Fuel shortage means gridlock in lines for gasoline
|
A
sign indicates that no gas is available at a gas station in the Brooklyn
borough of New York, Friday, Nov. 2, 2012. Homeland Security Secretary
Janet Napolitano on Friday temporarily waived a maritime rule to allow
foreign oil tankers coming from the Gulf of Mexico to enter Northeastern
ports to help ease a fuel shortage in the areas hardest hit by
Superstorm Sandy. Area residents have been struggling to find gas
stations with power. At stations with power, residents have faced
miles-long lines and dwindling supplies. |
NEW YORK (AP) -- When it came to fuel supplies and patience, the New York metro area was running close to empty Friday.
From
storm-scarred New Jersey to parts of Connecticut, a widespread lack of
gasoline or electricity to pump it brought grousing, gridlock and worse,
compounding frustrations as millions of Americans struggled to return
to normal days after Superstorm Sandy. A man pulled a gun in one
gas-line fracas that led to an arrest.
Lines
of cars, and in many places queues of people on foot carrying bright red
jerry cans for generators, waited for hours for the precious fuel. And
those were the lucky ones. Other customers gave up after finding only
closed stations or dry pumps marked with yellow tape or "No Gas" signs.
"EMPTY!" declared the red-type headline dominating the New York Daily News' front page.
"I
drove around last night and couldn't find anything," said a relieved
Kwabena Sintim-Misa as he finally prepared to fill up Friday morning in
Fort Lee, N.J., near the George Washington Bridge, where the wait in
line lasted three hours.
Arlend Pierre-Louis of Elmont, on Long Island, said he awoke at 4:30 a.m. to try to get gas.
When
he finally found some - "the one working pump in Elmont" - the line was
so long he gave up and returned to his home, which still has no light
or hot water.
At a Hess gas station in the Gowanus section of Brooklyn, the 10-block line caused confusion among passing drivers.
"There's
been a little screaming, a little yelling. And I saw one guy banging on
the hood of a car," said Vince Levine, who got in line in his van at 5
a.m. and was still waiting at 8 a.m. "But mostly it's been OK."
While
the snaking lines and frayed nerves revived memories for some of the
crippling Arab oil embargo of the 1970s, a cabdriver stuck in a 17-block
line at a Manhattan station remained philosophical.
"I don't blame anybody," said Harum Prince. "God, he knows why he brought this storm."
Many
tried to heed Mayor Michael Bloomberg's admonition to "have some
patience" as the stricken metro area recovers from the unprecedented
storm that upended daily life with power outages, food shortages and
other frustrations besides lack of fuel.
But tempers boiled over in some places.
Arguments
in gas station queues in New York's Queens borough and in Pelham led to
arrests, authorities said. In the first case, a man pulled a gun, and
in the second police confiscated a box cutter. No one was hurt.
Power
outages that lingered across the region prevented some gas stations
that had fuel from being able to pump it, officials said. But fuel
supplies themselves were badly disrupted by the storm.
Sandy
damaged ports that accept fuel tankers and flooded underground
equipment that sends fuel through pipelines. Without power, fuel
terminals can't pump gasoline onto tanker trucks, and gas stations can't
pump fuel into customers' cars.
The Port of
New York and New Jersey was slowly starting to accept tankers, but some
cargo was being diverted to the Port of Virginia. Federal requirements
for low-smog gasoline have been lifted, and fuel trucks are on their way
to the area.
Officials said they were working to speed the flow of fuel.
On
Friday, the Obama administration ordered the purchase of up to 12
million gallons of unleaded fuel and up to 10 million gallons of diesel
fuel for distribution in areas affected by the storm to supplement
private-sector efforts. It will be transported by tanker trucks to New
York, New Jersey and other damaged communities.
In
addition, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano temporarily
waived a maritime rule to allow foreign oil tankers coming from the Gulf
of Mexico to enter Northeastern ports. The action, she said, would
"remove a potential obstacle to bringing additional fuel to the
storm-damaged region."
New York Gov. Andrew
Cuomo, meanwhile, signed an executive order waiving the state's
requirement that fuel tankers register and pay a tax before unloading.
Tankers, he said Friday, are now making "great progress" delivering fuel to distribution centers.
"No reason to panic," the governor urged.
Bloomberg
told reporters Friday that the gas-supply issues "are starting to be
alleviated" through the temporary regulatory fixes and other
developments. He noted a plan is in place to ensure that police, fire
and other emergency vehicles have the fuel they need. Buses, including
school buses, are also a priority.
"But the bottom line is that the gasoline system is getting back on its feet," he said.
Delays
due to storms, the mayor added, "have happened before. They spring up
very quickly, and they go away very quickly. We basically have a supply
system - as it comes in we use it. If it stops coming in, we're in
trouble."
But keeping perspective could be a challenge as the gas lines lengthened.
Many
service centers along the Garden State Parkway and the New Jersey
Turnpike were so full that cars trying to pass at highway speeds
sometimes had to swerve to avoid them.
One New
Jersey town, Belleville, passed an emergency ordinance that rations
gas: Effective Monday, people with odd numbered license plates (or
driver's licenses for individuals filling gas containers) will only be
allowed to get gas on odd-numbered days; even-numbered plates on
even-numbered days.
In Connecticut, traffic
jams created by New Yorkers exiting from Interstate 95 to take advantage
of the stations that were open were "making it difficult for
everybody," said Greenwich police Lt. Kraig Gray.
Police
monitored lines in many places, including a Hess station in Fort Lee,
N.J., where an officer was seen ordering a man out of line after
sneaking in from a side street.
Among those waiting there, Kenneth Kelly of Englewood Cliffs took it all in stride.
"It
ain't that bad. I could be in Queens," he said, referring to the
confrontations there. "I've seen a lot of bad in my life, people getting
sick and things like that. This is what I call an inconvenience. Now,
losing something like a house, that would be bad."
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