Ellen Doucette only regrets one thing about Ozarks Area Community Action Corporation weatherizing her home: That her husband, Don, isn’t here to experience a warm home this winter.

Don died in May 2022, before Doucette saw OACAC replacing her neighbor’s windows.

“This little house is air-tight — it’s old, but it’s air-tight,” Doucette said. “That means a lot because Don, he had heart failure, and he was so cold. I just feel he would have been happy to know that OACAC had taken care of us like that. If only I had known.”

Doucette lives in a two-bedroom mobile home with her dogs Dottie and Daisy. OACAC’s Weatherization Assistance Program weather-stripped Doucette’s doors and windows, added insulation, added smoke and carbon monoxide detectors, changed out lightbulbs to LEDs, changed the dryer vent, wrapped the water heater, caulked all entries, caulked pipes and installed a fan to ensure adequate indoor air quality. There was no charge to Doucette.

Ellen Doucette talks about what the OACAC Weatherization Assistance Program did to her home on Tuesday, Oct. 24, 2023.

“That’s going to make a difference, because I’m on propane and every time that meter hits a number, it’s $6.75,” Doucette said. “Last year I kept the heat at 65 (degrees Fahrenheit) because I was afraid — How was I going to pay for it?”

This year, she and her pups are going to be warm.



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