Clean energy transition
Low Income Single Family Rehabilitation Program
To relieve the energy burden for low-income participants and overcome the up-front costs for home upgrade programs, Frontier Energy partners with Community Development Commissions to connect their clients to local programs.
Approach
Historically, whole building programs attract participants from upper-class and upper-middle-class demographics due to their high cost. To relieve the energy burden for low-income participants and overcome the up-front costs for home upgrade programs, Frontier Energy partners with Community Development Commissions to connect their clients to local programs. Through outreach, contractor training, and program requirement coordination, 88 low-income households upgraded an average 11.75% whole home energy savings. The program issued $200,000 in incentives. In addition, 19 contractors participated in the program and 5 people were trained to become BPI Building Analysts.
Frontier Energy:
- Worked with clients to understand their eligibility for specific energy efficiency measures and how those measures could be integrated into the rehabilitation work on their homes.
- Arranged for funding through a local credit union to provide a low-interest, no-cost loan for the work.
- Conducted multilingual outreach to residents and contractors.
- Encouraged contractors qualified to participate in programs to become Participating Contractors.
- Conducted contractor training.
Project Team
Nancy Barba