She lives in a drafty trailer in Boston's  West Roxbury neighborhood and gets by on $11,148 a year in pension and  Social Security benefits. Her heating aid help this year will drop from  $1,035 to $685. With rising heating oil prices, it probably will cost  her more than $3,000 for enough oil to keep warm unless she turns her  thermostat down to 60 degrees, as she plans.
"I  will just have to crawl into bed with the covers over me and stay  there," said Power, a widow who worked as a cashier and waitress until  she was 80. "I will do what I have to do."
Thousands  of poor people across the Northeast are bracing for a difficult winter  with substantially less home heating aid coming from the federal  government.
"They're playing Russian roulette with people's lives," said John Drew, who heads Action for Boston Community Development, Inc., which provides aid to low-income residents in Massachusetts.
The issue could flare just as New Hampshire votes in the Republican presidential primary.
Sen. Olympia Snowe,  R-Maine, said she hopes the candidates will take up the region's  heating aid crunch because it underscores how badly the country needs a  comprehensive energy policy.
Several Northeast  states already have reduced heating aid benefits to families as  Congress considers cutting more than $1 billion from last year's $4.7  billion Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program that served nearly 9 million households.
Families  in New England, where the winters are long and cold and people rely  heavily on costly oil heat, are expected to be especially hard hit. Many  poor and elderly people on fixed incomes struggle with rising heating  bills that can run into thousands of dollars. That can force them to cut  back on other necessities like food or medicine.
The Associated Press
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