Gov. Christie says he may lift gas rationing on Monday.
The governor, speaking at a press conference in Seaside Park on Friday, said the rationing has worked well and eased congestion at gas stations.
But he expects all power to be restored by Sunday, so rationing should therefore end.
Drivers in the following counties are now limited on the days in which they can fill up their gas tanks: Bergen, Essex, Hudson, Hunterdon, Middlesex, Morris, Monmouth, Passaic, Somerset, Sussex, Union, and Warren.
According to the state, plates ending in an even number can fill up on even numbered days of the month, while plates ending in an odd number can fill up on odd numbered days of the month.
The number to look for is the final numerical digit contained in the plate number, whether it is the final character on the plate or not, according to the governor's office.
So, for example, a theoretical plate number of "MVM 48Q" would have "8" as its final numerical digit, and would be permitted to fill up on an even day.
Specialized or vanity plates, those not displaying any numbers, will be considered odd numbered plates, the release said.
Maxim Sapozhnikov
11:03 pm on Saturday, November 10, 2012
Try donut rationing, Mr. Governor. It may work, too.
Mark Ruckhaus
6:26 pm on Friday, November 9, 2012
Maxim,
Your comment in this context was rude.
I'm not a Christie supporter as I find him to generally come across as a bombastic bully. But he did a great job with this storm and he should be given a lot of credit. If only he threw the politics away more often.
Salvatore Ferruggia
6:37 pm on Friday, November 9, 2012
He should try rationing ALL the food he eats. Our state budget would probably be cut in half.
Mark Ruckhaus
6:51 pm on Friday, November 9, 2012
Sal,
Ah, another genius heard from.
Carol Cox
9:16 pm on Friday, November 9, 2012
Shame on you!! This is a time of great difficulty for all and outright tragedy for many, and allyou can come up with is a cheap shot at the governor. It would appear that gray matter was being rationed when your allotment arrived.
Goodfella
9:44 pm on Friday, November 9, 2012
Hey Maxim,
The good thing is Chris Christie can lose the weight, but you seem to have a lot of plastic surgery ahead of you to correct your issues. Go back to Brighton Beach !
Lorin
7:38 am on Saturday, November 10, 2012
Hey Maxim, You look like you could skip a couple trips to donut shop yourself!
mimi
8:53 am on Saturday, November 10, 2012
My thoughts exactly, you are the pot calling the kettle black.
News Man
9:00 am on Saturday, November 10, 2012
Relax folks, I filled my tank this morning, no one waiting, no panicking.
The supply tankers are getting through and the stations have power to pump.
Almost back to normal and relieve the tention.
Time for a good old fashion gas price war and getting the price down to $2.00 a galloon.
Mary johnson
11:45 pm on Sunday, November 11, 2012
Not very nice...no matter his size...or his politics for that matter, he did what needed to be done for all New Jerseyans......I didn't vote for him before....but I will next time...good job Gov!!
mimi
8:01 am on Monday, November 12, 2012
That's just what I said only I want it to be the White House. This country could you a good cleaning out.
Ricky
2:53 am on Thursday, November 15, 2012
>>>Your comment in this context was rude.<<<
Mary it's a waste of time responding to immature posts on the internet. Nothing will ever stop them. In a way, it's therapy, far better than taking out frustrations on their spouse, kids, siblings or whoever.
Kevin Davitt
5:52 pm on Friday, November 9, 2012
If it's working, why not wait a little until he's sure we're back to normal?
Jimmy Drake
6:02 pm on Friday, November 9, 2012
TOTALLY AGREE KEVIN,
RdgwdGRock
11:30 am on Saturday, November 10, 2012
Kevin - you are right. one more week should be right to make sure that all stations are back and running correctly
JG
1:15 pm on Saturday, November 10, 2012
You remind me of the people who think the days gets longer because the government changes the clock. It's like cutting of the top of a blanket, sewing it back on the the bottom and be proud of yourself for a longer blanket. It's still the same length as if you did nothing.
Christie was a masterful politician, he had reports on the building inventory in distribution, improved roadways and the commitment of power companies to target fuel stations first. He saw a good progress report and used that non-public information to fool you.
Everyone swarmed to top off cars and keep mileage down, their tanks didn't grow. Fewer people needed generators as power was restored, couple that with breaking the supply log jam, he could have passed an illegal order which said the driver must yell "Krispy Kreme!" before any gas is filled and the lines would have exactly the same with some idiots yelling "Krispy Kreme!"
JG
1:15 pm on Saturday, November 10, 2012
The lessons we should learn from this is the EPA makes gas more expensive with the 1000s of different formulas it requires which forces producers to make specific blends for very small areas. It also once and for all shows that price controls ensure the fewest people possible get goods. Had stations been allowed to charge double, they would have bid up the wholesale price enough to make trucks from Maryland, PA and other places deliver here instead. It also would have prevented people from filling up for the sake of filling up and the lines would have be much shorter.
mimi
1:52 pm on Saturday, November 10, 2012
Does anyone but me not understand what the heck JG is saying?????
Mark C.
6:01 pm on Friday, November 9, 2012
Maxim....give the Gov. credit for his handling of the crisis. About the Gov. weight....pot calling kettle black.
Julie
6:10 pm on Friday, November 9, 2012
I passed by a gas station this morning and the attendant was waiting for costumers.
Passed another one and I stopped and got gas. No line and no waiting. On the other side there was a few cars with NY plates getting gas and the attendant told me that they came to NJ just to get gas.
