Federal shutdown creates uncertainty for Maine cancer patient struggling to stay warm

Gerard Berry, along with his wife, Stephanie, and daughter, Brooklynn, cover a bedroom window with plastic, Friday, Nov. 7, 2025, in Baileyville, Maine. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)
Gerard Berry, along with his wife, Stephanie, and daughter, Brooklynn, cover a bedroom window with plastic, Friday, Nov. 7, 2025, in Baileyville, Maine. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)
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The federal government shutdown has created delays in some states when it comes to the federal program that helps millions of families heat and cool their homes. New England officials are particularly concerned given the regionโ€™s reliance on oil for heat. While electric and natural gas companies generally are barred from cutting customers off, more than half of Maine households rely on oil. In Baileyville, Gerard Berry got emergency help filling his oil tank last winter when he was sick with stomach cancer. State officials say an emergency program that typically starts Nov. 1 is now on hold, though the state is reallocating money to help households that applied for help early.

BAILEYVILLE, Maine (AP) โ€” Setting the thermostat at 60 degrees used to be no problem for Gerard Berry, even during harsh Maine winters. Then he got sick with stomach cancer and struggled to stay warm as he lost weight.

โ€œI used to tell the kids, โ€˜Put a sweatshirt on.โ€™ But when I got sick, I got really thin, and we had to push it up a lot more,โ€ said Berry, 47. โ€œWe burned a lot more fuel last year than we ever did.โ€

Berryโ€™s family of seven got help filling their oil tank last winter. But Maine officials and those in other states are scrambling to sort out their options in light of the federal government shutdown.

An emergency assistance program that typically starts Nov. 1 and helps 7,000 Maine families per year remains on hold. But MaineHousing is reallocating $2.2 million earmarked for weatherization to make initial payments for roughly 4,000 households that applied early to the broader Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program.

Borrowing funds from one program to pay for another is not ideal, but โ€œthis will get the trucks rolling,โ€ said Dan Brennan, director of the quasi-state agency. Over the next few weeks, households that applied in August and September will have money added to their accounts with fuel vendors.

โ€œThis will help prevent heating emergencies for our most vulnerable neighbors, family members, and friends,โ€ Brennan said.

Commonly called LIHEAP, the $4.1 billion program helps 5.9 million households nationwide heat and cool their homes. While the uncertainty over its future is raising concerns across the country, New England officials are particularly concerned given the regionโ€™s reliance on oil for heat. Electric and natural gas companies generally are barred from pulling the plug, but more than half of Maine households rely on oil.

In Baileyville, a small town near the Canadian border, Berry puts plastic over his windows and blankets under the door to block the wind. In addition to the emergency assistance, he has benefited from a fuel donation program in Hancock and Washington counties known as โ€œThe Heating and Warmth Fund,โ€ or THAW. His church community also supported him through his illness, which included a severe lung infection, sepsis and surgery to remove part of his stomach and colon.

โ€œThe thing about having faith is, you donโ€™t have to worry. Like, Godโ€™s got me no matter what,โ€ he said. โ€œBut I know that a lot of people are really freaking out. Theyโ€™re really nervous, and itโ€™s sad to me.โ€

Berry considers himself โ€œvery conservativeโ€ but said he thinks both Republicans and Democrats are being manipulative. His said his illness prompted him to focus less on Washington and more on his local community.

โ€œHopefully people are waking up, but hopefully they wake up in the right way,โ€ he said. โ€œInstead of waking up and being like, โ€˜Letโ€™s start a revolution!โ€™ Letโ€™s wake up and letโ€™s go shake hands with our neighbors.โ€

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Ramer reported from Concord, New Hampshire.

Federal shutdown creates uncertainty for Maine family struggling to stay warm

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