New 400 dollar grants may keep power on
"A person can't live... for six months without electricity, especially a family like that with so many young children.... We don't want another incident like that to take place," Mayor Daley said.
Five children from the Ramirez family and a toddler staying with them died at 7706 N. Marshfield in a September 2006 fire touched off by a candle used to help light a three-bedroom apartment. The electricity had been shut off - the family hadn't paid the bill.
The family's plight touched a nerve with Daley, who lashed out at the landlord for ignoring his "moral responsibility" to assist a family in need.
The mayor also demanded a new level of cooperation from ComEd officials, who agreed to provide City Hall with the addresses where electric service has been disconnected for nonpayment so city departments can make well-being checks.
The "PowerUp" Fund is an example of that cooperation.
The fund will be financed by a $1 million contribution from ComEd and $500,000 from the city. Edison also plans to add a feature to its monthly bills - patterned after Peoples Energy's Share the Warmth program - to make it easy for residential customers to contribute .The utility has agreed to match the first $500,000 worth of check-off contributions from customers.
ComEd Chairman and CEO Frank Clark estimated that the fund, potentially worth $2.5 million, would be enough to restore service to as many as 4,000 to 5,000 customers who earn too much money to qualify for the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program.
ComEd customers can apply for the $400 grants at the offices of the Community Economic Development Association of Cook County.
Related News

Top Senate Democrat calls for permanent renewable energy, storage, EV tax credits
WASHINGTON - The 115th U.S. Congress has not even adjourned for the winter, and already a newly resurgent Democratic Party is making demands that reflect its majority status in the U.S. House come January.
Climate appears to be near the top of the list. Last Thursday, Senator Chuck Schumer (D-NY), the Democratic Leader in the Senate, sent a letter to President Trump demanding that any infrastructure package taken up in 2019 include “policies and funding to transition to a clean energy economy and mitigate the risks that the United States is already facing due to climate change.”
And in a list of…