Gas rationing expands as Sandy, Nor'easter effects linger
By Daniel Trotta and Robin Respaut | Reuters – 4 hrs ago
NEW YORK (Reuters) - New York City drivers will wake up on Friday to the first widespread gas rationing since the fuel crisis of the 1970s, as the U.S. Northeast struggles to recover from the devastation of Superstorm Sandy and a subsequent snowstorm.
              After a difficult 
commute Thursday night that saw heavily armed police trying to quiet 
crowds at area bus and train stations, New Jersey
 authorities are adding free buses and ferries Friday to try and ease 
commutes that have been four and five times longer than normal all week.
The recovery from Sandy stalled Wednesday after a 
snowstorm that plunged 300,000 homes and businesses back into darkness. 
By Thursday night much of the snow melted, and temperatures were due to 
warm slightly Friday, welcome news for the thousands of people still 
without power.
              Bitter cold, rain, 
snow and powerful winds added to the misery of disaster victims whose 
homes were destroyed or power was knocked out by Sandy. The storm came 
ashore on October 29 and caused widespread flooding, leading up to as 
much as $50 billion in economic losses and prompting the medical relief 
group Doctors Without Borders to set up its first-ever U.S. clinic.
              The Federal Emergency Management Agency
 said it was providing mobile homes to house those displaced by the 
storm, a reminder of the scramble after Hurricane Katrina seven years 
ago to tend to the newly homeless. Some evacuees will be put up nearly 
200 miles from home, FEMA said, because there is little available space 
closer to the city.
              GAS, PATIENCE RUNNING OUT
              With drivers still struggling to find adequate fuel, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg said Thursday the city would begin an indefinite program of gas rationing early Friday.
              It is modeled on 
one New Jersey implemented last week - allowing drivers to fill up on 
alternating days depending on their license plate number - that has 
reduced lines dramatically.
Bloomberg indicated that the city had little choice."It now appears there will be shortages for possibly another couple weeks," Bloomberg said, later adding, "If you think about it, it's not any great imposition once you get used to it."
              Neighboring 
counties would implement a similar program, he said, in an effort to cut
 down lines that ran for hours at local filling stations following 
Sandy. The city's iconic yellow taxis are exempt from the new 
regulation.
              New Yorkers, never known for holding their tongues, let their exasperation with the bad weather show.
              "Kick in the gas," 
the New York Post blared in a headline on its website, a day after its 
print newspaper hit the streets with the cover headline "God hates us!"
'ENOUGH IS ENOUGH'
              A week after Sandy,
 Doctors Without Borders established temporary emergency clinics in the 
hard-hit Rockaways - a barrier island in Queens facing the Atlantic 
Ocean - to tend to residents of high-rises, which still lacked power and
 heat and were left isolated by the storm.
              "I don't think any 
of us expected to see this level of lacking access to health care," said
 Lucy Doyle, who specializes in internal medicine at New York's
 Bellevue Hospital and has done stints with the group in the Democratic 
Republic of the Congo and Kenya. "A lot of us have said, it feels a lot 
like being in the field in a foreign country."
              Sandy's death toll 
in the United States and Canada reached 121 after New York authorities 
on Wednesday reported another death linked to the storm in the 
Rockaways.
              New York Governor Andrew Cuomo turned his ire on the power utilities, which he said had failed customers.
Some 696,000 homes and businesses in the region were without power as of late Thursday night.
              The storm damage 
exposed flaws in the regulation of power utilities that will require a 
complete redesign, said Cuomo, who oversees the state-controlled 
utilities and appoints the members of the Public Service Commission, 
which regulates investor-owned utilities such as Consolidated Edison.
              "It is nameless, 
faceless bureaucracy that is a monopoly that operates with very little 
incentive or sanction. ... They have failed the consumers," Cuomo said.
              (Additional 
reporting by Barbara Goldberg, Philip Barbara, Michelle Conlin, Chelsea 
Emery, Jilian Mincer and Edward Krudy; Writing by Dan Trotta and Ben 
Berkowitz; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
 
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