NJ State Troopers Deployed As Tensions Boil At Gas Stations In Sandy’s Wake
Riots in the streets
State troopers have been deployed at all gas stations along the NJ Turnpike and Garden State Parkway, where dwindling gasoline supplies are causing frayed nerves as the region endures its third full day with massive power outages.

People line up to fill gas containers at the New Jersey Turnpike’s Thomas A. Edison service area Wednesday, Oct. 31, 2012, near Woodbridge, N.J. After Monday’s storm surge from Sandy, many gas stations in the region are without power and those that are open have very long lines. (AP Photo/Mel Evans)
Frustration with gas supplies topped the list of issues causing tensions to boil over in New Jersey, New York and Connecticut, the states hardest hit by power outages in the wake of superstorm Sandy. Residents jockeyed for fuel at the few stations still pumping, searched store shelves in vain for batteries, struggled with sporadic cell phone service and found themselves unable to buy necessities at supermarkets.
Gasoline, in heavy demand for both cars and home generators, had customers waiting in line for hours and losing patience throughout the Garden State, as well as in New York, and Connecticut. In Wayne, N.J, police reported breaking up angry confrontations at gas stations throughout the day on Wednesday. In Brooklyn, tempers flared outside a Getty station, with drivers getting out of their cars and exchanging angry words.
“I don’t have any lights and need this gasoline for my generator,” Abdul Rahim Anwar told Reuters as he waited at a Getty service station in Gowanus, Brooklyn.
Officials said more than half of all gasoline service stations in the New York City area and New Jersey have been shut down because they are either out of fuel or don’t have power to operate pumps. In addition, pipelines and refineries have been shut down due to storm damage. More than 80 percent of stations in New Jersey were unable to sell gasoline as of Wednesday, according to the New Jersey Gasoline, Convenience, Automotive Association.
“Troopers have been deployed to monitor the operational gas stations at the rest areas along the turnpike,” New Jersey State Police Sgt. Adam Grossman told FoxNews.com.
Residents of southeastern Connecticut were driving more than an hour north to find stations with power to run their pumps. One attendant there said tension becomes especially raw when people wait in line to fill gas cans, as opposed to vehicle tanks.
“You’re waiting in line for five friggin’ gallons of gas!” he said.
At an Exxon station in Northvale, N.J., where a line of cars stretched for a third of a mile late into Wednesday night, and another line of men waiting to fill red jerry gas cans inched along,
“I’ll wait here all night,” said Barry Levin, 42, of Cliffside Park. “I need this for my family.”
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie moved to increase supplies of gasoline and diesel by waiving requirements that make it harder for stations to buy from out-of-state suppliers. The waiver will be in place until Nov. 7.
“When shortages threaten after natural disasters like Hurricane Sandy, fuel buyers need to venture farther from state borders to ensure that their customers get the gasoline and diesel they need,” Treasurer Andrew Sidamon-Eristoff said. “Temporarily suspending licensing is a prudent way of empowering merchants to buy fuel farther from the state line, boosting supplies for New Jersey motorists who need fuel to get to work and do their jobs.”
Kevin Beyer, president of the Long Island Gasoline Retailers Association in Smithtown, N.Y., said customers would be even more frustrated if they considered that the gas they need is underground – it just can’t be pumped.
“I have gas in the ground but no power,” Beyer said. “For many others they’re facing the opposite problem, with power but no gasoline. For the few stations that are lucky enough to have both they’ve got huge lines out front.”
Beyer estimated it could take until the end of next week to get all fuel stations operating again.
For now, the flow of precious fuel has slowed to a trickle and that has customers nerves frayed. Patch of Mendham-Chester, N.J., reported that a scuffle broke out Wednesday between two men bearing empty gas cans when one of the men filled his pick-up truck with gas after topping off his gas can. Shortly after he finished, the computer controlling the pump went dead, and a long line of hopeful customers was turned away.
Rivaling the demand for gas was the scarcity of D batteries, the kind most flashlights use. Virtually every store in New Jersey, New York City and Long Island was cleaned out, and there are reports of them selling for as much as $5 apiece.
At Lowe’s in Orange, N.Y., a manager said he and other employees – many without power in their own homes – have stayed in nearby hotels just to keep the store open and running.
