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B26-0243 • 2025

Automatic Enrollment for Utility Affordability Programs Act of 2025

Automatic Enrollment for Utility Affordability Programs Act of 2025

Energy
Active

The official status still shows this bill as active or still awaiting another formal step.

Sponsor
Allen
Last action
2026-03-26
Official status
Under Council Review
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

The bill summary provided does not include specific details on how the system will prioritize automatic enrollment if funds are limited, leaving some uncertainty.

Automatic Enrollment for Utility Affordability Programs Act of 2025

This act requires the Department of Energy and Environment to develop a system that automatically enrolls eligible District residents in utility affordability programs based on their income, with consent.

What This Bill Does

  • Requires DOEE to create an automatic enrollment system for utility affordability programs within one year after the law takes effect.
  • DOEE must use data from DHS and DHCF to identify households eligible for these programs.
  • Households must give explicit consent before being automatically enrolled in any program.
  • Provides a process where households can opt out of automatic enrollment at any time.

Who It Names or Affects

  • Low-income District residents who are eligible for utility affordability programs.
  • The Department of Energy and Environment (DOEE), which will manage the automatic enrollment system.
  • Departments of Human Services (DHS) and Health Care Finance (DHCF), providing data to DOEE.

Terms To Know

Utility Affordability Programs
Programs that help low-income residents pay for their utility bills, such as electricity and water.
Affirmative Consent
Explicit agreement given by a person before they are automatically enrolled in a program.

Limits and Unknowns

  • The bill does not specify how the system will prioritize automatic enrollment if funds are limited.
  • It is unclear when and how the law will be funded or implemented after it passes.

Bill History

  1. 2026-03-26 Council of the District of Columbia LIMS

    Public Hearing on B26-0243

  2. 2026-03-13 Council of the District of Columbia LIMS

    Notice of Public Hearing Published in the District of Columbia Register

  3. 2026-03-10 Council of the District of Columbia LIMS

    Revised Notice of Public Hearing filed in the Office of Secretary by Transportation and the Environment

  4. 2026-03-06 Council of the District of Columbia LIMS

    Notice of Public Hearing Published in the District of Columbia Register

  5. 2026-03-03 Council of the District of Columbia LIMS

    Revised Notice of Public Hearing filed in the Office of Secretary by Transportation and the Environment

  6. 2026-01-30 Council of the District of Columbia LIMS

    Notice of Public Hearing Published in the District of Columbia Register

  7. 2026-01-23 Council of the District of Columbia LIMS

    Notice of Public Hearing filed in the Office of Secretary by Transportation and the Environment

  8. 2025-05-16 Council of the District of Columbia LIMS

    Notice of Intent to Act on B26-0243 Published in the District of Columbia Register

  9. 2025-05-13 Council of the District of Columbia LIMS

    Referred to Committee on Transportation and the Environment with comments from the Committee on Business and Economic Development, Committee on Human Services, and Committee on Health

  10. 2025-05-06 Council of the District of Columbia LIMS

    B26-0243 Introduced by Councilmember Allen at Office of the Secretary

Official Summary Text

Automatic Enrollment for Utility Affordability Programs Act of 2025

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
1

May 6, 2025

Nyasha Howard
Secretary to the Council
Council of the District of Columbia
1350 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, D.C. 20004

Secretary Howard:

Today, along with Councilmembers Lewis George, McDuffie, Nadeau, Parker, and Robert White, I am
introducing the “Automatic Enrollment for Utility Affordability Programs Act of 2025 .” Please find
enclosed a signed copy of the legislation.

Rising utility costs have a severe impact on District residents. From 2000 to 2019, the average District
resident’s electricity bill increased by over 75% —from approximately $55 to $98. 1 Now, for one-
quarter of low-income households in the DC Metropolitan Area, energy expenses account for nearly
16% of their income.2 This is more than four times higher than the median energy burden for other
customers.3 Higher utility rates can exacerbate existing financial burdens for residents, many of
whom are already struggling to keep pace with rising costs in the District.

