Interesting that most kept the price at $2.50. I wonder if guarded stations will become the norm when PO comes?
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')Frenzy over gas shortages resumes
By Dennis Cauchon, USA TODAY
GULFPORT, Miss. ? Gasoline shortages continue to provoke unrest in hurricane-devastated Mississippi, even as looting has subsided and recovery workers toil in peace.
Police closely guard the few gas stations open for business, controlling long lines of cars with barriers and squad cars. The wait for gas can range from 10 minutes to four hours depending on the time and location.
"People get crazy about gasoline when we're not here," said Gulfport police officer Travis Sheaffer, standing guard at a gas station near Interstate 10. "They were cutting in line, pulling guns ? all types of insanity."
About a dozen gas stations were open Monday in Gulfport and Biloxi, the two biggest cities on the Mississippi coast. They generally are open only during the day, closing when police go off duty.
A few stations have raised prices above $4 a gallon, but most have kept gas prices at about $2.50 a gallon, the price charged before Hurricane Katrina. Stations generally limit customers to $30 of gas or 10 gallons. Gas station employees pump the gas to control the flow and handle payment outdoors to speed the lines.
"Some people pushed their cars here for gas," said Fallon Demoruell, a gas station worker. "A lot of them haven't been too polite."
Many motorists here are driving with windows down and air conditioning off to save fuel, despite temperatures in the 90s. People want gas not only for their cars, but also for generators that provide the only electricity for residents who remain.
A Chevron oil refinery in Pascagoula, Miss., has been a major source of gasoline for the area. The refinery was knocked out of operation by the storm, but it continues to release gasoline from reserves built up in an anticipation of the storm.
Waring Oil Co., a Chevron distributor in Gulfport, is delivering 8,800 gallons of gas a day to eight stations and selling it at pre-hurricane prices, said general manager Mart Windham. At its main facility, which is without power, the company is selling gasoline to all comers in quantities of 100 to 300 gallons.
"They're supposed to be part of the recovery effort, but we don't check," Windham said. Nobody has been turned away. Ambulances, power company trucks and government vehicles are allowed cut to the front of the line.
Paul Hanson Sr., a retiree from North Biloxi, got in line at 6:30 a.m. Sunday and, four hours later, was next in line. He's getting 265 gallons to divide among five families in his neighborhood.
Howard Kaufman, owner of Getcha Some Discount Beer and Tobacco in Saucier, Miss., was waiting to get 60 gallons of gas and 105 gallons of diesel to keep his business going. "Cigarettes and gas are the most coveted things you can get here right now," he said. His store was looted after the storm, and he had to buy $47,000 worth of cigarettes to replenish his supplies.
Homer Martin, a construction worker,, of Saucier, was in line to score 100 gallons after his father was turned away the day before because he only wanted to buy 50 gallons, below the 100-gallon minimum. "My father got so mad he came home, got a gun and headed out to find gas in Mobile," Martin said. "We haven't heard from him since he left yesterday. He's old-school and felt he needed the gas to provide for his family."
Martin was bringing the gas home to run a $3,000 generator he bought for his parents.