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HomeMy WebLinkAboutMemo - Read Before Packet - 11/1/2022 - Memorandum From Heather Young Re: Updated Iqap Presentation For Council Meeting 11/1/22 - Agenda Item 20Utilities electric · stormwater · wastewater · water 222 Laporte Ave. PO Box 580 Fort Collins, CO 80522-0580 970.212.2900 V/TDD: 711 utilities@fcgov.com fcgov.com/utilities M E M O R A N D U M DATE: Oct. 27, 2022 TO: Mayor and City Councilmembers FROM: Heather Young, Utilities Public Engagement Manager THROUGH: Kelly DiMartino, City Manager Tyler Marr, Interim Deputy City Manager Kendall Minor, Utilities Executive Director RE: Updated IQAP Presentation for Council Meeting 11/1/22 Fort Collins Utilities staff will be attending the City Council Meeting on Tuesday, November 1. The attached is an updated version of our Income-Qualified Assistance Program (IQAP) presentation. It will be replacing the version included in the printed and published agenda. CC: Gretchen Stanford, Deputy Director Utilities, Customer Connections Shannon Ash, Affordability Programs Manager Utilities Income-Qualified Assistance Program 11-01-2022 Pilot Wrap-Up and Program Adoption Discussion Heather Young, Sr. Community Engagement Manager Shannon Ash, Utilities Affordability Program Manager 2Why We’re Here Today • Seeking Council approval to make the Income-Qualified Assistance Program (IQAP) an adopted program (yes, adopt ordinance or no, don’t adopt) • Follow up on existing program structure August: Internal Utilities Communication September/October: Boards and Commissions Communication October 20: Council Finance Committee November 1: Council presentation 2022 Timeline 3Strategic Alignment •Neighborhood Livability and Social Health (NLSH) 1.3 • Improve accessibility of City and community programs to low- and moderate-income residents and increase participation in services to eligible income-qualified residents. •Our Climate Future • Big Move 7 – Healthy Affordable Housing: Everyone has healthy, stable housing they can afford • Big Move 12 – 100% Renewable Energy: Everyone in the community receives affordable, reliable, 100% renewable electricity, including from local sources Background 5IQAP History 2013-2018: Low-income program discussions; request from Council to explore further 2018: IQAP launches as a pilot program 2021: Pilot set to expire, Council approves pilot extension until 12/31/22 2022: Decide on IQAP program 6 Payment Assistance Efficient Home Efficient Practices Lower Utility Costs How we help income-qualified customers reduce utility costs: Utilities Affordability Programs 7Payment Assistance Medical Assistance Program (Discounted Rate) Income-Qualified Assistance Program ~23% rate reduction on electric, water, and wastewater services Customers are approved through the Low-income Energy Assistance Program (LEAP) Customers are automatically enrolled/renewed in IQAP based on LEAP approval Customers must be at 60% State Median Income or lowerPayment Assistance 8Income-Qualified Assistance Program Impact •Assumes a 10% increase in program participation for 2023 and a 15% increase in 2024. •Estimated total reach is 10,000 households using a city-wide poverty rate of ~16%, based on 2021 Census Bureau data combined with controlling for the student population in Fort Collins (City Rebates Eval Report, 2019). •At present, there are nearly 70,000 households in our electric service area. 755 759 1,727 1,900 2,185 0 500 1,000 1,500 2,000 2,500 2020 Participation 2021 Participation 2022 Participation 2023 Estimate 2024 Estimate IQAP Participants Program Update 10Auto-enroll 759 1,727 2021 2022 Average IQAP Participation • • One less application for customers to fill out In 2021, we removed the IQAP application. Now, customers enroll in LEAP and staff enrolls them in IQAP. • Less staff time to process • 87% of auto-enroll customers are satisfied or very satisfied in the ease of auto-enrollment 11IQAP Impact Energy Use Analysis • Energy use from auto-enroll IQAP participants initially increased by 2.9% on average (220 kWh/year). • This increase likely reflects that households are no longer as worried about paying their energy bills and are choosing to keep their homes at a more comfortable temperature. • By year three of enrollment, both IQAP and non-IQAP participants had similar energy use. (20) (10) - 10 20 30 40 50 60 Dec-16 Apr-17 Aug-17 Dec-17 Apr-18 Aug-18 Dec-18 Apr-19 Aug-19 Dec-19 Mar-20 Jul-20 Nov-20 Mar-21 Jul-21 Nov-21 Mar-22 Jul-22 Nov-22 IQAP Participant Monthly kWh DifferencePandemic startsIQAP starts 12IQAP Impact "The IQAP program is an integral and essential part of our lives. Being on a fixed income is difficult and this program makes it easier to continue to live in this beautiful city we have called home for many decades. We use the money we save each month to buy essentials such as food, insurance, fuel, clothing, shoes. We do not waste it or spend it frivolously. Thank you for offering the IQAP." Customer Survey Annual survey opportunity for IQAP customers, questions included: • What has been the biggest benefit of receiving the IQAP utility bill discount? • Is there anything you would like to change about the Income-Qualified Assistance Program? Benefit responses included: • increased quality of life • being able to save money for other expenses • decreased stress with paying bills • being educated on ways to conserve energy • budgeting on a fixed income When asked about changes they would like to see to the program, a larger discount was listed repeatedly. 13Rate Reduction • In 2021, Council requested that we evaluate whether a 23% rate reduction is still sufficient • Methodology: Aim for low-income customers to spend a similar percentage on utilities as someone who makes 100% of area median income • Takes LEAP benefit and gas bills into consideration • Recommendation: Increase rate reduction to 25% moving forward, evaluate every 3-5 years Why? Since 2018, utility bills have increased at a higher rate than income. 14Annual Financial Impact *Based on 1,727 enrolled participants. Prior projections estimated that 2,000 customers would be enrolled during the pilot phase. Total cost is nominal (0.3% of $138M), would minimally impact other Utilities customers. 23% rate reduction (current) 25% rate reduction (proposed) Average annual discount/customer $220.50 $240 Average annual Utilities cost* $392,000 $415,000 With a 25% rate reduction, customers would save an average of $20/month on their Utilities bill. 15Utility Purposes and Benefits •Creates parity within the residential rate class as to the percentage of household income committed to utility bills, compensating for income differences between low-income households and households that earn 100% of AMI • The nominal financial impact of not recovering a portion of participants’ monthly utility bills is offset by administrative efficiencies, including: •Timely billing payment, allowing Utilities to avoid incurring the costs of disconnection, collections, or payment plans • Increased participation in conservation programs that make low-income customer dwellings more efficient and advance regional efforts to reduce utility costs across the residential rate class •Extended reach and cumulative benefits of Utilities conservation and efficiency education that affects user habits in households that historically do not participate in these efforts • As customers continue participation, combined program education and incentives build trusted community relationships and provide more access to energy usage data and building insights that in turn allows Utilities to pursue environmental goals more aggressively. Utilities programs are guided by Charter Article XII, Sec. 6 of code. Question for Discussion 17Why Utilities Rate Reductions Are Needed • Additional factors: •Energy costs increase as we work towards carbon neutrality •Climate change = hotter temps = more energy use 1) https://www.aceee.org/energy-burden 2) https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-08-23/can-t-pay-utility-bills-20-million-us-homes-behind-on-payments-facing-shutoffs •Utility costs continue to increase at a faster rate than income, locally and nationally. • Some customers are on fixed incomes, especially seniors. • Inflation means people have to spend more of their income on basic needs like utilities. • Without access to heating, cooling, and water, unpaid utility bills can have dire health impacts. • “It’s higher prices. It’s heat waves and increasing needs for energy.” (2) •Income disparity and energy inequity exists in our community. Contributing factors include race, ethnicity and low- quality housing. • “High energy burdens and energy insecurity are well-documented and pervasive national issues. Even in 2017, a time of economic prosperity, well over one-quarter of all U.S. households experienced a high energy burden.” (1) Should the Income-Qualified Assistance Program become an adopted Utilities program? 18Summary • Adopting the Income-Qualified Assistance Program: • Aligns with existing priorities and the role of a municipal utility. • Invests in our community – the total financial cost is small compared to the customer and community impact. • Would have minimal impact to future rate increases, given current and projected participation numbers and a 25% rate reduction. • Is a responsible use of rate payer dollars because IQAP builds on existing benefits through LEAP, leveraging this partnership to help share the cost. 19Question for Council • Should the Income-Qualified Assistance Program become an adopted Utilities program? • Yes, adopt ordinance • No THANK YOU! 21Median Income Explained Number in Household Income Limit 1 $33,109 2 $43,297 