Households that are unable to keep up with energy bills eventually experience service
disconnections, losing access to essential services like power and water. In 2024 alone, Pepco
reported to the D.C. Public Service Commission that it issued disconnection notices to almost 40,000
low-income residential customers.4 Increased costs of living generally, especially for communities of

1 Ariel Drehoble et al., An Examination of District Residents’ Experiences with Utility Burdens and Affordability
Programs, at 5, AMERICAN COUNCIL FOR AN ENERGY EFFICIENT ECONOMY, https://doee.dc.gov/sites/default/files/
dc/sites/ddoe/service_content/attachments/Report_An%20Examination%20of%20District%20Residents%E2%80%
99%20Experiences%20with%20Utility%20Burdens%20and%20Affordability%20Programs.pdf .
2 Roxana Ayala & Amanda Dewey, Data Update: City Energy Burdens, at 3–4, AMERICAN COUNCIL FOR AN ENERGY
EFFICIENT ECONOMY, https://www.aceee.org/policy-brief/2024/09/data-update-city-energy-burdens
3 Id. at 4.
4 Pepco, Information on Disconnections for Non-Payment (updated January 21, 2025),
https://edocket.dcpsc.org/apis/api/Filing/download?attachId=217324&guidFileName=da131ed2 -3c90-465d-9dde-
083ac4dfaecc.pdf.

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color, has caused District residents to struggle to afford basic necessities —resulting in worse health
and financial outcomes.5

The Department of Energy and Environment (“DOEE”) administers several utility affordability
programs that help District residents with their utility bills, including the Low Income Home Energy
Assistance Program, the Utility Discount Programs, the Weatherization Assistance Program, and the
Clean Rivers Impervious Area Charge Residential Relief Program . Generally, enrollment in each of
these programs requires residents to submit an individual application and demonstrate that they
meet certain income restrictions. DOEE, to its credit, often refers residents enrolled in one of its utility
affordability programs to its other programs, helping residents take full advantage of all the benefits
offered by the agency. But, despite rising utility costs, the reality is that we aren’t reaching enough
people with the solutions we already have available because the process to enroll is too cumbersome
or they may simply be unaware of the assistance they could receive. This bill would change that.

To ensure that all households receive the utility assistance available to them, this bill would require
that DOEE launch a system through which it can automatically enroll qualifying households in its
utility affordability programs. Specifically, the bill requires that the Department of Human Services
(“DHS”) and the Department of Health Care Finance (“DHCF”) provide DOEE with enrollment data for
any income-qualified programs administered by those agencies, including SNAP, TANF, and Medicaid.
DOEE would use this information to enroll households in its own utility affordability programs. To
protect individual privacy, the bill requires that households affirmatively consent to have their
information shared by DHS or DHCF with DOEE for the purposes of automatic enrollment, and any
information shared would be limited to that purpose, absent explicit consent from the household .
The bill also requires that households that have been automatically enrolled receive notice of their
enrollment, the date they can expect to receive the benefit, and the amount they will receive.
Providing a transparent and efficient enrollment process will allow residents to maximize savings and
reduce energy burdens.

Low-income households experience the highest energy burdens in the District and will benefit the
most from this automatic enrollment system. By creating a system that, when completely
implemented, automatically enrolls low -income households in income -based assistance programs,
the District government can ease the burdens caused by rising utility bill costs and streamline the
process for getting help.

Sincerely,

Councilmember Charles Allen, Ward 6
Chairperson, Committee on Transportation & the Environment

5 Stephen Woolf et al., Uneven Opportunities: How Conditions for Wellness Vary across the Metropolitan
Washington Region, VIRGINIA COMMONWEALTH UNIVERSITY CENTER ON SOCIETY AND HEALTH, (October 26, 2018),
https://mwcog.org/documents/2020/10/26/uneven-opportunities-how-conditions-for-wellness-vary-across-the-
metropolitan-washington-region-health-health-data

