before small state allotments would increase above their hold-harmless levels, with the states' percentage shares of funds declining even as total appropriations increased.

The Senate bill also included different authorization amounts for LIHEAP, $2.14 billion for FY1985 and $2.275 billion for FY1986. After S. 2565 passed the Senate, the House debated and passed the bill on October 9, 1984, retaining all the provisions included in the Senate version. The bill became P.L. 98-558, the Human Services Reauthorization Act, on October 30, 1984.

Author Contact Information

Libby Perl, Specialist in Housing Policy ([email address scrubbed], [phone number scrubbed])

Footnotes

For more information about the RECS, see the EIA website at http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/recs/. For more information about this issue, see Appendix C of this report.
1.

For additional information on LIHEAP, see CRS Report RL31865, LIHEAP: Program and Funding, by [author name scrubbed].

2.

LIHEAP is codified at 42 U.S.C. §§8621-8630.

3.

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Administration for Children and Families, FY2014 LIHEAP Home Energy Notebook, p. 46.

4.

The formula section is codified at 42 U.S.C. §8623.

5.

Depending on how Congress appropriates them, contingency funds may remain available for distribution in more than one fiscal year or they may expire with the fiscal year for which they were appropriated.

6.

The statutory definition of emergency includes a significant home energy supply shortage or disruption, a significant increase in the cost of home energy, a significant increase in home energy disconnections, a significant increase in participation in a public benefit program, a significant increase in unemployment, or an event meeting such criteria as the Secretary determines to be appropriate. 42 U.S.C. §8622.

7.

Community Services Administration, "Character and Scope of Specific Community Action Programs: Emergency Energy Conservation Program," Federal Register, vol. 40, no. 145, July 28, 1975, p. 31603.

8.

See, for example, House Appropriations Committee, report to accompany H.R. 4877, the FY1977 Supplemental Appropriations Act, 95th Cong., 1st sess., H.Rept. 95-68, March 11, 1977: "The funds in this program are used primarily to purchase materials to insulate the homes of low-income families."

9.

For example, if a southern state experiences 700 heating degree days in a year and a northern state experiences 7,000, the northern state has 10 times as many heating degree days as the southern state. However, if both numbers are squared, the northern state has 100 times as many heating degree days as the southern state.

10.

Community Services Administration, "Emergency Energy Conservation Program: Submission of Funding Plans," Federal Register, vol. 41, no. 208, October 27, 1976, p. 47096.

11.

Ibid.

12.

Ibid., pp. 47096-47097.

13.

Community Services Administration, "Special Crisis Intervention Program: General Information, Application Procedures, and Post Grant Requirements," Federal Register, vol. 42, no. 125, June 29, 1977, p. 33240.

14.

The formula was described in the Senate Appropriations Committee report to accompany H.R. 4877, the FY1977 Supplemental Appropriations Act, 95th Cong., 1st sess., S.Rept. 95-64, March 24, 1977. The CSA implemented this formula, which it described in guidance to the states. See the Federal Register, Ibid.

15.

Funds were appropriated through the FY1978 Supplemental Appropriations Act (P.L. 95-240) and in FY1979 through a continuing resolution (P.L. 95-482). In FY1978, Congress called the program Emergency Energy Assistance Program and in FY1979 called it the Crisis Intervention Program (excluding the word "Special" from the title).

16.

Community Services Administration, "Emergency Energy Conservation Program: Funding Requirements for Emergency Energy Assistance Program," Federal Register, vol. 43, no. 46, March 8, 1978, p. 9476.

17.

Community Services Administration, "Emergency Energy Conservation Program: Fiscal Year 1979 Crisis Intervention Program," Federal Register, vol. 43, no. 250, December 28, 1978, pp. 60466-60467.

18.

Congress appropriated $250 million for ECAP as part of an FY1980 Continuing Resolution (P.L. 96-123, referencing the FY1980 Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services and Education Appropriations bill, H.R. 4389), and appropriated an additional $150 million as part of the Department of the Interior Appropriations Act (P.L. 96-126).

