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   Message 2,675 of 3,152   
   greeniacs to Text-Drivers R Killers   
   Re: Arizona drivers contend with unusual   
   29 Apr 23 09:03:10   
   
   XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.politics.green.party, sac.politics   
   XPost: talk.politics.guns   
   From: greeniacs@gmx.net   
      
   "Text-Drivers R Killers"  wrote in   
   news:subqon$195ge$12@news.freedyn.de:   
      
   > Lee wrote   
   >   
   >> Democrats are too ignorant to manage anything.  Get rid of them.   
      
   Phoenix, Arizona — Pain at the pump seems to be punishing the Grand Canyon   
   state.   
      
   While the national average for a gallon of regular was $3.63 Friday,   
   according to daily numbers released by AAA, in Arizona it was $1 more, at   
   $4.70. In the Phoenix metro area, the average is just over $5 a gallon.   
      
   "Before, it used to cost us probably $80 to fill up, and now it's almost   
   double that," Phoenix driver John Baker told CBS News.   
      
   Baker said his family is cutting back elsewhere, fearing $5 gas could be   
   here to stay.   
      
   "We don't really go out nearly as much as we used to," Baker said. "We   
   used to go to the movies on the weekends as a family. Now we just stick to   
   the swimming pool."   
      
   Two hours south of Phoenix, in Tucson, gas prices jumped more than 80   
   cents per gallon in just the last month, now averaging $4.73 a gallon.   
      
   Experts said the rapid spike amounts to bad timing.   
      
   "They get their gas primarily from a refinery in El Paso," AAA national   
   spokesperson Andrew Gross said. "That refinery is down for maintenance.   
   So, they're having to bring in more expensive gas from other places."   
      
   This also comes as refineries switch to more expensive summer blends,   
   while OPEC cuts oil production globally. That is on top of increased   
   driver demand for fuel during the summer months.   
      
   While still expensive, AAA predicts the rest of the U.S. won't see prices   
   climb quite as high as last summer's record.   
      
   "For the national average, I don't think we're going to see it reach $4   
   (per gallon)," Gross said.   
      
   But for Arizona drivers, $4 a gallon would be a summer dream come true.   
      
      
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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