Fair
41°
Crystal Lake, IL
Fair|Forecast »

Gas rationing and shortage 
fray nerves in New York City

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

NEW YORK – A gasoline shortage caused by superstorm Sandy forced 1970s-era rationing on New Yorkers Friday, adding a fuel-gauge obsession to their frayed nerves and dwindling patience.

“I take passenger, I look at gas. I take another passenger, I look at gas,” said New York City taxi driver Shi Shir K. Roy. “Tension all the time.”

Though rationing that allowed private motorists to fill up only every other day seemed to help with gas lines, it didn’t answer motorists’ questions about why they had been waiting for days in hourslong lines to fuel up. The confusion led some, like Angel Ventura, to panic.

Ventura, who drives a graffiti-covered delivery van for a camera rental company, said he 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 as he waited for gas in Manhattan.

As drivers waited on police-monitored lines, thousands of more residents in the region got their power back since Sandy came ashore 12 days ago. More than 420,000 customers still were without power in New Jersey and the New York City area. President Barack Obama said he would survey the damage in New York next week. The American Red Cross said Friday that widespread destruction from the storm will likely make this the largest U.S. relief effort since Hurricane Katrina in 2005, outpacing Hurricanes Ike and Gustav and California wildfires.

The gasoline rationing – first in the nation’s largest city since the 1970s Arab oil embargo – forced motorists to line up depending on whether their license plate ends with odd or even numbers. Mayor Michael Bloomberg said one-third of the city’s gas stations were open Friday, compared to 25 percent the day before, and cautioned, “there’s no guarantee that odd-even is going to make a big difference.”

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

Previous Page|1||||
Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Reader Poll

Which gaming system do you own?

Xbox
Wii
PlayStation
other
more than one