19.

"Windfall Profits Tax." In CQ Almanac 1979, 35th ed., 609-32 (Washington, DC: Congressional Quarterly, 1980) http://library.cqpress.com/cqalmanac/cqal79-1184031.

20.

Senate Committee on Labor and Human Resources, Home Energy Assistance Act, report to accompany S. 1724, 96th Cong., 1st sess., S.Rept. 96-378, October 25, 1979, p. 12.

21.

See, for example, Sen. Russell Long, "Home Energy Assistance Act," Senate debate, Congressional Record, vol. 125, part 25 (November 14, 1979), p. 32278. "But the formula [as passed by the Senate Finance Committee] went a long way toward considering the total household expense for energy, not just heating."

22.

Sen. Rudy Boschwitz, "Home Energy Assistance Act," Senate debate, Congressional Record, vol. 125, part 25 (November 14, 1979), p. 32290. "I refer back to the committee report, which talks about the intent of the act being to 'offset high heating costs (and cooling where medically necessary) and that assistance not be a supplement of all utilities and their use to run appliances, etc.'... It is very clear that it is the intent of the Senate to help keep people warm."

23.

Sen. Edmund Muskie, "Home Energy Assistance Act," Senate debate, Congressional Record, vol. 125, part 25 (November 14, 1979), p. 32288. "I do not often do this. As a matter of fact, this is my 21st year in the Senate, and I can recall only one other time in which I have sought to use delay and extended debate to make a point and to achieve justice. I am not a filibusterer. If I did not believe deeply about this, I would not be standing here."

24.

The BLS determined the lower living standard income level through its annual family budgets, which it maintained from 1947 to 1981. At the time the LIEAP program was enacted, the BLS developed annual family budgets assuming three different standards of living: lower, intermediate, and higher. The budget was calculated using costs of consumer goods including food, housing, transportation, clothing, and health care (unlike the federal poverty guidelines, which are based on the amount of money needed to buy food). The budget was then adjusted for family size and the prices of goods in various cities throughout the country. See David S. Johnson, John M. Rogers, and Lucilla Tan, "A Century of Family Budgets in the United States," Monthly Labor Review, 124, no. 5 (May 2001): 28-45.

25.

Sen. Russell B. Long, "Home Energy Assistance Act," Senate debate, Congressional Record, vol. 125, part 25 (November 15, 1979), p. 32561. "This language was evolved in the Finance Committee. When the majority of the committee voted to exclude such items as air-conditioning and anything related to cooling a house and limited that formula to heating, this Senator contended that, if that were to be the case, there should be at least a minimum on which people could depend."

26.

According to the law, "The State is authorized to make grants to eligible households to meet the rising costs of cooling whenever the household establishes that such cooling is the result of medical need pursuant to standards established by the Secretary."

27.

House Committee on Appropriations, report to accompany H.R. 7998, the FY1981 Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education Appropriations Act, 96th Cong., 2nd sess., H. Rept. 96-1244, August 21, 1980, pp. 75-76.

28.

See, for example, Rep. David Obey, "Low Income Energy Assistance," House debate, Congressional Record, vol. 126, part 18 (August 27, 1980), p. 23505. "Last year the Congress adopted a formula which, very frankly, was unfair to the South. It provided a much larger amount of the money available than it should have to Northern States. In response to that, Senator Long, on the windfall profit tax legislation, adopted an amendment which, for the block grant portion of the program, provided phenomenal increases for the Southern States at the expense of the Northern States."

29.

"The Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program: An Analysis of the 1984 Reauthorization Issues," Coalition of Northeastern Governors, April 1984, p. 5.

30.

H.Rept. 96-1244 did not specify the years between which the increase in home heating expenditures should be measured. In implementing the formula, HHS measured the increase between 1978 and 1980.

