Andrew Rosenthal, " If your utility bills have increased, how are you coping with increased expenses? Please explain. (Cumulative Q.27b/47)", contributed by Andrew Rosenthal, Alison Kenner, Briana Leone, Morgan Sarao and James Adams, The Energy Rights Project, Platform for Experimental Collaborative Ethnography, last modified 6 June 2022, accessed 24 November 2024. https://energyrights.info/content/if-your-utility-bills-have-increased-how-are-you-coping-increased-expenses-please-explain-0
Critical Commentary
This chart reflects responses to Question #47 from the Spring 2020 and Winter 2020 surveys and Question #27b in the Spring 2021 survey which asks respondents “If your utility bills have increased, how are you coping with increased expenses? Please explain.” Open ended responses were categorized as follows
Just paying for them
Utility bills haven’t increased or N/A
Adapting lifestyle to pay for increased expenses
Insignificant change in expenses
Hasn’t received a bill/unknown if they’ve increased
External support
Other bills have decreased which has balanced out increased utility expenses.
Paying what they can afford (not paying the bill in its entirety)
Paying some utilities while not paying others
Through energy assistance
Other
142 respondents answered this question
Forty-four (30.99%) respondents just paid them.
Nine respondents (6.34%) reported the increases were not insignificant
Three respondents (2.11%) asked reported their family was helping
Three respondents (2.11%) answered that their unemployment helped them.
One respondent (0.70%) used student aid.
Ten respondents (7.04%) answered “other.”
Two respondents (1.41%) answered that their stimulus check helped them.
Four respondents (2.82%) reported decreases in other bills balanced out the increases.
Two respondents (1.41%) were trying to save money.
Ten respondents (7.04%) reported they were trying to save energy.
Fifteen respondents (10.56%) changed or adapted their lifestyle.
Three respondents (2.11%) went into their savings
Five respondents (3.52%) reported working more hours.
Three respondents (2.11%) paid their bills late
Sixteen respondents (11.27%) reported they paid what they can
Eight respondents (5.63%) used energy assistance.
Five respondent (3.52%) prioritized some bills over others
Ten respondents (7.04%) were on a payment plan.
Two respondents (1.41%) were unsure
One respondent (0.70%) took out a loan
One respondent (0.70%) was not paying their bills.
Two respondents (1.41%) called the company
One respondent (0.70%) asked for an extension
The data was produced by the Shifting Energy Demands in COVID-19 Survey, which has been administered to 234 people over two time periods. The Spring 2020 survey was administered to 86 people between May and June, and the Winter 2020 survey was administered to 83 people between December 2020 and March 2021 The Spring 2021 survey was administered to 65 people between March 2021 and June 2021. Visit the Shifting Energy Demands in COVID-19 - Spring + Winter 2020 Survey Results page to view more data from our survey. The project is approved by Drexel’s IRB.