a. Electric, Gas, and Water
Electric, gas, and private water companies 20 cannot shut off your service if you, your child, or someone else in your household is seriously ill and you cannot afford to pay your bills because of financial hardship.21 The utility companies must treat any medical condition that a doctor considers a serious illness as a serious illness. Serious illness can include psychiatric health problems such as major depression, anxiety disorder, Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), and Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). It can also include chronic physical health problems such as diabetes, asthma, and fibromyalgia. Or, it can be a temporary serious illness such as pneumonia or the flu.
To protect yourself against a shut-off, you should take the following steps as soon as possible:
Note: If the company refuses to honor the initial phone call from the doctor, physician’s assistant, nurse practitioner, or Board of Health, report this immediately to the DPU's Consumer Division and request that the DPU order the company to continue your service.
- Contact your doctor, physician’s assistant, nurse practitioner, or the local Board of Health and explain your situation. Ask them to immediately contact the utility company by phone and tell the company that you are or someone in your household is seriously ill. Make sure the doctor or Board of Health has your name and address to give to the utility.
- Within seven days of this initial phone contact, the doctor or Board of Health must send a letter to the utility company certifying the illness. See the sample letter (Form 6)and sample form letter (Form 7) that can be given to your doctor to fill out. Tell your doctor to include the words "serious illness" in the letter and to describe the illness. If it is a chronic or long-term illness, the doctor should include the words "chronic illness" in the letter. A letter that states that the illness is a "chronic illness" will result in 180 days of protection before you have to renew, while a letter that does not state this will result in only 90 days of protection. If you are uncomfortable having the utility know the type of illness, a letter from the medical practitioner that simply includes the words “serious illness” or “chronic” may be sufficient.
- Contact the company and ask them to send you a financial hardship form. You must complete and submit this form as proof that you are unable to pay the amount you owe.
- Your doctor, physician’s assistant, nurse practitioner, or the Board of Health will need to send a new letter at the end of the protected period (180 days for an illness certified as chronic and 90 days for an illness not certified as chronic). Serious illness letters can be renewed for as long as the illness persists.
b. Wireline Telephone
Some land line telephone customers are eligible for a similar "serious illness" protection.22 However, the doctor's letter must be renewed every 30 days even if the illness is specified as chronic, with a maximum of two renewals (a maximum total of 90 days of protection). By the end of the protection period, you must either pay the total amount owed or enter into a payment plan with the company in order to prevent shut-off.
You can also receive up to 30 days of protection when there is a "personal emergency" in which lack of access to a phone endangers the health or safety of a household member.23
A personal emergency can include domestic violence or threats from a past abuser, or any other crisis or threat that requires access to a phone. If you need protection from shut-off because of an emergency, you must write a letter to the company explaining your emergency and why you are unable to pay your bills. You should also call the company and alert a Customer Service representative to your situation. By the end of the 30-day protection period, you must either pay the amount that you owe or enter into a payment plan with the company.
If you have difficulty getting a phone company to protect your account from shut-off based on a serious illness or personal emergency, call the DTC Consumer Division. Even though there are regulations that set certain time limits as to when the telephone company is required to give protection, if you need protection you should try to persuade the company to extend the protection period.