ALBANY, NY (04/21/2025) (readMedia)-- As winter heating season ends, a new report shows the NY HEAT Act would have saved the 1 in 4 New York families struggling to pay their energy bills an average of $1,632 last year if lawmakers passed and implemented the bill. The report, compiled by Spring Street Climate Fund, relies on data analysis from think tank Switchbox, and shows how much energy-burdened families would have saved on average in each region of the state last year:
The NY HEAT Act would limit the amount households are forced to pay for heat, alleviate rate hikes happening across the state, and save families who need help most an average of $136 each month on their bills. The Senate included the bill in their one-house budget - now it's on the Assembly to deliver for families in need.
View the report from Spring Street Climate Fund here.
"Assembly Members claim they want to save New Yorkers money, but their continued inaction is costing families thousands of dollars. Rate hikes are making it worse. The Assembly needs to pass the NY HEAT Act now, or watch more families forced to choose between eating and heating every winter," said John Raskin, President of Spring Street Climate Fund.
Background
As of September 2024, approximately 1 in 7 households in New York was two months or more behind on their energy bills. This crisis is impacting more than 1.2 million families, who are collectively in debt more than $1.3 billion dollars to utilities. According to a recent report from AGREE, since 2022, every major gas utility in New York State has raised the cost of energy for their customers:
The Home Energy Affordable Transition Act, also known as the NY HEAT Act, will reduce the expansion of New York's outdated and dangerous fracked gas system and save the 1 in 4 New Yorkers who struggle to pay their energy bills an average of $136 every month. The bill modernizes archaic state laws that force New Yorkers to pay hundreds of millions of dollars each year to subsidize new fracked gas hookups and pipelines. It would limit households' energy burdens and would allow utilities to provide cheaper and clean heating alternatives at no additional cost to customers – a win-win for New Yorkers and the environment.
The NY HEAT Act will also free New Yorkers from the gas mandate (also known as "the utility obligation to serve gas"), an antiquated state law that locks utilities, and consequently the vast majority of New Yorkers, into the dirty, expensive, aging gas system for heat. Because of the gas mandate, one home that wants to stay on the gas system can be the deciding factor for an entire neighborhood that would otherwise have the opportunity to receive cheaper, cleaner heating alternatives from their utility. The NY HEAT Act would require utilities to provide easy access to the most affordable and healthier heating options for their families.
According to a Siena Poll, New Yorkers agree by an overwhelming 58% to 26% that the legislature should pass the NY HEAT Act. Support for the NY HEAT Act is popular across party lines, with 67% of Democrats, 47% of Republicans, and 55% of independents agreeing it should pass. The bill is also popular with 60% of upstate voters, 55% of union households, and across income groups. 74% of Black voters and 70% of Latino voters also support the legislation. An even larger share, 51 - 17%, said that lawmakers did not do enough to improve the quality of life during last year's legislative session.
State action against climate change is crucial as Trump takes office and vows to go all-in on fossil fuels. 2024 was the hottest year on record, and New Yorkers experienced wildfires, flooding, and tornadoes. The NY HEAT Act will help New York fight climate change and it will protect New Yorkers from an unpredictable Trump administration by helping to stabilize heat and energy prices.