Passing The Full NY HEAT Act Essential To Protect Bronx Residents From Sky-High Energy Costs
Across New York State, households are tired of seeing their energy bills rise—especially when families are already struggling to pay for rent, groceries, and medical necessities. Some parts of New York are struggling worse than others. In the Capital District region, more than one in five residents are energy burdened. And in the Bronx, Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie’s home turf, families are dealing with the twin burdens of high energy costs and skyrocketing asthma rates.
Speaker Heastie has an opportunity this session to address both burdens at once. The NY HEAT Act, which would cap the cost of monthly energy bills at 6% of a household’s income and help increase the adoption of highly efficient heat pumps, is essential to keeping energy bills low and helping residents breathe cleaner air. Further, this bill would help protect residents from untenable energy bill hikes today and in the future by ending outdated laws that subsidize the expansion of fossil fuel infrastructure.
Rising energy costs are a real threat to affordability today in the Bronx. According to a 2023 report, 65% of residents can’t afford to live in the Bronx, where the cost of living has increased by 123% since 2000. More than a third of Bronx residents grapple with high energy bills, a trend that will only continue as utilities continue to get the green light to raise rates for unnecessary fossil fuel spending. By capping utility bills at 6% of a household’s annual income, the NY HEAT Act could save the average energy-burdened Bronx household $135 per month – giving people back $1,620 each year for groceries, childcare, prescriptions, and more.
As bills skyrocket, a growing body of research shows that the air pollution that comes from burning fossil fuels in buildings exacerbates health problems across the state, and nearly 19% of childhood asthma cases in New York can be attributed to using gas stoves in the home. These health impacts aren’t felt equally. People of color in New York are exposed to 2.6 times as much outdoor particulate matter (PM2.5) pollution from residential gas appliances as white New Yorkers. By investing in modern clean heating systems like heat pumps for all, the NY HEAT Act will help New Yorkers swap out the fossil fuel heating equipment that pollutes the air we breathe, indoors and out.