3 $53,484 4 $63,672 5 $73,860 6 $84,047 Number in Household Income Limit 1 $45,120 2 $51,540 3 $57,960 4 $64,380 5 $69,540 6 $74,700 Colorado State Median Income (60%) - 2022 Larimer County Area Median Income (60%) - 2022 According to the 2020 Census, 16%of Fort Collins residents live in poverty. census.gov/quickfacts/fortcollinscitycolorado Outreach •Engagement • Monthly Utilities Insights newsletter • Customer surveys • Direct customer engagement at events and through targeted outreach • Participation in efficiency programs •Outreach • Increased outreach for the 2022-2023 LEAP season. Events planned at the following: -La Familia -CSU (staff and off-campus students) -Northside Aztlan Community Center -Senior Center -Old Town Library -CARE Housing 22 *Materials are also translated into Spanish Group Outcome Energy Board – June 25, Sept. 8 Supportive of this program Affordable Housing Board – Oct. 6 Supportive of this program Council Finance Committee – Oct. 20 Water Commission – Oct. 20 Supportive of this program 23Boards, Commissions and Committee Feedback 24Utilities Affordability Programs One-Time Payment Assistance • Payment Assistance Fund • Utilities Pandemic Assistance • Neighbor to Neighbor Funding Reduced Rates • Income-Qualified Assistance Program • Medical Assistance Program • Digital Equity Rate Retrofit Programs • Larimer County Conservation Corps Water and Energy Program • Colorado Affordable Residential Energy Outreach • Utilities Insights Newsletter • Direct customer engagement • Outreach to agencies 25Payment Assistance Fund • Can receive funding once per season (Oct. 1 – Sept. 30) • Bills must be past due • 80% of Area Median Income • Energy Outreach Colorado matches funds 1:1 • Contact partner agencies to receive funding: • Neighbor to Neighbor – 970-484-7498 • Catholic Charities – 970-484-5010 • La Familia/The Family Center – 970-221-1615 • Discover Goodwill – 1-888-775-5327 • CSU (students and staff only) – 970-491-8051 Payment Assistance Fund (One-Time Assistance) One-Time Payment Assistance • Payment Assistance Fund Funding source Where to apply Customers served Number of customers served (2020/2021) Amount distributed (2020/2021) Average per customer Utilities funds remaining Utilities Pandemic Assistance Fort Collins Utilities Residential and commercial 647 $296,386 $458 $466,712 Consolidated Appropriations Act Neighbor to Neighbor Residential, income-qualified, renters 898 $261,734 $291 ? Payment Assistance Fund – Energy Outreach Colorado La Familia Neighbor to Neighbor Catholic Charities Discover Goodwill CSU Residential, income-qualified 1,443 $562,380 $390 $333,961 CARES Act Fort Collins Utilities Residential and commercial 1,423 $575,910 $405 $0 Total 3,528 $1.4 million $405.71 $1.1 million 26Financial Assistance During Covid 27Reduced Rate Programs Medical Assistance Program (Discounted Rate) Income-Qualified Assistance Program Medical Assistance Program Digital Equity Rate Launched in 2018 with Time-of-Day electric rates Launched in 2012 Launched with Connexion ~23% rate reduction ~23% rate reduction $19.95/month rate Qualifications: • Approved through the Low-income Energy Assistance Program (LEAP) • Automatically enrolled/renewed in IQAP based on LEAP approval • 60% State Median Income Qualifications: • Medically necessary electric equipment or air conditioning • Physician certification • 60% Area Median Income Qualifications: • 60% Area Median Income Reduced Rates • Income-Qualified Assistance Program • Medical Assistance Program • Digital Equity Rate 28Equipment Repair/Replacement and Efficiency Programs LCCC Water and Energy Program (Basic Retrofits) Retrofit Programs Larimer County Conservation Corps Water and Energy Program Colorado Affordable Residential Energy Basic inspection of home, appliances, windows, toilets and heating/cooling system Comprehensive upgrades available for air sealing, insulation, HVAC, windows and appliances Install efficiency measures Assessment and efficiency measures installed Partnership with Larimer County, Loveland utilities Partnership with Energy Outreach Colorado, Xcel Energy, Platte River Power Authority Annual program targets: • 350 assessments • 175,000 kWh • 1.9M gal water Annual program targets: • 40 upgrades • 15,000 kWh 29Get FoCo App 30Charter Requirement and IQAP Purpose Charter Article XII, Sec. 6: All net operating revenues of the city’s utilities shall be held within the respective utility’s fund and may be expended only for renewals, replacements, extraordinary repairs, extensions, improvements, enlargements and betterments to such utility, or other specific utility purpose determine by the Council to be beneficial to the ratepayers of said utility. 