31.

See, for example, Senate debate, Congressional Record, vol. 125, parts 24-25 (November 13-15, 1979), pp. 32082-32086, 32275-32293, 32558-32565, and 32576-32589.

32.

House debate, Congressional Record, vol. 126, part 18 (August 27, 1980), pp. 23502-23515.

33.

See, for example, Comments of Rep. Billy Tauzin, U.S. Congress, Joint Hearing before the Subcommittees of the Committees on Energy and Commerce, Education and Labor, and Ways and Means, Energy Costs and Low Income Energy Assistance, 98th Cong., 1st sess., February 24, 1983, pp. 119-120.

34.

Report of the Committee on Energy and Commerce to accompany H.R. 2439, the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Amendments of 1984, 98th Cong., 2nd sess., H.Rept. 98-139, Part 2, May 15, 1984, p. 13.

35.

Ibid., p. 4.

36.

Congressional Record, vol. 129, part 17 (September 13, 1983), p. 23877. The greatest increases in percentage allocations were for Florida at 51%, Texas at 44%, and Alabama at 37%. The states whose percentage allocations decreased the most were Vermont at 32%, North Dakota at 24%, and New Hampshire at 23%.

37.

"The Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program: An Analysis of the 1984 Reauthorization Issues," Coalition of Northeastern Governors, April 1984, p. 9.

38.

The final version of S. 2565 can be found in the Congressional Record, daily edition, vol. 130 (October 4, 1984), p. S13393.

39.

Congressional Record, daily edition, vol. 130 (October 4, 1984), pp. S13415-S13416.

40.

Report of the Committee on Energy and Commerce to accompany H.R. 2439, the Low-Income Home Energy Amendments of 1984, 98th Cong., 2nd sess., H.Rept. 98-139, Part 2, May 15, 1984, p. 13.

41.

"[A] State's allotment percentage is the percentage which expenditures for home energy by low-income households in that State bears to such expenditures in all States." 42 U.S.C. §8623(a)(2).

42.

The LIHEAP statute considers households with income at or below 150% of poverty or 60% of state median income (whichever value is greater) to be low income. 42 U.S.C. §8624(b)(2)(B).

43.

A state's heating and cooling degree data are weighted by population in the state.

44.

For more information about the RECS, see the EIA website at http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/recs/.

45.

The EIA's state data tables are available at http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/states/_seds.html.

46.

When appropriations are below a hypothetical FY1984 appropriation of $1.975 billion, the result of the current law's hold-harmless provisions is that states receive the same allotment percentages that they did under the old formula. See U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program: Report to Congress for FY1987, p. 133.

47.

This amount is arrived at by adding $27 million and $3 million to $1.975 billion.

48.

HHS Administration for Children and Families, Office of Community Services, LIHEAP Dear Colleague Notice Allocation for Territories FY2014, November 22, 2013, http://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/ocs/resource/liheap-allocation-for-territories-fy-2014.

49.

The exceptions to this are states that benefit from the hold-harmless rate, described in the next section, and the states that are ratably reduced in order to compensate states that benefit from the hold-harmless rate.

50.

"States which thereby receive the greatest proportional increase in allotments ... shall have their allotments reduced to the extent necessary to ensure that ... no State for fiscal year 1986 and thereafter shall receive less than the amount of funds the State would have received in fiscal year 1984." 42 U.S.C. §8623(a)(2)(A)(ii).

51.

"[A]ny State whose allotment percentage out of funds available to States from a total appropriation of $2,250,000,000 would be less than 1 percent, shall not, in any year when total appropriations equal or exceed $2,250,000,000, have its allotment percentage reduced from the percentage it would receive from a total appropriation of $2,140,000,000." 42 U.S.C. §8623(a)(2)(B).

52.

For more information about this issue, see Appendix C of this report.

