ATLANTA (AP) - Motorists are rising before dawn so they can be
at the filling station when the delivery truck arrives. Some are
skipping work or telecommuting. Others are taking the extreme step
- for Atlanta - of switching to public transportation.
Across a section of the South, a hurricane-induced gasoline
shortage that was expected to last only a few days is dragging into
its third week, and experts say it could persist into mid-October.
The Atlanta area has been hit particularly hard, along with
Nashville and western North Carolina.
Those lucky enough to find gas are paying more than drivers
elsewhere around the country.
"I've used up gas just looking for gas," said Larry Jenkins, a
construction worker who pulled his red pickup truck into a Citgo
station in Charlotte, N.C., on Monday. The sign said $3.99 a
gallon, but the pumps were closed. Many filling stations in the
area have not had gas for days.
"Right now, I'll pay anything for gas," Jenkins said. "I
don't care if it's $5 or $6 a gallon. I need it."
The shortage started with the one-two punch of Hurricanes Gustav
and Ike, which shut down refineries along the Gulf Coast. Now, more
than two weeks after Ike, many refineries are still making fuel at
reduced levels.
While other parts of the country get gasoline from a variety of
domestic and overseas sources, the Southeast relies heavily on two
pipelines that carry fuel from the Gulf of Mexico. Because the
gasoline moves at just 3 to 5 mph, it can take up to 10 days to
reach Atlanta.
A tendency among panicky drivers in the hardest-hit areas to top
off their tanks every time they pass an open station has only made
matters worse.
"Fuel is coming back into the system, but as soon as it comes
in, it's being sucked back out by consumers who are afraid the
shortage is going to continue," said Ben Brockwell of the Oil
Price Information Service in Wall, N.J.
In the meantime, government agencies have postponed public
hearings, community colleges have canceled classes, and some
companies have provided vans for carpooling or encouraged employees
to work from home.
Hours-long lines, "No gas" signs and plastic bags covering
fuel-pump nozzles are familiar sights around Atlanta, where drivers
have become intimately familiar with fuel delivery schedules,
rising before daybreak when they know gas is coming to a certain
station.
"I was just in Atlanta yesterday. There is no gasoline in
Atlanta, in Charlotte, in Chattanooga. It's like a Third World
country," former House Speaker Newt Gingrich said Sunday on ABC.
Police officers and a security guard were on hand to manage the
flow of cars at a downtown Atlanta gas station around midday
Monday.
Kathy Burdett, 49, of Forest Park, said the shortage ruined her
weekend plans to visit Stone Mountain with out-of-town guests.
"I didn't go anywhere all weekend and we kept close to home,"
said Burdett, who had to hunt for the gasoline her friends needed
to make it home to Tennessee.
The average price for regular gas Monday was $3.94 per gallon in
Georgia, 30 cents higher than the national average, according to
the AAA. Motorists were paying an average of $3.89 a gallon Monday
in North Carolina and $3.80 in South Carolina.
Authorities in North Carolina and Tennessee said they were
investigating reports of price-gouging, while Georgia's consumer
affairs office has subpoenaed sales records from 130 gas stations
because of similar complaints.
Even in Atlanta, a city notorious for long commutes and traffic,
some drivers were turning to public transportation. Although the
MARTA bus and subway system did not have ridership numbers for
September, a spokeswoman said parking lots at stations were busier
than usual.
As she waited in a gas line at an Atlanta station, 27-year-old
Kasheeda Washington said she planned to start taking the bus
because driving from her home in suburban Marietta to two jobs in
Atlanta and to classes at the downtown campus of Georgia State
University had become too expensive.
"I would have never thought this day would come when I would
have to wait for gas," she said.
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Associated Press writers John Porretto in Houston, Juanita
Cousins in Atlanta, Katrina A. Goggins in Columbia, S.C., Randall
Dickerson in Nashville, Tenn., and Mitch Weiss in Charlotte, N.C.,
contributed to this report.
(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)