New York – Drivers Grapple With NYC Gas Rationing After Sandy

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    A gas line forms for free fuel from a tanker in the Far Rockaways section of the Queens borough of New York, Saturday, Nov. 10, 2012.  Despite power returning to many neighborhoods in the metropolitan area, residents of the Far Rockaways continue to live without power and heat due to damage caused by Superstorm Sandy.(AP Photo/John Minchillo)New York – Some of society’s most vulnerable have been pushed to the brink in the powerless, flood-ravaged neighborhoods struggling to recover from Superstorm Sandy.

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    The storm disrupted the fragile support networks that allowed the elderly, the disabled and the chronically ill to get by. It has closed pharmacies, kept home care aids from getting to clients and made getting around in a wheelchair impossible.

    Authorities and volunteers are trying hard to make sure families like that don’t fall into despair.

    Paramedics from all over the country fanned out across the Rockaways section of New York City this weekend to check on shut-ins and anyone who might need help.

    Nancy Clark of the city’s health department says the idea was to find people who “sheltered in place” during the storm, who might need assistance.

    THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below.

    A return to 1970s-era gas rationing seemed to help with hourslong gas station lines that formed after Superstorm Sandy, but it didn’t end a fuel-gauge fixation that suddenly has become a way of life for drivers in the nation’s largest city.

    With police monitoring lines, motorists in New York City and Long Island on Friday began dealing with a new piece of fallout from the monster storm: odd-even gas rationing.

    “Even? Odd? Whatever it is, I didn’t have the right one,” said Joe Standart, a 62-year-old artist, whose car was ordered off a Manhattan gas station line by a police officer. Friday was an odd-numbered day, meaning only motorists whose license plates end in odd numbers, or letters, could fuel up. Standart’s plate ended in an even number, so he would have to wait until Saturday.

    As drivers sorted out an odd-even plan – a scheme not seen in New York since the 1970s Arab oil embargo – thousands of people in the region got their power back for the first time since Sandy came ashore 12 days ago. Still, more than 330,000 customers were still without power in New Jersey and the New York City area.

    President Barack Obama, who visited the battered Jersey coast earlier, said he would survey the damage in New York next week from the storm, which the American Red Cross said will create its largest U.S. relief effort since Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

    New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie spent Friday visiting battered coastal areas in his state, from Sea Bright to Seaside Heights, calling the storm “our Katrina.”

    The governor said the long, difficult rebuilding period would begin in earnest next week and include the restoration of the state’s most iconic attractions. But Christie, who said he spent his youth at the Jersey Shore and brought his children there, cautioned that it wouldn’t look the same next summer as it did last summer.

    He said power would be restored to nearly everyone in the state by Saturday night, and that he would likely decide by early next week whether to end gas rationing there.

    In New York City, Angel Ventura, who drives a delivery van for a camera rental company, has taken to hunting for gasoline every time his gauge drops below a quarter of a tank. “It makes me crazy, thinking I might hit empty and not be able to find it,” he said.

    Industry officials first blamed the gas shortage on fuel stations that lost power but now say the problem has shifted to supply terminals, which are either shut or operating at reduced capacity. Drivers are also quicker to top off tanks because they’re afraid gasoline won’t be available, AAA spokesman Michael Green said.

    Tom Kloza, chief oil analyst at the Oil Price Information Service, said the densely populated New York-New Jersey area has fewer stations per capita than any other major metropolitan area, making the shortage an even bigger problem. He said rationing earlier might have helped in New York City; New Jersey implemented it last week.

    “It does curb some of the manic or panic behavior,” Kloza said.

    Mayor Michael Bloomberg said one-third of the city’s gas stations had gas to sell at any given time Friday, compared to 25 percent the day before, though the federal Energy Department said more than 70 percent of the city’s stations have gas available.

    Bloomberg said the gas shortages could last for a couple of weeks.

    On Long Island, where odd-even rationing also began Friday, a spot check found shorter lines – 30 to 40 cars at most – and more stations with gas. In Brooklyn, car service owner Gary Lindenbaum said waits last week had been five or six hours.

    “The rationing really helps us a lot,” said Lindenbaum, owner of Court Express. “We need to work. We need the gas.”

    Desperate drivers weren’t paying much attention to prices, but in New Jersey, seven gas stations were among the eight businesses sued by the state Friday on price-gouging claims.

    Meanwhile, many officials were pointing to power companies as the culprit in the region’s slow recovery. Gov. Andrew Cuomo has called for investigation of the region’s utilities, criticizing them as unprepared and badly managed. On Friday, two congressmen from Long Island urged the federal government – even the military – to come in and help the Long Island Power Authority restore electricity.

    Long Island’s main utility, the Long Island Power Authority, has declined to respond to criticism; the president of National Grid US, which manages the grid on LIPA’s behalf, said Friday that he thought his company had “performed extremely well” under the circumstances. New York utility Consolidated Edison Corp. has called the storm the worst in its history.

    Some residents of Toms River, N.J., were given a precious hour Friday to see their storm-wrecked houses for the first time and grab warm-weather clothing, important pictures – whatever belongings they could. When Steve Dabern saw his flooded house, the floor was torn in pieces, the refrigerator was on its side and the kitchen furniture was in the living room.

    “Sickness. I felt sick,” he said.


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    6 Comments
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    DovidTheK
    DovidTheK
    11 years ago

    No lines any more in New Jersey. They should cancel the odd even now.

    11 years ago

    Just drove through Flatbush no gas !! Only two places open with crazy lines . Why font you wake up and realize that ration won’t help only gas will!

    mr11210
    mr11210
    11 years ago

    NJ has gas no wait or odd even practiced

    QWERTY123
    QWERTY123
    11 years ago

    Simple Sution: Allow gas stations to raise prices, and they will have an incentive to bring in gasoline from further away. This is simple economics. It works every day in every market (potatoes, cotton, gold, meat, you name it!) As long as the government interferes with the free market by insisting that gas stations don’t ‘price gouge’, the shortage will not end. I predict that gas prices only have to go up a dollar or two per gallon – and the problem will be solved literally overnight. (Why are prices allowed to go up when OPEC arbitrarily cuts supply, but not when an honest trucker wants to bring in gasoline from a hundred miles away?) Its hard to believe that our elected officials don’t understand simple economics. Maybe if enough people forward this idea to their elected officials – they’ll wake up from their power-induced ‘hero’ halucinations and stop focusing on preventing ‘price-gouging’ and instead allow prices to go up in order to save their constituents hundreds of thousand of collective hours waiting in line….

    SF2K1
    SF2K1
    11 years ago

    All the more reason to get rid of gas guzzlers and use public transportation.

    DRE53
    DRE53
    11 years ago

    We need to make it clear to Bloomberg that if this shortage persists we won’t give him a 4th term