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westiedogs Aug 31st, 2005 04:44 PM

No Gas In NC
 
There is no more gas being delivered to NC. The lines at the gas station are about an hour long and I heard that they had their last delivery on Sunday which would last approx. 5-7 days. I also heard they let police, gov't officers, etc. know of the shortage yesterday but the public had no knowledge until late today. The governor says not to panic but not to travel on labor day. Katrina is everywhere.

mikemo Aug 31st, 2005 04:45 PM

Speak to and vote for energy savvy politicians.
M

Binthair Aug 31st, 2005 05:05 PM

I knew someday I would figure out why I left NC for Texas!

steve Aug 31st, 2005 05:26 PM

I guess you don't live in NC. I just waited in line for 5 minutes to fill up and yes I needed it.


rb_travelerxATyahoo Aug 31st, 2005 08:22 PM

I was reading the online edition of the Newport News VA Daily Press (www.dailypress.com) and it states the situation in Tidewater/Peninsula Virginia is the same.

Litespeed_Chick Sep 1st, 2005 04:21 AM

I'm in SC, about 15 miles from the NC line. I ignored the panic-buying last night and got gas this morning without waiting.

Official word is there is enough gas, and some of the pipelines are already back working. The cause of the shortage and lines...and ridiculous prices...is people over-reacting and rushing to the pump.

Or at least I hope so....

leahinsc Sep 1st, 2005 04:38 AM

Litespeed - here in Asheville people were being ridiculous as well. Reminded me of last year's flu shot panic - people who'd never even considered getting one waiting in line for hours. I have 1/2 a tank - I'll work from home, walk where I have to and it's already been on the news that the gas lines are running at 30% and we'll have gas by Sunday back to "normal"...

westiedogs Sep 1st, 2005 05:13 AM

In Charlotte last night, there were huge lines and even fights at the gas stations. Today, a few got supply but alot are out.

SAnParis Sep 1st, 2005 05:31 AM

I pulled right up to the pump in Charlotte last night w/no wait at all. Was it busier than usual, yes. But most of the panic buying occurred right after work I think. Nothing like a great leader to instill unnecessary panic in the masses. I'm still going to the beach this weekend, if I get stuck there for a few extra days, so be it.

maryanne1 Sep 1st, 2005 05:32 AM

My daughter who lives in the Mooresville area reported the same last night at the gas pumps-lines and high prices.
The Governor of N.C. has sent an email to state workers(she is one) of this shortage and what they should do.

SAnParis Sep 1st, 2005 05:37 AM

There is looting going on here in Charlotte as well, gas was up to $3.69/gallon last I checked (for Premium) & may be even more this morning. The Governor caused the panic, w/the ill-advised TV pronouncement.

obxgirl Sep 1st, 2005 06:22 AM

There is no shortage of gas in the Hampton Roads area of Virginia. Activity at the pumps seems busier than normal (and has been all week) but there are no lines. I'd attribute that to increasing prices not lack of supply.

Local news sources are saying that the pipeline supplying gas to most of the eastern seaboard has reopened although not to full capacity yet.

I think the Gov of NC was irresponsible in his statement. It's one thing to take reasonable steps (like suspending non mandatory travel for state workers) but an entirely different thing to announce the sky might be falling (oh, but don't panic).

Litespeed_Chick Sep 1st, 2005 06:23 AM

Leah- good analogy. I hated to go to the gas station even this morning w/ the rest of the lemmings...but the last time I filled up I was in Charleston...I was going to become a bike commuter if I didn't find any today! Paid $3.20 for midgrade.

SAnParis Sep 1st, 2005 06:30 AM

Exactly obx, let's take what may, or may not be a problem, & turn it into a major over-reaction &/or panic situation.

Chicago_Heather Sep 1st, 2005 06:55 AM

When you wrote "There is looting going on here in Charlotte as well", do you mean actual looting of stores? I hadn't heard anything about it on the news.

leahinsc Sep 1st, 2005 06:59 AM

I think SanParis meant "looting" with regards to price gauging...A friend of mine went to a station here in Asheville and they told her the credit card machines weren't working and that she would have to pay cash - she suspect this was so they wouldn't have to report it.

SAnParis Sep 1st, 2005 07:07 AM

I was referring to the gouging at the pump. It is a shame that gas stations & hotels feel the need to take advantage of people at a time when the last thing they should be worrying about is their 'bottom-line'.

