UMaine Helps Mainers Budget, Connect with Resources in Face of Rising Energy Costs

Contact: George Criner at (207) 581-3151; Kristen Andresen at (207) 581-3742

ORONO — In the face of falling temperatures and rising energy prices, a University of Maine School of Economics program will help individuals and businesses make ends meet. The Financial Education Initiative will teach Mainers how evaluate their finances; create and stick to a budget; and connect with organizations and programs that can provide heating and financial assistance.

UMaine economics professor George Criner, along with master’s students Hugh Stevens and Sharon Hageman, will travel to five regions in eastern and central Maine to provide financial counseling to individuals and groups. Outreach locations include Belfast-Bucksport; Greater Bangor; Millinocket-Houlton; Washington County and Farmington.

“We’re interested in helping people realize what their situation is before it reaches a crisis level,” says Criner. “We’re providing them with information to help them make intelligent decisions.”

The University of Maine School of Economics will collaborate with UMaine Cooperative Extension, UMaine’s Business School, Maine Centers for Women, Work and Community and the Maine Municipal Association. Over time, they hope to extend their coverage to more towns in Aroostook, Franklin, Penobscot, Piscataquis, Washington and Hancock Counties.

This feet-on-the-street approach is critical, according to Stevens.

“If they can’t afford to pay $5 a gallon for fuel oil, they can’t afford $4 a gallon for gas to drive to a state agency,” he says. “We’re going to them, to each and every community our budget allows, to every community center and church, if we can get two people who are interested, we’ll meet with them.”

Just as their geographic reach is broad, so is the range of assistance they can offer. When people apply for general assistance, the town often will require recipients to have a budget in place to show how they plan to get back on track. These students can make a budget with their eyes closed. But they can also let people know how much money they’ll need to heat their house this winter, how to open a bank account and how to get out of debt.

This outreach comes at a time when Maine residents are hit with a one-two punch of rising energy prices and predictions of a long, cold winter. About 80 percent of Mainers heat their homes with oil, the highest percentage in the nation. Maine’s electricity rates are among the highest in the nation, as well.

“This is such an unusual case,” Criner says. “Maine uses the highest percentage of heating oil, and for a lot of lower-income folks, it’s been a big jump [in their oil bills]. Nobody knows how this is going to unfold, but at least we have people who are willing to help.”

Criner, Hageman and Stevens anticipate that the initiative will continue to grow and change as they gain a better understanding of what their clients need and how they can best serve them. In the future, it is Criner’s hope that graduate and undergraduate students from UM Fort Kent, UM Machias, UM Farmington and UM Presque Isle will join the effort.

“Giving somebody money is a one-time action,” Stevens said. “We would hope that increased financial education would provide people with a long-term financial coping skill. Not only are we long-term in our outlook, the skill is long-term, as well.”