TEA believes that we can fight both poverty and pollution. That is why we helped to found the Low Income Energy Network [1] (LIEN) in 2004 to raise awareness of implications for low-income families of increases in energy prices and to suggest solutions.
LIEN's mandate is to ensure universal access to adequate energy as a basic necessity, while minimizing the impacts on health and on the local and global environment of meeting the essential energy and conservation needs of all Ontarians. LIEN promotes programs and policies which tackle the problems of energy poverty and homelessness, reduce Ontario's contribution to smog and climate change, and promote a healthy economy through renewable and energy efficient technologies.
Working with other environmental, anti-poverty and affordable housing groups, we have proposed a comprehensive program [2] that delivers energy conservation to low-income consumers which permanently reduce bills and pollution, provides bill payment support and emergency assistance to those who need it, and educates consumers and policy makers on low-income energy issues.