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_____________________________ ______________________________ 1
Councilmember Janeese Lewis George Councilmember Charles Allen 2
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_____________________________ ______________________________ 5
Councilmember Kenyan R. McDuffie Councilmember Brianne K. Nadeau 6
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_____________________________ _____________________________ 9
Councilmember Zachary Parker Councilmember Robert C. White, Jr. 10
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A BILL 14
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IN THE COUNCIL OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA 19
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_________________________ 21
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To require that the Department of Energy and Environment create a system through which it 24
automatically enroll s District residents into income -qualified utility affordability 25
programs. 26
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BE IT ENACTED BY THE COUNCIL OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, That this 28
act may be cited as the “Automatic Enrollment for Utility Affordability Programs Act of 2025”. 29
(a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, upon request by the Department of Energy 30
and Environment (“DOEE”) for the purposes described in subsection s (b) and (c), the following 31
agencies shall provide, or cause to be provided, the information listed below to DOEE , including 32
personal identifying information: 33
(1) For the Department of Human Services (“DHS”), enrollment data f rom 34
households participating in any program administered by DHS, the eligibility of which is based on 35
household income, including the District’s Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (“TANF”) 36

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Program, Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (“SNAP”), or the Special Supplemental 37
Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children (“WIC”); and 38
(2) For the Department of Health Care Finance (“DHCF”), enrollment data for 39
households participating in any program administered by DHCF, the eligibility of which is based 40
on household income, including Medicaid. 41
(b)(1) DOEE, in consultation with the Public Service Commission and the Office of 42
People’s Counsel, shall launch a system for automatically enrolling eligible households in DOEE’s 43
income-qualified utility affordability programs within one year of the effective date of this act. 44
(2) If funds are not available to automatically enroll all eligible households, DOEE 45
may prioritize automatic enrollment for households in the following order of need: 46
(A) Low-income households experiencing severe energy burden; 47
(B) Low-income households experiencing high energy burden; and 48
(C) Low-income households. 49
(3) DOEE may prioritize which of its utility affordability programs into which it 50
automatically enrolls households. 51
(c)(1) DOEE shall use the information obtained as described in subsection (a) to 52
automatically enroll eligible household using the system launched pursuant to subsection (b)(1). 53
(2) The system developed pursuant to subsection (b)(1) shall: 54
(A) Require affirmative consent from a member of the household prior to 55
automatically enrolling that household, in a manner to be determined by the Mayor; 56
(B) Allow households to decline, opt out, or withdraw from automatic 57
enrollment at any time; 58

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(C) Include a data -sharing protocol that ensures that individuals’ personal 59
identifying information, including the individual’s name, account number, service address, phone 60
number, shall not be shared for purposes other than automatic enrollment in utility affordability 61
programs without the individual’s affirmative consent; and 62
(D) No later than 60 days after enrolling an eligible household pursuant to 63
subsection (c)(1), inform the household: 64
(i) That the household has been automatically enrolled in utility 65
affordability programs; 66
(ii) The anticipated date by which the household will begin receiving 67
benefits through the utility affordability program in which the household was enrolled; and 68
(iii) What the anticipated monthly benefits will be through the utility 69
affordability program. 70
(4) If the development of a new, or updates to an existing, case management system 71
or information technology management system are needed to implement the requirements of this 72
subsection, DOEE shall endeavor to develop or update that system in a way that allows for other 73
District agencies to: 74
(A) Input information related to household income obtained from sources 75
other than those listed in subsection (a) of this section; and 76
(B) Automatically enroll households into income-qualified programs 77
administered by District agencies other than those specified in subsection (b)(1) of this section. 78
Sec. 3. Fiscal impact statement. 79

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The Council adopts the fiscal impact statement in the committee report as the fiscal impact 80
statement required by section 4a of the General Legislative Procedures Act of 1975, approved 81
October 16, 2006 (120 Stat. 2038; D.C. Official Code § 1-301.47a). 82
Sec. 4. Effective date. 83
This act shall take effect after approval by the Mayor (or in the event of veto by the Mayor, 84
action by the Council to override the veto), a 30 -day period of congressional review as provided 85
in section 602(c)(1) of the District of Columbia Home Rule Act, approved December 24, 1973 (87 86
Stat. 813; D.C. Official Code § 1 -206.02(c)(1)), and publication in the District of Columbia 87
Register. 88