1 / 62

Low-Income Program Evaluation: Informing Program Management and Cost-Effectiveness

This presentation discusses insights from the evaluation of a low-income program, focusing on program management, cost-effectiveness, and the intersection with the Universal Service Program. It examines the requirements, goals, workflow, budget, contractors' performance, savings, challenges, and recommendations for improvement.

hager
Download Presentation

Low-Income Program Evaluation: Informing Program Management and Cost-Effectiveness

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Low Income Program Evaluation Insights Informing Program Management and Cost-Effectiveness Stu Jerue, PGW Jackie Berger, APPRISE April 4, 2019

  2. Presentation Overview

  3. Background

  4. PA Universal Service Programs

  5. Intersection of CAP and LIURP 2017 Natural Gas CAP Programs Source: 2017 Report on Universal Service Programs & Collections Performance. PA Public Utility Commission, Bureau of Consumer Services.

  6. LIURP Requirements

  7. LIURP Reporting Requirements

  8. Pgw approach

  9. Home Comfort • Program goals and workflow: • 3 Contractors schedule audits, develop work scopes, and return to perform efficiency measures • Achieve deep cost-effective savings, based on TRC • Seek whatever savings possible, even when work scope is limited • Over 20,000 homes treated in program to date • Many receive only “core measures” at audit • Customers assigned in program; no application

  10. Budget and Jobs

  11. Contractors & Scorecard • Diversity of contractor types & subcontracting models • Competition-driven, with funds allocated based on scorecard • Total Savings • Cost-effectiveness • QA • Data entry, issue resolution, other metrics

  12. Project Example • Reduced usage from 196 MMBtu by 85 MMBtu (43%) at a cost of $8,831 • 25% leakage reduction and insulation • New heater and chimney liner • Low-flow devices • Electrical rewiring Source: Philly Mag

  13. challenges

  14. Savings Decline

  15. PGW Pre-Treatment Usage Decline 23% decline in pre-treatment usage from 2011 to 2016.

  16. Pre-Treatment Usage Decline (Electric Heat) 18% decline in pre-treatment usage from 2011 to 2017.

  17. Level of Treatment

  18. Health and Safety Issues

  19. Health and Safety Issues There were 687 health & safety issues reported in 2016.

  20. Change in Jobs Fully Treated

  21. Change in Jobs With at Least 1 Major Measure

  22. Energy Savings Decline

  23. Energy Savings Decline

  24. Energy Savings Decline

  25. Energy Savings Decline – Electric Heating 34% decline in savings from 2011 to 2016.

  26. Challenges Servicing Customers • Customer refusals / no-shows • Landlord authorization • Program name and awareness • Other challenges serving low income and senior populations

  27. evaluation

  28. 2016 Evaluation – Energy Savings

  29. Energy Savings by Contractor

  30. 2016 Evaluation – Comprehensive Jobs

  31. 2016 Evaluation – Comprehensive & Limited Jobs

  32. 2016 Evaluation – Comprehensive Jobs Major measures include roof insulation, heating system replacement, infiltration work, and programmable thermostats.

  33. 2016 Evaluation – Limited Jobs Major measures include roof insulation, heating system replacement, infiltration work, and programmable thermostats.

  34. 2016 Evaluation – Measure Savings ***Statistically significant at the 99 percent level; **95% level. *90% level.

  35. 2016 Evaluation – Measure Savings by Contractor ***Statistically significant at the 99 percent level; **95% level. *90% level.

  36. 2013 Evaluation – Measure Savings ***Statistically significant at the 99 percent level; **95% level. *90% level.

  37. 2016 Evaluation – Realization Rates

  38. 2016 Evaluation – Benefit-Cost Ratio

  39. Findings & Recommendations • Contractor performance inputs • Percent of jobs that are comprehensive • Major and minor measures installed • Level of investment • Contractor performance measurement • Level of savings • Realization rates • Benefit-cost ratio

  40. Findings & Recommendations • Measures with statistically significant savings • Heating system replacement • Roof insulation • Water heater replacement • Air sealing • Programmable thermostats • Variation in measure-specific savings by contractor

  41. Program improvements

  42. Putting into Context • Develop hypotheses • Not defining thermal envelope or using blower door properly • Unclear expectations and communication • Crews not encouraged to seek deep savings • “Quality” not defined • Realistic understanding of program limitations and ability to change contractors • Steering a barge, not a speedboat

  43. Reviewing Evaluation Report • Body of evidence • Impact evaluation report • Other annual reporting • Inspection reports • Aggregated measure and case data • Customer complaints • Contractor field visits

  44. Improvement Plan and Schedule

  45. Inspection Updates

  46. Contractor-Centric Training & Mentoring • On-site shadowing for all auditors and crews • Classroom trainings for all program staff • Web conferences & meetings at contractor offices • Availability for technical questions & QA report review

  47. Program Manual • Define quality • Reduce communication issues • Provide inspector tool • Set clear expectations • Provide to field staff, management and administrators

  48. Health and Safety Documentation Tree • Fewer blower door tests = low realized savings • Perform work safely, and tell us why you chose that step • Recognizing contractor’s sense of risk

  49. Blower Door Estimation Protocol

  50. Zonal Pressure Requirements • Zonal pressure pre and post tests required for zones receiving air sealing and insulation. • Goal to achieve 45pa @ 50CFM for zones outside the envelope

More Related