Several public commenters told the council they remain concerned about the pace of community designation work and barriers non‑English speakers face in accessing energy assistance.
Marianne Babass, who identified herself during the meeting, said a community lost its environmental justice designation after the pandemic and that residents have petitioned the state for designation. "We petitioned the state in February and again in December," she said, and asked council staff to complete the remaining steps and work with residents on follow‑up.
A separate resident described sharply rising electricity and gas bills, difficulty qualifying for state benefits and language barriers that make enrollment and fraud reporting more difficult. The commenter said some competitive suppliers use opaque products and automatic renewals and urged the state to strengthen consumer protections and expand outreach channels in multiple languages.
Council staff responded by listing existing programs and urging callers to contact utilities and Mass Save for enrollment and eligibility checks, and by noting efforts to simplify administrative steps. Several council members later asked the presenter to prioritize outreach to non‑English speakers and to clarify how programs will reach multifamily and low‑income households.
Why it matters: Petitioned designation affects whether communities are eligible for targeted environmental justice resources; language and administrative barriers can impede access to energy affordability programs and consumer protections.
Next steps: Council members requested additional materials and follow‑up in future meetings, and staff signaled availability to help connect residents with program enrollment resources.