2 min read

I’m responding to Joe Charpentier’s great article on heat pumps (Nov. 16). It has always amazed me that weatherizing was not a prerequisite of purchasing heat pumps through the Efficiency Maine program.

We have updated our insulation, doors and windows, furnaces two or more times in our old house. The products available today are vastly more efficient and improved since the 1970s. We had spray foam insulation done on the exterior basement walls. What a huge difference that makes.

New, efficient oil furnaces also reduce fossil fuel consumption. It would have helped more Maine homeowners to run a program that included updating their heating system even if it was oil. It would have increased eligibility for the program and allowed people to keep their central heating in these larger, rambling houses that are so common in Maine. 

It’s disturbing to hear that homeowners have invested thousands of dollars for heat pumps only to find that they can’t afford the electric bill and then resort to their oil-fired heat anyway.

Now, the tax laws have changed to only allow for tax credits and not rebates for installing heat pumps. That change eliminates the low-income tax filer from getting any money back on their investment since it requires tax owed or paid out before a credit is due. 

Gov. Mills’ lofty goals of fossil fuel reduction didn’t meet the Maine homeowner where they were at. In an unproven market, she required Mainers to be testers in our harsh Maine climate. 

Patricia Perkins
Oxford

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