Install
openclaw skills install emergency-financial-triagePriority-based action plan for financial emergencies. Use when someone can't make rent, is about to be evicted, can't afford food, has utilities about to be shut off, or faces any immediate financial crisis.
openclaw skills install emergency-financial-triageWhen you can't pay your bills, everything feels equally urgent. It's not. There is a specific order to handle financial emergencies that prevents the worst outcomes. This is the triage protocol — what to pay first, what can wait, and who to call. Programs and phone numbers are US-specific — adapt for your country.
STOP. Before proceeding, the agent MUST ask:
"Before we start, I need to ask: are you safe right now? Are you in a situation where someone is controlling your finances or threatening you?"
Agent action: Ask this question explicitly. Financial crises and abuse overlap frequently.
Not all bills are equal. Here's the priority order based on consequences:
PAYMENT PRIORITY (most urgent first):
1. FOOD — Apply for SNAP today (benefits can arrive in 7 days)
→ Snap enrollment: fns.usda.gov/snap
→ Local food banks: feedingamerica.org/find-your-local-foodbank
→ WIC (for pregnant women/children): fns.usda.gov/wic
2. ESSENTIAL MEDICATION — Don't skip meds
→ NeedyMeds.org — discount drug programs
→ GoodRx.com — prescription price comparison
→ Patient assistance programs (from the drug manufacturer)
→ $4 generic lists at Walmart, Costco (no membership needed for pharmacy)
3. HOUSING — Rent or mortgage
→ Call your landlord BEFORE the due date: "I'm having a financial
emergency. Can we discuss a payment plan?"
→ Apply for Emergency Rental Assistance: treasury.gov/rental-assistance
→ Call 211 for local housing assistance programs
4. UTILITIES — Power, water, heat
→ Call each provider and ask for a "hardship plan" or "payment arrangement"
→ LIHEAP (Low Income Home Energy Assistance): liheap.org
→ Most states prohibit utility shutoffs in extreme cold/heat
5. TRANSPORTATION — If needed for work
→ Car payment before insurance (can't drive without the car)
→ If facing repossession, call the lender about forbearance
6. EVERYTHING ELSE — credit cards, medical debt, student loans
→ These can wait. They damage your credit but don't take your home.
→ Federal student loans: apply for income-driven repayment or forbearance
→ Credit cards: call and ask for hardship program
→ Medical debt: does not go to collections for 180 days typically
WHERE TO FIND MONEY THIS WEEK:
□ 211 (dial 2-1-1) — connects to ALL local assistance programs
□ Salvation Army / St. Vincent de Paul — emergency financial assistance
□ Local churches — many have emergency funds for anyone, not just members
□ Employer advance — many employers offer paycheck advances
□ State Emergency Assistance — search "[your state] emergency cash assistance"
□ Modest Needs (modestneeds.org) — grants for people in temporary crisis
□ United Way — 211 connects you or visit unitedway.org
DO NOT:
✗ Take out a payday loan (300-500% APR — will make things worse)
✗ Borrow against your 401k unless truly last resort
✗ Use title loans (you'll lose your car)
The single most important thing: CALL BEFORE YOU'RE LATE. Every creditor has hardship programs they don't advertise.
CREDITOR CALL SCRIPT:
"Hi, I'm calling because I'm experiencing a financial hardship
due to [job loss / medical emergency / income reduction].
I want to stay current on my account. Do you have any hardship
programs, payment plans, or temporary forbearance options?"
FOR EACH CREDITOR, ASK:
→ Can payments be deferred?
→ Can late fees be waived?
→ Is there a hardship/forbearance program?
→ Can the due date be moved?
→ GET THE REPRESENTATIVE'S NAME AND CONFIRMATION NUMBER.
If you cannot access the resources above or the situation worsens: