Gasoline Runs Short, Adding Woes to Storm Recovery
Widespread
gas shortages stirred fears among residents and disrupted some rescue
and emergency services on Thursday as the New York region struggled
to return to a semblance of normalcy after being ravaged by Hurricane
Sandy
1
November, 2012
Tiny
increments of progress — some subway and bus lines were back in
service — were overshadowed by new estimates of the storm’s
financial cost, struggles to restore power, and by the discovery of
more bodies in flooded communities.
The
lines of cars waiting for gas at a Sunoco here ran in three
directions: a mile-long line up the Garden State Parkway, a half-mile
line along Vauxhall Road, and another, including a fleet of mail
trucks that needed to refuel before resuming their rounds, snaking
through a back entrance. The scene was being replayed across the
state as drivers waited in lines that ran hundreds of vehicles deep,
requiring state troopers and local police to protect against
exploding tempers.
“I’ve
been pumping gas for 36 hours, I pumped 17,000 gallons,” said
Abhishek Soni, the owner of an Exxon in Montclair, where disputes on
the line Wednesday night had become so heated that Mr. Soni called
the police and turned off the pumps for 45 minutes to restore calm.
“My nose, my mouth is bleeding from the fumes. The fighting just
makes it worse.”
Four
days after Hurricane Sandy, the effort to secure enough gas for the
region moved to the forefront of recovery work. The problems affected
even New York City, where the Taxi Commission warned that the
suddenly indispensable fleet of yellow cabs would thin significantly
Friday because of the fuel shortage.
City
officials said they had reached an agreement with a major supplier
Thursday night that would ensure emergency operations — fire,
police, sanitation and work by the parks department to clean up
downed trees — would continue uninterrupted.
Though
Thursday marked a return to routine for many who ride the subway to
work or celebrated the resumption of power, the scenes of long lines,
fistfights at gas stations and siphoning at parking lots highlighted
the difficult, uneven slog to recovery.
The
losses from the storm will approach $50 billion, according to an
early estimate from economists at Moody’s Analytics — about $30
billion in property damage, the rest in lost economic activity like
meals and canceled flights. At the same time the death toll in New
York City rose to 38, as rescuers continued to discover bodies while
combing through coastal wreckage. Among them were the bodies of two
boys, 2 and 4, who had been torn from their mother by raging
floodwaters on Staten Island on Monday night.
The
lack of power continued to bedevil efforts to address the damage.
About 43 percent of customers in New Jersey and about 16 percent in
New York State remained without electricity, and Officials said that
they expected power to be restored to all of Manhattan by Saturday.
Those issues were only aggravated by the increasingly short supply of
gas, particularly given that many suburban residents in New Jersey
and elsewhere were heading to the stations to fuel generators, which
provided the lone source of power and heat to homes across the
region.
According
to figures from AAA, of the gas stations it monitors, roughly 60
percent of stations in New Jersey and 70 percent on Long Island were
closed.
At
stations that were open, nerves frayed. Fights broke out Thursday at
the block-long Hess station on 10th Avenue in Midtown Manhattan,
forcing the Police Department to send three officers to keep the
peace, a police official said. By evening, the police had to close
two lanes of the broad thoroughfare to accommodate a line of
customers stretching eight blocks, to 37th Street.
The
ports and refineries that supply much of the region’s gas had been
shut down in advance of the storm and were damaged by it. That
disrupted deliveries to gas stations that had power to pump the fuel.
But the bigger problem was that many stations and storage facilities
remained without power.
Politicians
were scrambling Thursday to increase the supply of fuel — the Port
of New York and New Jersey opened just enough to allow boats carrying
gas to move, and Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey waived
restrictions that make it harder for stations to buy gas from
out-of-state suppliers. Mr. Christie’s office had warned that price
gougers would be prosecuted, but drivers were reporting that some
stations were charging more than $4 a gallon, even though the state
had set gas prices at $3.59 on the highways last week.
Mr.
Christie said Thursday afternoon that President Obama had sent
250,000 gallons of gas and 500,000 gallons of diesel fuel to the
state through the Department of Defense, and he pledged to send more
if needed.
Despite
these steps the situation was not expected to get significantly
better on Friday. Utility companies said power might not be fully
restored until late next week.
In
Paterson, N.J., the state’s third-largest city, the Police
Department was trying to negotiate emergency contracts for gas, and
short of that, said it would beginning siphoning it from other city
vehicles to keep police cruisers running.
The
Essex County executive, Joseph N. DiVincenzo Jr., said that the fuel
shortage had become his No. 1 concern, causing officials to start
limiting gas half a tank at a time to police and fire vehicles. “All
22 of our municipalities are having problems getting fuel,” he
said. “Everyone’s on edge.”
Some
drove hours out of their way, across state lines, in search of gas.
Others tried their luck at a dozen stations, finding many roped off,
or turned to Twitter, trading tips about where lines were long.
That
is how Jason Brown, 25, of St. Albans, Queens, learned there might be
gas at a BP station two miles away in Valley Stream, Nassau County.
He walked there lugging a five-gallon Igloo cooler hoping to fill it
with gas for his car — only to find a line stretching a
quarter-mile along Sunrise Highway. When the generator pumping the
gas failed, the crowd erupted into fights and police were called in
to close the station.
“I’m
trying to get gas for my family,” Mr. Brown said. “Everywhere you
go, it’s either a riot or there’s no gas.”
The
lines themselves only exacerbated the problem; reports in the local
media provoked drivers to buy gasoline before stations ran out. Some
spent what fuel they had searching for more and could be seen pushing
vehicles toward relief.
“I
just want to have it, because you don’t know how long this is going
to last,” said Richard Bianchi, waiting in the half-mile line at
the Sunoco in Union with a tank that was three-quarters full.
“People
are panicking,” said Jimmy Qawasmi, the owner of a Mobil in the
Westchester County town of Mamaroneck. “People must have heard
something.”
Bloomfield
Avenue, a traffic artery connecting several towns in Essex County,
N.J., was unusually congested as drivers stopped to lean out their
windows at every station: “You got gas?” Mr. Soni’s station in
Montclair had received a delivery of 8,000 gallons at 4 p.m.
Wednesday, but that had run out by 2:30 a.m. Thursday. A tanker truck
passed by, prompting a cheer. “I’m empty!” the driver called
out.
Up
the road, a tanker turned into one gas station just down from where a
crowd was waiting at another. The people waiting dashed across the
street, only to see the tanker turn and go to the station where they
had been waiting. The police were refusing to let the station open
for three hours, but people were determined to hold out.
As
Benito Domena, holding two gas cans, said: “The wait is just going
to be worse elsewhere.”
16 Photos Of Chaos As New Yorkers Attempt To Get Back To Work
Across
New York and New Jersey, commuters fight staggering bus lines and
fuel shortages to get back to their normal lives.
1
November, 2012
1. A bus line wrapping around the Barclays Center in Brooklyn
Source: @RAndersonBRKLYN
3. The line for the bus outside the Barclays Center in Brooklyn wrapped twice around the building
Via: AP
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