31Arrears Analysis Process Step Cost Send disconnect notice (Printing and mailing) $0.60 Actual disconnect $6.06 Collect payment $5.15 Reconnect service once payment is made $6.06 Send customers to collections $6.06 Total cost $23.93 • When we avoid disconnecting a customer, the utility saves ~$24/avoided disconnect in printing, mailing, and staff costs. 32LIHWAP Low-Income Household Water Assistance Program (LIHWAP) provides funds to assist low- income households with water and wastewater bills. • The City of Fort Collins is not able to participate in this program due to our current billing system. • Funds are required to only be applied to the water portion of the customer’s bill and our current system does not allow payments to be separated per service. • A new billing system is in the RFP process and will hopefully include the ability to apply payments to specific utility services. Colorado’s LIHWAP, which began in November 2021, is a temporary, emergency program managed and operated at a state level by the Colorado Department of Public Health, where the state is responsible for processing benefit payments to water service providers. Colorado’s LIHWAP provides a one-time benefit payment for a maximum benefit amount of $2,000. To determine the benefit level, Colorado will consider the amount past due to continue service or the total amount to be paid to the water service vendor to re-establish water service by bringing the household debt balance to zero. • Enrollment in IQAP provides a year-round discounted rate on water and wastewater. 33LEAP and EBT Cards The Low-income Energy Assistance Program (LEAP) program works to keep communities warm during the winter (November through April) by providing assistance for heating costs, equipment repair and/or replacement of inoperable heating tools. While the program is not intended to pay the entire cost of home heating, it aims to help alleviate some of the burdens that come with Colorado's colder months. • The City of Fort Collins billing system does not allow for payments to be applied to specific portions of a customer’s bill. • Customers receive an EBT card in the mail for the benefit amount, withdraw the money from the card, and apply it to their bill. • Customer Care and Technology is requesting to implement a system that would allow EBT cards to be processed as a form of payment. 34IQAP Customers Legend: • Blue area: Light and Power service area • Pink area: Water service area • Purple area: Both Light and Power and Water service areas • Green/yellow icons: IQAP customers • Dark blue icons: MAP customers 35Mobile Home Park Support For most mobile home parks in Fort Collins, the property manager/owner is the utility customer for water utilities such as stormwater, wastewater, and drinking water, and the resident is the customer for electric. In this case, a park will receive a bill from the utility company for the water services, which they may choose to then re-bill to residents or include these utilities as a part of the monthly rent. Residents that are electric customers will receive their own separate electricity bill from their provider. If residents are charged individually for water, the following rules apply: Each month, property managers must provide water billing information for the entire mobile home park’s monthly water bill, amount owed to the utility provider, and amount paid by park management. Property managers must also provide the formula used to calculate the amount each mobile home resident owes for water. No additional administrative fees for water utility billing are allowed. If water is included in the rent as an amenity, there are currently no rules regarding transparency of water billing. We are exploring a rebate program to assist residents with the water portion of their bill. 36Utilities Pandemic Assistance Residential Commercial 1033 customers 29 customers $398,390 total funding spent $41,488 total funding spent $386 - average per customer $1,431 - average per customer Fort Collins Utilities received $469,000 from Platte River Power Authority and $381,550 from the American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) to directly support our customers in need as a result of the pandemic. As of October 18, 2022,the following has been allocated: A new program was developed to reach property managers, who will be able to apply for these funds to cover inactive accounts that have been unpaid. 37PUC The current PUC requirement on regulated public utilities is as follows: Utilities must offer a Percentage of Income Payment Program (PIPP)that is designed to ensure consumers are not paying more than six percent of their monthly income on electric and natural gas bills ... The income threshold for eligibility for the program sits at 185 percent of the Federal Poverty Level, or 60 percent of the State Median Income. In Colorado, the State Median Income is $100,760 for a four-member household, making that family qualified at $60,456. 38The Utilities Affordability Programs Team