Chicago_Heather Sep 1st, 2005 07:17 AM

Not that getting shafted at the pump is a good thing, but I was hoping that it was what the post referred to ... I'm sorry to hear about so many hardships along with the devastation.

BKelly Sep 1st, 2005 08:03 AM

Both gas stations off of Exit 23 east of I-77 had no gas left this morning. Lines into the street yesterday for both of them....

leahinsc Sep 1st, 2005 08:08 AM

I think yesterday was a mess - it was the same here in Asheville and now everything has calmed down - the most recent news is that the pipeline supplying much of the SE has been restored up to 30% capacity and they expect it to be up to 60% by the weekend. This is still not great but we will be getting gas - just at higher prices. More incentive for people to think about how they can conserve.

wiseguy Sep 1st, 2005 09:32 AM

As a former gas station owner, I can tell you that the raise in price yesterday was a rip off. What the owners had in the ground yesterday was purchased at a lower price. When they run out and have to refill, then the raise in price MIGHT be justified.

Is it time to FINALLY start buying smaller cars as in Europe?

Is it time to shrug off the tree huggers and start drilling for oil in this country?

inthechips2 Sep 1st, 2005 09:37 AM

Every week when my little neighborhood station gets its shipment, the price changes. (Mostly up lately, unfortunately). It doesn't make sense that the stations changed their prices within no time at all after this crisis occurred in NOLA. Did they all get a shipment at exactly the same time? Wiseguy is so right on this one.

cmcfong Sep 1st, 2005 09:38 AM

$4.99 a gallon in High Point, NC at noon today.
The Attorney General (wishing to be governor) announced that citizens should report any price gouging. "That's illegal" he cried as the cameras ran. Wait, does he have a spare minute to tell us how to recognize gouging as opposed to normal profiteering? Any teams investigating? Has he bothered to read the statute and see the one to which he refers only applies if the Governor has declared a state of emergency Just venting, folks.

Litespeed_Chick Sep 1st, 2005 10:03 AM

wiseguy:
"Is it time to FINALLY start buying smaller cars as in Europe?

Is it time to shrug off the tree huggers and start drilling for oil in this country?"

Yes to both. Hmmm... does that make me a moderate?


leahinsc Sep 1st, 2005 10:08 AM

I think this is a good wake up call for a gas reliant nation. Today walking down the street I saw a man leave his new Buick idling as he stood on a porch to converse with someone for 10 minutes and let's not even start talking about the fuel-ishly inefficent SUV's, Hummers etc....I'm all for Smart Cars like they have in Europe but right now am afraid of being creamed by some cellphone talking mom with a Starbucks coffee in the other hand and a screaming child in the back seat.

allovereurope Sep 1st, 2005 10:10 AM

I think if we had listened to the tree huggers, we wouldn't be looking at this gas crisis. Bush reduced funding for the levees, since he thought a Cat 4 or 5 storm was unlikely in that region.

Environmentalists and scientists said that because of global warming, they are much more likely. He shrugged off the scientists an said global warming does not exist. So the levees weren't reinforced, they failed, and now we're short of gas.

By the way, the money saved was used for Iraq.

mikemo Sep 1st, 2005 10:20 AM

"...Pay for what you value and Value what you pay for..."
Medical care may be next.

Much of MX may be 2nd or 3rd World, but "none" of the Central Mexicanos (including the drug dealers and corrupt politicians) would behave, in the face of a regional catastrophe, like the Barbarian hoards in the SE US we are seeing on international Sat/Cable TV.
Fifth world? Maybe. Check the prison populations. They are there for a VG reason.
Hope y'all bought some energy stocks on Tuesday or Wednesday.
Vayan con Dios, mis amigos.
M

MerryTravel Sep 1st, 2005 11:00 AM

If you think you're being gouged save your gas receipts (that paying with cash stuff is nonsense!). The governor of Michigan is encouraging people to do this so the gougers can be prosecuted when things settle down.

Litespeed_Chick Sep 1st, 2005 11:04 AM

allovereurope: I would like to see your source for that comment about Bush and the levies and his reasoning. I think you are full of it, but give me a reliable source and I'll apologize.

