Energy Poverty

The Utility Assistance Gap: Why NJ Programs Still Leave Families One Bill Away from Crisis

New Jersey’s energy-assistance system keeps thousands of families from losing service — but the numbers show a growing gap between what a typical household owes and what help programs can realistically cover. That gap is where shutoffs, debt, and health harms begin.

March 25, 2026 Love of Humanity Research Team 8 min read

There’s a common assumption that if a family can’t pay their utility bill, “there are programs for that.” In New Jersey, that’s partly true — and partly the problem.

Programs like LIHEAP (the federal Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program) and the state’s Universal Service Fund (USF) are real lifelines. But they were designed for a different era of bills. When energy costs rise faster than wages, the assistance system doesn’t fail in one dramatic moment. It frays slowly: first a skipped payment, then late fees, then arrears, then a shutoff notice — and eventually a crisis that costs far more to fix.

249,714
NJ households received LIHEAP bill-payment assistance in FY2024.
13.4%
Average share of an annual household energy bill covered by LIHEAP in NJ (FY2024).
6%
USF’s goal: make combined gas + electric costs no more than 6% of annual income for eligible households.
39%
NJ households below the ALICE Threshold in 2023 — households that can’t afford the basics in their county.

All figures above are from public program reporting and ALICE financial-hardship research; see sources at the end.

1) The math behind “help”

LIHEAP is frequently the first stop when a household is behind on heat or medically necessary cooling. In FY2024, New Jersey provided LIHEAP bill-payment assistance to 249,714 households. But average assistance was $262 per year, while the average annual energy bill for recipient households was $1,955 — meaning LIHEAP covered about 13.4% of the typical bill.

That percentage matters because it captures the real experience of need. A one-time $262 credit can stabilize a household that is only slightly behind — but it is rarely enough to erase the kind of arrears that build up after a job loss, a medical emergency, or a winter of high heating demand.

When the average bill is nearly $2,000 a year, covering 13% helps — but it doesn’t solve affordability.

2) Crisis prevention is the silent work

Utility shutoffs are not just an inconvenience. They trigger a chain reaction: spoiled food, unsafe indoor temperatures, missed workdays, and higher risk for seniors and medically fragile neighbors. The good news is that assistance does prevent disconnections.

In FY2024, LIHEAP benefits in New Jersey prevented loss of service 20,954 times and restored service 1,425 times for households that had already been disconnected or had run out of deliverable fuel. Those are families who stayed safe because help arrived in time.

But these counts also reveal a deeper issue: prevention is measurable because the threat is constant. If tens of thousands of shutoff events are being avoided each year, then tens of thousands of households are routinely living on the edge of disconnection.

3) The affordability gap is wider than “poverty”

Energy hardship does not stop at the federal poverty line. United For ALICE’s 2025 update on New Jersey shows why: in 2023, 10% of NJ households (359,444) were below the Federal Poverty Level, and another 29% (1,018,576) were ALICE — earning above the poverty line but still unable to afford the basics in their county. Combined, 39% (1,378,020) of NJ households were below the ALICE Threshold.

That’s a reality donors and policymakers often miss: a household can be “too high income” for many supports and still be one bill away from crisis — especially in high-cost counties like Monmouth, where housing and transportation costs are high and seasonal energy needs (air conditioning in summer, heat in winter) are nonnegotiable.

4) Energy burden isn’t evenly distributed

Energy burden — the share of income spent on home energy — is one of the simplest ways to see inequity. Rutgers’ New Jersey State Policy Lab has documented that while the average energy burden across New Jersey is around 2–3% of income, low-income communities can face energy burdens around 13%.

The same analysis shows that 68% of census tracts with low median household incomes have a high energy burden (4% and above). When energy costs consume that much of a paycheck, families cut back elsewhere: food, prescriptions, childcare, transportation. The bill doesn’t just strain a budget; it reshapes the entire household’s health and stability.

5) What’s the role for a local nonprofit?

This is where Love of Humanity’s mission — climate energy relief for families — becomes both practical and urgent. Assistance programs are essential, but they are not designed to be a full affordability solution. The local role is to close gaps quickly and flexibly:

In Monmouth County, where families can look stable on paper yet still struggle with hidden costs, that kind of targeted support can prevent a shutoff from becoming a housing crisis — or a medical emergency.

6) A donor’s question: “Does my gift really matter?”

Yes — because the biggest danger zone is often not total need, but timing. A household can qualify for help and still lose service if their shutoff date arrives before an application is processed. A small, rapid-response grant can keep power on long enough for larger programs to do their work.

And because energy burden is so tightly linked to health, a quick intervention is more than financial — it’s preventive care.

What you can do today

Donate: Your gift helps us provide rapid, flexible energy relief when families are at the cliff’s edge.

Volunteer: Join our team to help neighbors navigate utility-assistance applications and gather required documents.

Share: Post this report and tag a friend who cares about climate justice, affordability, and community resilience.

Sources

  • LIHEAP Performance Management (U.S. Administration for Children & Families), “FY 2024 Executive Summary — NJ” (accessed 2026-03-25): https://liheappm.acf.gov/sites/default/files/private/pm/exec-summaries/2024/FY2024ExecutiveSummary-NJ.pdf
  • NJ Board of Public Utilities, “Universal Service Fund (USF)” (accessed 2026-03-25): https://www.nj.gov/bpu/residential/assistance/usf.html
  • United For ALICE / United Ways of New Jersey, “The State of ALICE in New Jersey: 2025 Update on Financial Hardship” (accessed 2026-03-25): https://www.unitedforalice.org/Attachments/AllReports/state-of-alice-report-New-Jersey-2025.pdf
  • Rutgers New Jersey State Policy Lab, “Aspects of Energy Inequity in New Jersey” (published 2025-03-18; accessed 2026-03-25): https://policylab.rutgers.edu/publication/aspects-of-energy-inequity-in-new-jersey/