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Highlanders can tap into £4m support fund for help with rising fuel bills


By Calum MacLeod

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Rising fuel costs are putting more financial pressure on households in the Highlands and across the UK.
Rising fuel costs are putting more financial pressure on households in the Highlands and across the UK.

More than 400 charities, organisations and advisers have signed up to refer Highlanders and other Scots struggling with their energy bills to a £4 million support fund.

The Scottish Government scheme is being administered by national advice service Advice Direct Scotland, and ‘referral partners’ can still register to help their clients hit by the cost-of-living crisis.

The Home Heating Support Fund is open until March 31 and applications can be made on behalf of individuals by referral partners through www.homeheatingadvice.scot.

Charities, housing associations, and community organisations which provide energy or debt advice, are encouraged to register online so that they can seek funding for people they support.

Targeted funding from the Home Heating Support Fund will reflect each individual’s circumstances, with extra support available for households where one person is over 75, living with a disability or illness, and/or living in a remote or island community.

Payments start at £100, rising to £1000 to clear outstanding debt, with the money paid directly to suppliers on behalf of the household.

Eligibility is based on households which are ‘self-rationing’ their energy, meaning those who are deliberately limiting their energy use so that they can afford to spend money on other goods or services.

Payments can be for electricity, oil, gas, LPG, coal or other forms of heating, and are made directly to the supplier.

Individuals cannot apply directly to the fund.

Andrew Bartlett
Andrew Bartlett

Andrew Bartlett, chief executive of Advice Direct Scotland, said: “Since launching the scheme, more than 400 referral partners have registered and we’re receiving hundreds of applications on behalf of their clients who are struggling with energy bills.

“This demonstrates the scale of the cost-of-living crisis.

“But we know there are more people out there who need support, so we encourage any charities, housing associations, or community organisations which provide energy or debt advice to register with us.

“This fund will prove absolutely crucial in ensuring that households who have been hit the hardest can continue to heat their homes and feed their families.”

THAW Orkney, a charitable organisation that assists fuel poor households, has been able to secure individual grants averaging around £350 to dozens of households since the fund opened in December, making payments directly to people's energy providers or supporting clients with weekly top-up texts.

THAW Orkney community support officer Craig Nisbet.
THAW Orkney community support officer Craig Nisbet.

Craig Nisbet, a community support officer at THAW Orkney, told of the huge difference the fund has made to his customers and encouraged other organisations to register to become referral partners.

He said: "Having access to this fund this year means I am making some wonderful phone calls where I'm getting to tell people 'your child will be warm this winter'.

"When we're calling these people, you can feel their shoulders drop, you can feel their tension disappear. There's so much else to worry about at the moment and this is one less weight on them.

"As a small, third sector organisation working locally, with a small staff number and limited resources, we're delighted we have been able to bring such a fantastic amount of support into a small, rural community through this scheme.

"We've seen families and households hugely impacted by this where they know they are not going to be cold in the immediate future.

"If there are organisations in other small communities that know people who are struggling and don't know how to access the funds to help them, becoming a referral partner can give you access to life-changing support for people. It will get people through the winter."

Rachael Taylor (31) is among the many householders who have received help from THAW Orkney.

“My bills in winter absolutely sky-rocket, they go from around £100 a month to £250 a month," she said.

“I don’t have my heating turned up, I have very little heating on in my house and tend to grab a jumper and a couple of blankets when it gets chilly.

“I’ve been dealing with THAW since last year when I had problems with my electricity, and they’ve been wonderful in signposting what’s available.

“The only way I could afford to pay for these bills would be to not put fuel in my car, which when you live in a remote or a rural area is really important.

“THAW told me they could support me through the Home Heating Support Fund which has been a massive help. The £350 is more than a month and a half of electricity for me.

“I honestly don’t know what I would have done without it. It puts my head above water financially and means I don’t have to stress over where it’s all going.”

Read more: Inverness debt counselling centre for Christians Against Poverty (CAP) reaches out to provide free advice for people struggling to meet soaring costs of fuel and food bills


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