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A motorist pumps gas while people stand in line with containers to purchase gas on Friday in Brooklyn, N.Y. Police were at gas stations to enforce a new gasoline rationing plan that lets motorists fill up every other day.

A motorist pumps gas while people stand in line with containers to purchase gas on Friday in Brooklyn, N.Y. Police were at gas stations to enforce a new gasoline rationing plan that lets motorists fill up every other day.
Bebeto Matthews / The Associated Press

Gas rationing in New York fuels tempers, long lines

By Tina Susman / Los Angeles Times
Published: November 10. 2012 4:00AM PST

NEW YORK — Leslie Martin was never so happy to be odd. If only she’d known how to pump her own gas on the first day of rationing in New York and suburban Long Island.

Still, Martin made do early Friday after waiting for hours in line as the state tries to manage the gasoline shortage resulting from station closures and fuel delivery problems in the wake of Hurricane Sandy. Because Friday, Nov. 9, is an odd number, only people like Martin, driving cars with license plates ending in odd numbers or characters, were allowed at the pumps.

Estimates vary on the percentage of stations in New York City that are open and pumping regularly. When Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced the rationing plan Thursday, he said only about one-quarter of the city’s stations had gas available. Whatever the true number, it’s not enough — as evidenced by the lines that quickly sprout and extend down avenues as soon as tankers show up with fuel supplies. The search for an open gas station has replaced the search for a parking space as the most infuriating task for city dwellers.

Martin, who lives in Brooklyn, did not have to look far. A large station in her neighborhood was open early Friday. She got into her daughter’s black Honda — which she needed to return to her daughter in Washington over the weekend — and waited, along with hundreds of other vehicles whose plates ended in 1,3,5,7 or 9. Police stood guard at one end of the station, but they couldn’t cover all the entrances, leading some people, like Nellie Smith, to try to cut in front of others.

“I’ve been in this car for two hours!" Martin bellowed as Smith tried to nudge the nose of her red Ford Focus in front of car after car. Each vehicle successfully hugged the rear bumper of the car in front to prevent Smith from getting into the line. Martin did the same.

“I’m too old for this," she said half-jokingly after Smith conceded defeat and drove off. “And it’s not even my car."

At the pumps, signs directed customers to pay first — cash only, $50 limit. Behind protective glass in a small booth, a lone woman managed the seemingly endless line of people pushing dollars toward her, impatient to fill up before the pumps ran dry.

Mick Ahmed, who runs a car service in Brooklyn, said his 15 drivers never knew when or where they’d be able to fill up. If they spot an open station, they pull in and wait, often for several hours, said Ahmed. That, combined with the increase in people calling for cars because of disruptions in public transport, has made keeping his business afloat “near impossible."

“It’s murder," said Ahmed as he fielded calls from people trying to reserve vehicles and from drivers checking in to give updates on open gas stations. At any given time, he said one-fourth of his drivers were stuck in gas lines. “It’s a loss for everyone, but what are you gonna do?" he said with a shrug.

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