(Heating degree days)2

(Heating degree days)2

(Heating degree days)2

Number of homeowners in poverty

Number of households in poverty

Number of households below 125% of poverty

Number of persons over age 65 with income less than 125% of poverty

Difference in home heating expenditures between 1978 and 1979

Relative cost of fuel

P.L. 96-223

P.L. 96-369

Assign each state the option under which they receive the greatest proportion of funds. If Options 2 and 3 both result in a greater proportion than Option 1, assign the state the lesser of Option 2 or 3.

Each state receives the greater of 75% of the amount under P.L. 96-223 or Option 1 or Option 2 under P.L. 96-369.

Option 1:

½

Residential energy expenditures

Option 1:

½

½

(Heating degree days)2 * Households with income ≤ BLS lower living standard

½

(Heating degree days)2 * Population with income ≤ 125% of poverty

Option 2:

¼

Residential energy expenditures

Option 2:

¼

Total residential energy expenditures 1980

¾

(Heating degree days)2 * Households with income ≤ BLS lower living standard

¾

(Heating degree days)2 * Households with income ≤ BLS lower living standard

Option 3:

½

Residential energy expenditures

½

Heating degree days * Households with income ≤ BLS lower living standard

Option 4:

Funds sufficient for a minimum benefit of $120 per AFDC, SSI, and Food Stamp- recipient household

1.

LIHEAP is codified at 42 U.S.C. §§8621-8630.

2.

The formula section is codified at 42 U.S.C. §8623.

3.

Depending on how Congress appropriates them, contingency funds may remain available for distribution in more than one fiscal year or they may expire with the fiscal year for which they were appropriated.

4.

The statutory definition of emergency includes a significant home energy supply shortage or disruption, a significant increase in the cost of home energy, a significant increase in home energy disconnections, a significant increase in participation in a public benefit program, a significant increase in unemployment, or an event meeting such criteria as the Secretary determines to be appropriate. 42 U.S.C. §8622.

5.

42 U.S.C. §8623(a)(2)

6.

"[A] State's allotment percentage is the percentage which expenditures for home energy by low-income households in that State bears to such expenditures in all States." 42 U.S.C. §8623(a)(2).

7.

The LIHEAP statute considers households with income at or below 150% of poverty or 60% of state median income (whichever value is greater) to be low income. 42 U.S.C. §8624(b)(2)(B).

8.

42 U.S.C. §8623(a)(4).

9.

A state's heating and cooling degree data are weighted by population in the state.

10.
11.

The EIA's state data tables are available at http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/states/_seds.html.

12.

When appropriations are below a hypothetical FY1984 appropriation of $1.975 billion, the result of the current law's hold-harmless provisions is that states receive the same allotment percentages that they did under the old formula. See U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program: Report to Congress for FY1987, p. 133.

13.

This amount is arrived at by adding $2.988 million for TTA to $1.975 billion.

14.

HHS Administration for Children and Families, Office of Community Services, LIHEAP Dear Colleague Notice Allocation for Territories FY2014, November 22, 2013, http://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/ocs/resource/liheap-allocation-for-territories-fy-2014.

15.

The exceptions to this are states that benefit from the hold-harmless rate, described in the next section, and the states that are ratably reduced in order to compensate states that benefit from the hold-harmless rate.

16.

"States which thereby receive the greatest proportional increase in allotments ... shall have their allotments reduced to the extent necessary to ensure that ... no State for fiscal year 1986 and thereafter shall receive less than the amount of funds the State would have received in fiscal year 1984." 42 U.S.C. §8623(a)(2)(A)(ii).

17.

"[A]ny State whose allotment percentage out of funds available to States from a total appropriation of $2,250,000,000 would be less than 1 percent, shall not, in any year when total appropriations equal or exceed $2,250,000,000, have its allotment percentage reduced from the percentage it would receive from a total appropriation of $2,140,000,000." 42 U.S.C. §8623(a)(2)(B).

18.
19.

