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Summary of State Utility Shut-off Moratoriums due to COVID-19

October 19, 2020

States and utilities moved quickly to suspend utility shut-offs due to nonpayment as low-income households struggle with the loss of income due to illness and job loss as a result of COVID-19 pandemic. State-mandated suspensions on utility shut-offs due to nonpayment as a result of COVID-19 are now in place in 17 states and the District of Columbia. The other 33 states have moratoriums that have expired or never implemented state-mandated moratoriums. Seven states have moratoriums that will expire by early-November if not extended: Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Wisconsin, Colorado, and Arkansas. This means that an additional 20.5 million people may lose protection from utility shut offs between now and early-November. An estimated 205.4 million people across the U.S. are already at risk of utility disconnections.

Note: This is a list of all utility actions that NEADA is aware of at the time of release. Questions: Please contact Mark Wolfe: mwolfe@neada.org or Cass Lovejoy: clovejoy@neada.org. Please send additions or updates with source documentation to Elizabeth Eagles: eeagles@neada.org.

Statewide suspensions (17 states & D.C.):

  • State-ordered Suspensions of Gas, Electric, and Water (17 states & DC): Alaska, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Hawaii, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Mexico, New York, Pennsylvania, Washington, Wisconsin, Wyoming
  • State-ordered Suspensions of Telecom (9 states & DC): Alaska, California, District of Columbia, Hawaii, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Washington, Wyoming

States without suspensions/with voluntary suspensions (33 states):

  • Expired State-ordered Suspensions of Gas, Electric, and Water (18 states): Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Michigan, Mississippi, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, North Carolina, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, Virginia
  • States Without Mandatory Suspensions (15 states): Alabama, Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Minnesota, Missouri, Nevada, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, West Virginia
    • Note: Though these states have no official moratorium, all 15 of them have some form of voluntary moratorium which varies depending on the state and the specific utility provider
  • Expired State-ordered Suspensions of Telecom (7 states): Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana, Montana, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Vermont

The calendar of moratorium expiration dates is as follows:

Table 1: State-ordered Utility Shut-off Moratoriums on Gas, Electric, and Water

 

Moratorium end date Count of states States
31-Oct 1 Connecticuti
1-Nov 3 Delaware, Maine, Wisconsin
5-Nov 1 Colorado
13-Nov 2 Arkansas, New Mexico
15-Nov 2 Alaska, Marylandii
16-Nov 1 Massachusetts
30-Nov 1 Pennsylvania
31-Dec 2 Hawaii, Kentucky
Until end of emergency or further announcements 1 Wyoming
Until 15 days after end of emergency 1 District of Columbia
Until 180 days after end of emergency (March 31, 2021 at latest) 1 New York
Until April 30, 2021 1 Washington
Until 2021 1 California
States with expired or no state-ordered moratorium 33 Alabama, Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Indianaiii, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraskaiv, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Rhode Islandv, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennesseevi, Texas, Utah, Vermontvii, Virginia, West Virginia
Total 51
i Moratorium ended October 1 for non-hardship customers, October 31 for hardship customers.
ii Residential service disconnections may resume November 15; utilities began sending disconnection notices October 1.
iii Moratorium ended officially on August 14, suspension on residential late fees, deposits, and disconnection/reconnection fees continued until October 12.
iv Mandatory suspension of water and telecom shut-offs, voluntary suspension of gas and electric shut-offs.
v Moratorium for National Grid customers enrolled in low income program ends November 1; moratorium for all other National Grid residential customers ended September 30; moratorium on all other regulated utilities expired July 17.
vi Moratorium ended August 29 and disconnections may resume September 29 after a 30-day written notice has been sent to customers.
vii The customers of most utilities have until spring of 2021 to work with their utilities to develop payment plans to avoid disconnection.

Table 2: Proportion of U.S. Population Covered by Gas, Electric, and Water Moratoriums

# of U.S. population % of U.S. population</strong
With state-ordered moratorium 122,799,513 37.4%
Without state-ordered moratorium/ with expired moratorium 205,440,010 62.6%

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