There is absolutely no way for us to know if the current warming trend is meaningful in any way. The time we have been measuring temps is a drop in the ocean compared to the history of the earth. It's hilarious that people have begun to take the global warming theories as fact. Maybe humans are causing the earth to warm, and maybe we're not. Too soon to tell.

Should we rein in our over-comsumption? Sure. I'm certainly sick of seeing huge gas guzzling SUVs with Sierra Club stickers on them. Should we run around blaming global warming for everything from hurricanes to asthma and talk about how wind and solar power could run the world if not for evil politicians? No, that would just make us look like fatuous, head-in-the-sand morons.

allovereurope Sep 1st, 2005 11:41 AM

It was on Salon.com go to the site, get a free sitepass, it's all there. Granted, they do love to rip up Bush on that site. But its considered reputable, as far as I know.

allovereurope Sep 1st, 2005 11:52 AM

Whoops---here is the link.

http://www.salon.com/opinion/blument...ion/index.html

I don't post information on these forums unless I've either been to a place or read or researched something myself. I'm not full of it.


capecodshanty Sep 1st, 2005 12:07 PM

Thanks for the site, all over europe. For months, my husband has been telling me what a great site it is. It has some wonderful information, not just the rants and raves of so many.

RBCal Sep 1st, 2005 12:14 PM

Also from salon

The Bush administration's policy of turning over wetlands to developers almost certainly also contributed to the heightened level of the storm surge. In 1990, a federal task force began restoring lost wetlands surrounding New Orleans. Every two miles of wetland between the Crescent City and the Gulf reduces a surge by half a foot. Bush had promised "no net loss" of wetlands, a policy launched by his father's administration and bolstered by President Clinton. But he reversed his approach in 2003, unleashing the developers. The Army Corps of Engineers and the Environmental Protection Agency then announced they could no longer protect wetlands unless they were somehow related to interstate commerce.

wtm003 Sep 1st, 2005 12:20 PM

Allovereurope - I would hardly call Sidney Blumenthal a reputable source. His anti-Bush agenda is as obvious as Ann Coulter's anti-Clinton bias. I'm skeptical of ANY left or right wing organization that claims to know the truth.

New Orleans has been a disaster waiting to happen for decades. A scientist with the National Hurricane Center was on television a few days ago and said that Katrina was just part of the normal hurricane cycle. According to him, hurricanes cycles fluctuate year to year. I'm much more willing to consider a scientific opinion than commentary by someone trying to push a political agenda.

I think the most important agenda at the moment is to pitch in - donate money, cut back on gas consumption, volunteer - do something productive rather than point fingers and blame.

Yawn_boring Sep 1st, 2005 12:50 PM

Delerious -- great name! Read the rules -- no posting copyrighted material. What a load of drivel anyway.

Shane Sep 1st, 2005 01:13 PM

Ironically, in the Sept. 11, 2001 edition of POPULAR MECHANICS, a man named Jim Wilson authored an article which explained what might happen to New Orleans if hit by a hurricane of Katrina's strength. Of course, the article was swept away by the sensational events of that day and forgotten- until now.

Delirious Sep 1st, 2005 01:19 PM

Oops sorry! I'm delirous so I can't be held responsible!!!!!!

Little_Man Sep 1st, 2005 01:20 PM

I apologize in advance. But I have nowhere to vent!!! I just saw on tv a big navy ship leaving Va. to help the hurricane victims. It'll take 5 or 6 days to get there...Why on earth is everything taking so long???

On Sunday, while watching CNN, I said to my husband, why on earth aren't there buses and cargo planes in there evacuating people now? Am I the only one who thought that?

Where is our government????

Deona Sep 1st, 2005 02:01 PM

I read someones earlier post about the gas being $4.99 a gallon in High Point, NC. That's just too much. Sounds like our gas is going to be elevated like the European gas prices.

allovereurope Sep 3rd, 2005 12:15 AM

How about this person's qualifications (as quoted in the New York Times, which I believe is considered a reputable source):

In June 2004, Walter Maestri, emergency management chief for Jefferson Parish, fretted to The Times-Picayune in New Orleans: "It appears that the money has been moved in the president's budget to handle homeland security and the war in Iraq, and I suppose that's the price we pay. Nobody locally is happy that the levees can't be finished, and we are doing everything we can to make the case that this is a security issue for us."

Waiting for my apology....


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