Community Services Administration, "Character and Scope of Specific Community Action Programs: Emergency Energy Conservation Program," Federal Register, vol. 40, no. 145, July 28, 1975, p. 31603.

20.

See, for example, House Appropriations Committee, report to accompany H.R. 4877, the FY1977 Supplemental Appropriations Act, 95th Cong., 1st sess., H.Rept. 95-68, March 11, 1977: "The funds in this program are used primarily to purchase materials to insulate the homes of low-income families."

21.

For example, if a southern state experiences 700 heating degree days in a year and a northern state experiences 7,000, the northern state has 10 times as many heating degree days as the southern state. However, if both numbers are squared, the northern state has 100 times as many heating degree days as the southern state.

22.

Community Services Administration, "Emergency Energy Conservation Program: Submission of Funding Plans," Federal Register, vol. 41, no. 208, October 27, 1976, p. 47096.

23.

Ibid.

24.

Ibid., pp. 47096-47097.

25.

Community Services Administration, "Special Crisis Intervention Program: General Information, Application Procedures, and Post Grant Requirements," Federal Register, vol. 42, no. 125, June 29, 1977, p. 33240.

26.

The formula was described in the Senate Appropriations Committee report to accompany H.R. 4877, the FY1977 Supplemental Appropriations Act, 95th Cong., 1st sess., S.Rept. 95-64, March 24, 1977. The CSA implemented this formula, which it described in guidance to the states. See the Federal Register, Ibid.

27.

Funds were appropriated through the FY1978 Supplemental Appropriations Act (P.L. 95-240) and in FY1979 through a continuing resolution (P.L. 95-482). In FY1978, Congress called the program Emergency Energy Assistance Program and in FY1979 called it the Crisis Intervention Program (excluding the word "Special" from the title).

28.

Community Services Administration, "Emergency Energy Conservation Program: Funding Requirements for Emergency Energy Assistance Program," Federal Register, vol. 43, no. 46, March 8, 1978, p. 9476.

29.

Community Services Administration, "Emergency Energy Conservation Program: Fiscal Year 1979 Crisis Intervention Program," Federal Register, vol. 43, no. 250, December 28, 1978, pp. 60466-60467.

30.

Congress appropriated $250 million for ECAP as part of an FY1980 Continuing Resolution (P.L. 96-123, referencing the FY1980 Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services and Education Appropriations bill, H.R. 4389), and appropriated an additional $150 million as part of the Department of the Interior Appropriations Act (P.L. 96-126).

31.

"Windfall Profits Tax." In CQ Almanac 1979, 35th ed., 609-32 (Washington, DC: Congressional Quarterly, 1980) http://library.cqpress.com/cqalmanac/cqal79-1184031.

32.

Senate Committee on Labor and Human Resources, Home Energy Assistance Act, report to accompany S. 1724, 96th Cong., 1st sess., S.Rept. 96-378, October 25, 1979, p. 12.

33.

See, for example, Sen. Russell Long, "Home Energy Assistance Act," Senate debate, Congressional Record, vol. 125, part 25 (November 14, 1979), p. 32278. "But the formula [as passed by the Senate Finance Committee] went a long way toward considering the total household expense for energy, not just heating."

34.

Sen. Rudy Boschwitz, "Home Energy Assistance Act," Senate debate, Congressional Record, vol. 125, part 25 (November 14, 1979), p. 32290. "I refer back to the committee report, which talks about the intent of the act being to 'offset high heating costs (and cooling where medically necessary) and that assistance not be a supplement of all utilities and their use to run appliances, etc.'... It is very clear that it is the intent of the Senate to help keep people warm."

35.

Sen. Edmund Muskie, "Home Energy Assistance Act," Senate debate, Congressional Record, vol. 125, part 25 (November 14, 1979), p. 32288. "I do not often do this. As a matter of fact, this is my 21st year in the Senate, and I can recall only one other time in which I have sought to use delay and extended debate to make a point and to achieve justice. I am not a filibusterer. If I did not believe deeply about this, I would not be standing here."