“You see the worst in people at a time like this,” he said. “We’re trying to be there for them, but they get angry when they can’t get batteries or flashlights. I tell the staff not to take it personally – people are hurting.”
Supermarkets with their own generators managed to stay open and offer even perishable items. But other grocery stores went dark, or offered their customers an even more frustrating proposition: For instance, at the ShopRite supermarket in Neptune, N.J., food and supplies could be had – but customers were required to provide exact change.
Other targets of frustration are the utility crews working to restore power. With the daunting task of repairing nearly half of all service in New Jersey and as much as 80 percent on Long Island, local power companies are getting help from out of state. But that doesn’t stop angry calls to company offices and even occasional confrontations on streets – when utility workers can even be spotted. The Long Island Power Authority advised customers angry at a lack of visible LIPA crews that many working to restore electricity to Long Island have come from out of state and are using personal vehicles. source – Fox News
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about 6 months ago
Remember it’s all about the one who counts the votes?
Same here: It’s all about the one who sells the gas.
I had a muslim man and a black, female tv host cut me off from buying gas when evacuating a storm. Hatefilled, vindictive people.
I’m going to go fill all my cans now. Just in case somethings comes this way.
about 6 months ago
This is my opinion:
The governors of the states that are hard hit should contact the governors of the states around that that is not effected and see if they could mobile their guard units to help bring in gasoline and generators to the service stations to help ease this mess; they could ask the great one for help from the army, navy, air force and marines if he would do it this is not rocket science but common sense.
about 6 months ago
Just like hospital facilities, “ALL” fueling stations should have back-up power generators (should be code). Regardless of location. Oil companies should foot the bill.
about 6 months ago
And then a mobil tanker capable of dispensing fuel as patrons come out of their homes! AND NO GOUGING the consumer, same with water and food!
about 6 months ago
In God’s mysterious, merciful ways, He allows this superstorm and aftermath to happen, so that even mockers would after all this time perhaps begin to seriously consider the practicality of emergency preparedness, instead of continually scoffing at the Christian mindset of forethought in caring for one’s family. Please all re-read the story of Joseph and the seven years of plenty, and the following seven years of famine. Whosoever is wise, take heed. Consider these things a foreshadowing of what is yet to occur, and that you are given still a space of time. Walk closely with the Lord now more than ever before, His return draws near. Pray for one another, friends, family, extended family, communities, nations, leaders, even enemies. The unsaved have no way to prepare for what will happen, they are just clueless and confused. Pray for their salvation so they will have the Holy Spirit of truth to guide them and enable them unto discernment.
about 6 months ago
This is a mini dress rehersal for the disasters preplanned, like the collapse of the New Madrid fault. Having a generator makes too much sense for the business owners.
about 6 months ago
Generators, though useful currently, will be largely obsolete after the hyperinflation begins. Think of how life was in the 1800s, those are the methods of how people will cope effectively in the months ahead. Society as we knew it for most of our lifetime, will become a memory. People will be forced to once again think of what really matters in life.
Micah 6.8 ” He hath shewed thee, O man, what is good; and what doth the LORD require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God?”
about 6 months ago
i should qualify my remark on generators, which was meant specifically in reference to gasoline/diesel/heating oil based types. HHO generators and various other suppressed technologies are another story.
also, if one has ample supply of fuel for their generator, then of course it wont be obsolete. but then the issue becomes, unless the generator is not noticed by other interested parties, whether one is prepared to defend their stock of supplies, and the logistics involved in that, should such situations arise…
the most practical preppers (of those who are able), concerning this matter, are located outside of cities.
about 6 months ago
I lived in Fla. the year 8 hurricanes hit our state; four hit the area I lived in. After all that, the state passed a law that required all gas stations to have generators large enough to pump their gas. No more huge lines; no more fights between locals and angry New Yorkers (they were always the angriest ones in line). Grocery stores caught on quickly and got huge generators so they could cash in on those who failed to prepare properly for the storm; but they were always crowded by people who appreciated the air conditioning, too! Price gouging is illegal everywhere; if you see it, REPORT IT! Those crooks who do it will be fined heavily. Can’t believe NY and NJ allow a ten cent mark up; Fla doesn’t allow any mark up above the normal price. Anyway, the only people in those long lines are the people who failed to prepare.
about 6 months ago
Jody…hi there former neighbor!