Saturday, May 28, 2011

Summer Bummer As Gas Costs Soar And People Are Trapped At Home With Their Families

Not that driving in a car with a bunch of screaming kids is any bargain, but this summer, if you want to make money, learn how to treat the dread disease cabin fever, as many folks will be suffering from this in the sweltering heat. After being trapped indoors all winter through record snow and floods, here comes summer, and we're staying home because filling up my gas tank will cost about $75.

I expect there to be an upsurge in block parties and homicidal rage when barbecues descend into drunken orgies of violence as dormant family issues rise to the surface, and there is no escape. If you want to leave you have to walk home.

Also, I read an article like this and I think, why do we even bother having a government? You know this is the same shit I was reading about 30-40 years ago? High gas prices, blame OPEC, dependence on foreign oil, yada yada yada. Nothing really changes because there is nobody steering the ship. We could've had a chimp running things for the last 40 years and gotten the same result. Maybe better.
There's less money this summer for hotel rooms, surfboards and bathing suits. It's all going into the gas tank.

High prices at the pump are putting a squeeze on the family budget as the traditional summer driving season begins. For every $10 the typical household earns before taxes, almost a full dollar now goes toward gas, a 40 percent bigger bite than normal.

Households spent an average of $369 on gas last month. In April 2009, they spent just $201. Families now spend more filling up than they spend on cars, clothes or recreation. Last year, they spent less on gasoline than each of those things.

Jeffrey Wayman of Cape Charles, Va., spent Friday riding his motorcycle to North Carolina's Outer Banks, a day trip with his wife. They decided to eat snacks in a gas station parking lot rather than buy lunch because rising fuel prices have eaten so much into their budget over the past year that they can't ride as frequently as they would like.

"We used to do it a lot more, but not as much now," he said. "You have to cut back when you have a $480 gas bill a month."

Alex Martinez, a senior at Arcadia High School outside Los Angeles, said his family's trips to San Francisco, which they usually take once or more a year, are on hold. As he stopped at a gas station to put $5 of fuel in his car -- not much more than a gallon -- he said the high prices are crimping social life for him and his friends.

"We're always worrying, `How are we going to get home. We've got less than half a gallon left,'" Martinez said. "We definitely can't go out as much, and we can't go as far."

As Memorial Day weekend opens, the nationwide average for a gallon of unleaded is $3.81. Though prices have drifted lower in recent days, analysts expect average price for 2011 to come in higher than the previous record, $3.25 in 2008. A year ago, gas cost $2.76.

[Assocaited Press]

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