36.

The BLS determined the lower living standard income level through its annual family budgets, which it maintained from 1947 to 1981. At the time the LIEAP program was enacted, the BLS developed annual family budgets assuming three different standards of living: lower, intermediate, and higher. The budget was calculated using costs of consumer goods including food, housing, transportation, clothing, and health care (unlike the federal poverty guidelines, which are based on the amount of money needed to buy food). The budget was then adjusted for family size and the prices of goods in various cities throughout the country. See David S. Johnson, John M. Rogers, and Lucilla Tan, "A Century of Family Budgets in the United States," Monthly Labor Review, 124, no. 5 (May 2001): 28-45.

37.

Sen. Russell B. Long, "Home Energy Assistance Act," Senate debate, Congressional Record, vol. 125, part 25 (November 15, 1979), p. 32561. "This language was evolved in the Finance Committee. When the majority of the committee voted to exclude such items as air-conditioning and anything related to cooling a house and limited that formula to heating, this Senator contended that, if that were to be the case, there should be at least a minimum on which people could depend."

38.

According to the law, "The State is authorized to make grants to eligible households to meet the rising costs of cooling whenever the household establishes that such cooling is the result of medical need pursuant to standards established by the Secretary."

39.

House Committee on Appropriations, report to accompany H.R. 7998, the FY1981 Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education Appropriations Act, 96th Cong., 2nd sess., H. Rept. 96-1244, August 21, 1980, pp. 75-76.

40.

See, for example, Rep. David Obey, "Low Income Energy Assistance," House debate, Congressional Record, vol. 126, part 18 (August 27, 1980), p. 23505. "Last year the Congress adopted a formula which, very frankly, was unfair to the South. It provided a much larger amount of the money available than it should have to Northern States. In response to that, Senator Long, on the windfall profit tax legislation, adopted an amendment which, for the block grant portion of the program, provided phenomenal increases for the Southern States at the expense of the Northern States."

41.

"The Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program: An Analysis of the 1984 Reauthorization Issues," Coalition of Northeastern Governors, April 1984, p. 5.

42.

H.Rept. 96-1244 did not specify the years between which the increase in home heating expenditures should be measured. In implementing the formula, HHS measured the increase between 1978 and 1980.

43.

See, for example, Senate debate, Congressional Record, vol. 125, parts 24-25 (November 13-15, 1979), pp. 32082-32086, 32275-32293, 32558-32565, and 32576-32589.

44.

House debate, Congressional Record, vol. 126, part 18 (August 27, 1980), pp. 23502-23515.

45.

See, for example, Comments of Rep. Billy Tauzin, U.S. Congress, Joint Hearing before the Subcommittees of the Committees on Energy and Commerce, Education and Labor, and Ways and Means, Energy Costs and Low Income Energy Assistance, 98th Cong., 1st sess., February 24, 1983, pp. 119-120.

46.

Report of the Committee on Energy and Commerce to accompany H.R. 2439, the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Amendments of 1984, 98th Cong., 2nd sess., H.Rept. 98-139, Part 2, May 15, 1984, p. 13.

47.

Ibid., p. 4.

48.

Congressional Record, vol. 129, part 17 (September 13, 1983), p. 23877. The greatest increases in percentage allocations were for Florida at 51%, Texas at 44%, and Alabama at 37%. The states whose percentage allocations decreased the most were Vermont at 32%, North Dakota at 24%, and New Hampshire at 23%.

49.

"The Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program: An Analysis of the 1984 Reauthorization Issues," Coalition of Northeastern Governors, April 1984, p. 9.

50.

The final version of S. 2565 can be found in the Congressional Record, daily edition, vol. 130 (October 4, 1984), p. S13393.

51.

Congressional Record, daily edition, vol. 130 (October 4, 1984), pp. S13415-S13416.