Low-Income Energy Assistance Program Keeps North Carolina Families Warm | Eastern North Carolina Now

Low-income North Carolina families struggling with winter heating bills may apply for help through an assistance program run through county departments of social services

ENCNow
Press Release:

    RALEIGH     Low-income North Carolina families struggling with winter heating bills may apply for help through an assistance program run through county departments of social services.

    More than $9 million remains available to help eligible households pay their heating bills through the state-administered Low-Income Energy Assistance Program (LIEAP). The federally funded program helps keep families safe and healthy by providing a one-time payment directly to the utility company.

    Last winter, more than 120,000 families benefited from $38 million in assistance. The frigid start to 2018 that brought several inches of snow to most of the state left many North Carolina households reeling from unusually high heating costs.

    "These funds assist families who have experienced an unusually high heating cost this year," said Wayne Black, director of the Division of Social Services. "We're thankful for the opportunity to help families stay warm during the winter season."

    County departments of social services are accepting applications for the program through March 31 or until funds are exhausted. More than $27 million in LIEAP funds have been distributed to families across the state since December.

    For more information and to apply for assistance, people should contact their county department of social services: http://www.ncdhhs.gov/divisions/dss/local-county-social-services-offices.

      NC Department of Health and Human Services

  • 2001 Mail Service Center
  • Raleigh, NC 27699-2001
  • news@dhhs.nc.gov(919) 855-4840

Go Back


Leave a Guest Comment

Your Name or Alias
Your Email Address ( your email address will not be published )
Enter Your Comment ( text only please )




Remarks by LTG H.R. McMaster at the Munich Security Conference Statewide, Government, State and Federal Press Briefing by Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin on North Korea Sanctions


HbAD0

Latest State and Federal

"This highly provocative move was designed to interfere with our counter narco-terror operations."
Charlie Kirk, 31 years of age, who was renowned as one of the most important and influential college speakers /Leaders in many decades; founder of Turning Point USA, has been shot dead at Utah Valley University.
The Trump administration took actions against Harvard related to the anti-Israel protests that roiled its campus.
In addition, Sheikha Al-Thani has "taken to promoting Mamdani’s mayoral candidacy on social media, boosting news of favorable polling on Instagram"
Raleigh, N.C. — The State Board of Elections has reached a legal settlement with the United States Department of Justice in United States of America v. North Carolina State Board of Elections.
For this particular Hollywood love story, there was no girl bossing, no modern twists, no glorification of living in sin forever.

HbAD1

National attention is intensifying after the gruesome murder of a Ukrainian refugee on a Charlotte light rail on Aug. 22.
Trump is different from most politicians. He doesn’t feel he owes these corporations anything.
In Australia, Canada, and Europe, free speech on asylum, migration, and national identity is increasingly being curtailed by law.
The first three episodes of the current season of "South Park" have hammered President Donald Trump and other GOP targets.
16 days after Hamas October 7 massacre, Turkish President Erdogan said Hamas was “not a terrorist organization … [but rather] a liberation group"
"I’m ready to help defend President Trump’s America First agenda, Texas families, and individual liberty."

HbAD2

The Democrats turned our own census into a weapon against us. It's time to disarm them permanently.
As tariffs settle in, John Deere, one of the nation’s largest manufacturers of heavy farm equipment, continues to suffer financial losses due to tariff costs.
Not everything has to be reduced to the partisan trenches.
"Accountability is coming. Federal funds will not be used to poison the minds of the next generation."
Plaintiffs in a $16 million class-action lawsuit against Raleigh challenged the city's legal tactics in a new state Supreme Court filing.
Why are Donald Trump’s anti-crime measures so popular with people who don’t want to be killed?

HbAD3

 
Back to Top