RALEIGH, N.C., Sept. 26, 2008

Gas Shortage Wipes Out Southern Weekend

Drivers Still Wait In Long Fuel Lines Weeks After Ike Shuts Down Refineries, Pipelines

    • A sign announcing that a filling station is out of gas is displayed in Nashville, Tenn., Sept. 19, 2008.

      A sign announcing that a filling station is out of gas is displayed in Nashville, Tenn., Sept. 19, 2008.  (AP/Mark Humphrey)

    • Yellow warning tape is wrapped around empty gas pumps in Nashville, Tenn., Sept. 19, 2008.

      Yellow warning tape is wrapped around empty gas pumps in Nashville, Tenn., Sept. 19, 2008.  (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey)

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(AP)  This is how serious the Southeastern gas shortage has become: There's talk of calling off college football.

Not serious talk, of course. A petroleum executive's suggestion that No. 3 Georgia postpone its Saturday night game against No. 8 Alabama was quickly dismissed Friday by the Georgia governor's office as "ridiculous."

But the university's police chief did suggest fans who can't make a round trip to Sanford Stadium on a single tank stay home.

Weeks after Hurricane Ike shut down Gulf Coast refineries and dried up interstate pipelines, some panicked drivers are still waiting in long lines to top off their tanks at the few stations with fuel.

Many across the Southeast are keeping their cars in the garage this weekend, forced to cancel plans for fear they'll run out of gas.

"I don't have any assurance that I'm gonna even be able to get more than $30 worth of gas," said Wendy Stewart, 37, a bank manager from Atlanta who had planned to drive to Charlotte. "How am I gonna get out of town and drive five hours on $30 of gas? I can't do it."

Brittany Hoisington, a 19-year-old veterinary assistant from Raleigh, decided weeks ago to travel to Asheville with her grandfather to visit her uncle. She hasn't seen her uncle in five years, and now the reunion will have to wait.

"I figure it might not be a good idea to go there if there's no way to get gas," Hoisington said. "How would we get home?"

The gas shortage has hit hardest in Atlanta, Nashville, Tenn., and the Carolinas, including the Charlotte area and the mountain towns to the west. For days it has closed civic offices, cut short workdays and even canceled community college classes.

Despite promises that more fuel may have already arrived, the shortage appears likely to continue to intrude on personal time, threatening college football homecomings, spins through the mountains to check out fall foliage and even a last warm-weather weekend at the beach.

"People have called saying, 'If I get there, can I get back?"' said Brad Dean, the president of the chamber of commerce in Myrtle Beach, S.C., where gas is plentiful.

Quote

It's like ants to a picnic and they feed until it's all gone.

Tom Crosby, AAA Carolinas spokesman
Worried drivers have jammed the phone lines all week at the Florida offices of AAA Auto Club South to ask if they should cancel plans. Those who can't, said spokesman Randy Bly, should budget extra time to search for gas and start hunting when their fuel gauge starts to drop.

"What I tell people is if I had the option, I would not go anywhere this weekend," Bly said.

Ironically, those warnings are exacerbating the shortage. Tom Crosby, a spokesman for AAA Carolinas, said more than two-thirds of the Gulf Coast oil refineries shut down by Ike are back online. Fuel is again flowing in the pipelines that serve the hardest-hit areas, he said, but not enough to account for folks rushing to top off their tanks when an empty station is resupplied.

"It's like ants to a picnic and they feed until it's all gone," Crosby said.

He and state officials said supply issues in western North Carolina should subside by Saturday, but such promises aren't always enough for innkeepers as they try to soothe customers worried they won't be able to make it back home from a mountain getaway.

"We have had some cancellations," said Ron Storto, the vice president of hospitality for Biltmore Farms Hotels, which operates four hotels in Asheville. "It's the uncertainty of it that's got people on edge."

Some aren't bothered by the shortage. In eastern Kentucky, state police said a motorcycle fundraising ride scheduled for Sunday - postponed once already - will proceed as planned. Officials at North Carolina State and Wake Forest universities chuckled at the idea of calling off their weekend football games.

Even in places that have gas, cost is still a concern. Mandy Roberts, of Pleasant View, Tenn., had planned to drive with her husband and 9-year-old son to Tuscaloosa, Ala., next weekend to watch Alabama host Kentucky. But they sold their tickets, unable to afford the drive.

"I'm disappointed. This would have been my son's first game," said Roberts, 29. "He's starting to take an interest, and it would have been neat for him to see it in-person. Maybe next year."

© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 17 Comments
by xmanborg September 29, 2008 12:25 PM EDT
I am sure that John McCain has plenty of GAS. His depends can supply all his GAS needs years.

McCain is so FULL of Himself. Wrong on WMD, Wrong on USA being greated as Liberators, Wrong on Sectarian Violence.

