Archive for May, 2006

Direct your Anger for High Gas Prices Properly

Tuesday, May 30th, 2006

GasHostage.com is in favor of supporting causes that will help alleviate gas prices but we DO NOT support aggressive or obscene behavior to gas station employees, managers or their ownership.  I have often said that gas stations are profitable, but I don’t think that they are making excessive profits and they are certainly not dictating the high gas prices.  Oil companies like Exxon are dictating the oil prices and not the service stations and therefore you should not take out your frustrations on gas station employees who are only trying to earn a living. 

 If you want to make an impact we have some suggestions but violence and abuse of your fellow man is not the answer!

Gas Prices are Making Consumers Angry

Tuesday, May 30th, 2006

The future of oil and gas looks bleak to consumers who have finally had enough.  Don’t exptect things to get better either as gas and oil prices are expected to soar during summer.  I don’t blame the gas stations for the high gas prices, and it is unfortunate that gas station attendents are taking the brunt of unhappy consumers.

Tempers are rising along with gas prices. Gas stations across the country report that drivers are taking out their gas rage against big oil by yelling at clerks and cashiers and sometimes driving off without paying.

“Everyone is suffering at the same time,” said Sam Shirazie, a clerk at a Chevron station east of downtown Los Angeles. “If I could help to reduce that pain, I would.”

No detailed statistics are kept on incidents of gas rage. But the National Association of Convenience Stores said anecdotal evidence indicates they have increased since prices began climbing in February.

Employees of Fleming Corp., which operates 14 gas stations in Kansas and Missouri, have heard everything from “just a mumble-grumble kind of thing to a cheap shot or blaming the clerk for world oil prices,” owner Ed Roitz said.

Division manager Ron Davis hears complaints firsthand.

“Out of all our customers, probably 1 percent does the loudest squealing,” he said. “I don’t want to repeat some of it. They’ll talk about the blankety-blank oil companies.”

The convenience stores association advises store owners to ensure that employees understand the costs associated with gas, and encourages them to explain to customers that in some cases they aren’t making any profits despite the soaring price of fuel. Retailers make about two- thirds of their profits from items inside the store, he said.

But, “don’t dismiss customer complaints because we’re in the customer service business, and anytime you don’t address customer complaints they’ll go somewhere else,” association spokesman Jeff Lenard said.

Steve Grosse is trying humor to defuse tempers. At his Shell station in Manhattan Beach, he replaced the price of gas with the words “arm,” “leg” and “first born.”

In Los Angeles, Chevron station co-owner Anthony Sinai has started giving free sodas to customers who pump $20 worth of gas. He wants to avoid a repeat of an incident last year when an upset customer threw a cup of coffee at a female clerk and knocked over display items.

Consumers might finally be getting at least a temporary break at the pump. The latest figures released May 21 by the Lundberg Survey indicate the nationwide average price of self-serve regular fell about 1.45 cents in the previous two weeks to $2.93 a gallon _ the first dip since the Feb. 24 price of $2.24 began to climb.

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37 Million People Traveling for the Memorial Day Holiday Weekend

Friday, May 26th, 2006

Memorial Day holiday weekend is upon us and upwards of 37 million people are expected to be traveling the roads and flying the skies.  With the increase in fuel costs this year, motorists are expected to stay closer to home then normal.  It is unfortunate, but families now have to budget extra money for fuel costs when traveling the country and it may mean less tourist dollars for some communities.  It is a shame as part of the great appeal of the US, is the wide open and ever changing scenery the country has to offer not only to foreign tourists but local ones as well. 

AAA said 37.6 million Americans will travel 50 miles or more, or about 1 percent more than last year – an estimate derived from a national phone survey of 1,500 adults. More than 80 percent of those travelers will take road trips, while another 10 percent will fly. The remainder will be packed into trains and buses.

The number of Memorial Day travelers had risen by more than 2 percent in each of the past two years, after remaining flat in 2003 and declining marginally in 2002.
The average retail price of gasoline is $2.93 a gallon, or 36 percent higher than a year ago, and that appears to be having some impact on fuel consumption, according to Energy Department statistics.
AAA forecast that flights over the holiday weekend would be about 10 percent more expensive than a year ago and that hotel rates would be roughly 5 percent higher. More than 40 percent of those surveyed said they would be staying with friends or relatives, with another 35 percent sleeping at hotels and motels.