McCain just Wrong for 2009.
Reply to this comment
by nellyolson September 29, 2008 3:12 AM EDT
George Bush is scum, McCain is worse. The sad part is, dummies will actually vote for him.
Join the change www.theoandavirus.com/forum
Reply to this comment
by labourboss September 28, 2008 1:41 AM EDT
Here in Texas where Ike hit (Southeast texas) I have not had any problem getting gas at $3.499 a gallon. I think somebody is being taken for a ride.
PS We are all getting taken for a ride on the price!
Reply to this comment
by janefondu September 27, 2008 11:49 PM EDT
LOOK WHAT A DEMOCRATIC LED CONGRESS CAN DO FOR THE COUNTRY... NADA , ZIP , ZERO, ZILCH. THEIR MOTTO IS DONT BE A HERO BE A ZERO!!! MAYBE THATS WHY THEIR APPROVAL RATING IS WORSE THAN DUBYA''S!!!
Reply to this comment
by janefondu September 27, 2008 11:48 PM EDT
KATRINA DID NOT HIT THE REFINERIES. IKE HIT THE COMMUNITY THE REFINERIES ARE IN. PEOPLE HAVE JUST NOW RETURNED TO THIS AREA AND GONE THROUGH THE PROCESS OF BRING THE REFINERIES BACK ONLINE. THE ONLINE BOOT UP TAKES APPROX. 2 WEEKS TO PRESSURIZE VESSELS AND PIPES TO A SAFE LEVEL BEFORE REFINING CAN BEGIN.
Reply to this comment
by janefondu September 27, 2008 11:46 PM EDT
WHATS FEMA AND BUSH GOT TO DO WITH THIS? CONGRESS WHO THE MAJORITY ARE DEMS JUST NOW DECIDED TO GET ONBOARD AND PASS THE REPUBS ENERGY ENERGY PLAN. I SWEAR QUITE DRINKING THE COOL AID BETTER YET GO AHEAD AND GO FOR A SWIM!
Reply to this comment
by gce65 September 27, 2008 11:41 PM EDT
What? No gas in Bush''s stronghold in the South? Don''t you feel relieved YOU elected him twice and he put such incompetent people in charge at FEMA?

They still haven''t figured it out.
Reply to this comment
by spiritwalk September 27, 2008 10:54 PM EDT
Why has Hurricane Ike caused, what seems to be, so much more disruption in the fuel delivery than Katrina did?
Katrina was a category 5 storm and Ike was a category 2 storm. That is a major difference. That is like the difference between being in a car wreck at 90 miles mph and 30 mph. New Orleans is below sea level and needs 7 giant pumps to just drain the daily water. But the fule supply didn''t dry up as dramatically as it has done after this storm.
I have lived along coastal New England most of my life and have gone through direct hits from Hurricanes Carol and Bob so I know what hurricanes can do. I have never been to Galveston, but from the pictures I saw it seems that most of the structures there were not that storm resistent to begin with. New Englanders know that if you build a house on stilts along the beach that the first good nor''easter will take them out, but I have to believe that the oil industry must have built some stronger structures than that along the Gulf coast. was there really that much damage to the pipelines or is this another artificially induced gas crisis?
Reply to this comment
by cbsblogger September 27, 2008 8:17 PM EDT
President GW Bush......
you''ve made America what it is today.
Reply to this comment
by myopinion1 September 27, 2008 7:26 PM EDT
What a bunch of idiots. Omg I''m LMAO over here. Oh no, what if my $30 in gas doesn''t get me out of town to the next station? LOL what a bunch of morons.
Reply to this comment
by upto1947 September 27, 2008 5:42 PM EDT
Blame, Blame, Blame. That is all some peopel know how to do. How about looking at what you do and STOP BLAMING everyone elsa. I know why you are GOD and know all.
Reply to this comment
by whatithink1 September 27, 2008 1:44 PM EDT
The South should have picked a better president!
Reply to this comment
by bin_biden September 27, 2008 1:01 PM EDT
The Saudis reduced output of oil from the Persian Gulf. This country is at the mercy of the cartel. They pay George W. Bush to guarantee a high price. Bush is definitely a homosexual and crook.
Reply to this comment
by jlagat September 27, 2008 10:22 AM EDT
Southerners voted for Bush; let them stay home to read their bibles to find a solution to their gas problems.

Remember Southerners, you not having gas is god''s will.
Reply to this comment
by twistedsister1959 September 27, 2008 9:34 AM EDT
Well we do feel sorry for you you cwazywabt. American by birth and Southern by the grace of God.
Reply to this comment
by prophit2 September 27, 2008 9:31 AM EDT
These deals are like war games... they test these things out on us to see how far they can push us. They want us to become violent so we will riot and they can declare martial law..... well, good for those at those gas lines for being so patient and not falling this is garbage.

If everyone would stop a minute and notice the unprecedented grab for our wealth BY FASCIST CORPORATIONS AND BANKERS that I have never seen happen so blatantly and so fast with so little being said by the sold out and BANKER OWNED LONG GONE PRESS....

WE NEED TO WAKE UP OR ELSE WE ARE ABOUT TO GET WHAT WE DESERVE FOR LOOKING THE OTHER WAY FOR SO LONG. Your leaving no legacy to your children.
Reply to this comment
by nothappyatall September 27, 2008 4:38 AM EDT
bank manager from Atlanta who had planned to drive to Charlotte. "How am I gonna get out of town and drive five hours on $30 of gas? I can''t do it."

Brittany Hoisington, a 19-year-old veterinary assistant from Raleigh, decided weeks ago to travel to Asheville with her grandfather to visit her uncle. She hasn''t seen her uncle in five years, and now the reunion will have to wait. "


TOTAL extravagant waste of fossil fuel- driving 5 HOURS to see a stupid football game that can be seen on TV is insane.
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