Ricky
2:04 am on Sunday, November 11, 2012
>>>I passed by a gas station this morning and the attendant was waiting for costumers<<<
There were plenty of people who normally wait until the gauge reads one quarter or less and then they stop for fuel. The media made of them nervous, they all headed to any station they saw others lined up, dove into the lines. Now that those drivers have full tanks, they're back to their own mindset again and won't need to stop for fuel for days and days. The attendants will be sitting there with nothing to do.
jerry stevenson
6:18 pm on Friday, November 9, 2012
Let's give credit where credit is due. The gas rationing plan worked....it relieved panic. There have been no lines the last few days. Mayor Bloomberg adopted the New Jersey plan 100% for implementation in NYC and Long Island.
Catherine with a K
6:53 am on Saturday, November 10, 2012
Sorry, Jerry, don't agree it worked. The lines didn't get shorter until more gas stations opened. People who didn't even need gas got on line just because they couldn't get it the next day and didn't know what would be going on in two days. Thus the rationing actually made the line longer.
Not a popular idea, but allowing "gouging" would have actually helped the problem. It would have a. stopped people from buying gas they didn't really need, b. encouraged suppliers to get gas to where the prices (i.e. demand) were highest, and c. given gas stations a financial incentive to have generators.
Barry Black
6:46 pm on Friday, November 9, 2012
With NY imposing rationing they will just come to NJ for gas imposing more lines. Christie will have to keep rationing to make it even all around.
Mark Ruckhaus
6:55 pm on Friday, November 9, 2012
Maybe some, Barry, but a lot of that will be close to the border. Why penalize the rest of us if the gas is here? And, some folks will think twice if they have to spend ten or twelve bucks to cross the bridge for the privilege so, though you might have some lines, it shouldn't be that bad.
JG
1:19 pm on Saturday, November 10, 2012
We should welcome them here to pay the gas tax to NJ, maybe they will even shop in Paramus on Sunday to add to our economic recovery!
Tomodachi San
7:00 pm on Friday, November 9, 2012
Governor Christie is a very good man in a pinch.
Xwd AS
7:20 pm on Friday, November 9, 2012
Why not just announce that gas attendants have discretion to waive the odd/even scheme when they have no lines of cars. In practice, this looks like what is happening anyway.
Ricky
3:01 am on Saturday, November 10, 2012
Maybe it did or maybe you saw a commercial plate. Commerical vehicles no matter their size were exempt from that odd/even rule.
Puddyknife
11:42 am on Saturday, November 10, 2012
Our local gas station waived it if there was no line... obviously is there was a wait they imposed it. But for the past few days they hasn't really been a line at all. I think that the rationing worked. I was never desperate for gas and had what was needed to get me around.
Just Facts
7:24 pm on Friday, November 9, 2012
Christie is a Big Mouth Bully...... There is enough gasoline to fill all the gas pumps in America probably 20 times... Yet they hold the gas back now to keep the prices jacked up.... raising them up by law 10% each day...if they chose....Then Chrispy made a promise that the power would be turned on by the weekend......which did not happen.....His Big Mouth trash talking of good people has worn many people in NJ thin,,,,,His free helicopter rides and use of State Troopers for political trips across the country is hipocritical.....while the NJ state Unemployment is the 3rd highest in the NATION he is doing poliical favors?? Plus my taxes went UP AGAIN!!...He is a big fat bag of hot air!! Arrogant Millionaire.
Ed Coster
8:13 am on Saturday, November 10, 2012
Maxim and Just Facts demonstrate what is wrong with politics in America. If you don't have facts or logic on your side you engage in ad hominam attacks. Civil discourse, like journalism, is dead.
Puddyknife
11:47 am on Saturday, November 10, 2012
Sure there is enough gas but if stations don't have power to pump it... there really isn't. In turn the tankers were held at port. Most say it was a bad move but in all honesty, since there are areas still recovering i don't want a gas tanker going down a road with a live wire... sending tankers out without knowledge of what they were driving into was a recipe for disaster. Politics aside I think Christie handled this fairly well. No one is perfect but in a crisis he showed me he can handle his state well. And no I actual loath him as a politician but can still admit he should get credit where credit is due.
Julles51
10:30 am on Tuesday, November 13, 2012
Just Facts - you almost had me on your side until your last 2 words "arrogant millionaire" which just tells me that you are simply one of those people who didn't do so well in school, don't have lots of money are are jealous of anyone who does. Typical. The election certainly divided the haves and have-nots...maybe if the have-nots worked a little harder they'd stop being so jealous. Oops, time to go pick up your Obama phone!
Cj
7:24 pm on Friday, November 9, 2012
Who cares what a person looks like. I somehow think you are not perfect either. Everyone of you saying nasty things. Grow up. The man has done a wonderful job with this disaster and deserves credit.
mimi
1:54 pm on Saturday, November 10, 2012
Amen.
yaya
7:36 pm on Friday, November 9, 2012
There should be rationing of what comes out of some people's mouths. It really is sad that some people have nothing better to do than post ridiculous, immature random comments, especially at a time like this. Enough said.
jojo
8:07 pm on Friday, November 9, 2012
no bravado, the guvna did his job, that's what he got elected for, i'm not crazy about him and will have to take everything into account, there is still a long way to go for people, but as far as gas situation goes, he did well, and I learned some lessons as well.
EMG
9:01 pm on Friday, November 9, 2012
I like the gas rationing, I think we should keep it!
Q
9:27 pm on Friday, November 9, 2012
I have an even # plate and couldn't get gas yesterday (even day). The gas stations I passed were either closed entirely or had signs saying "diesel only." I have been dwindling down from the 1/2 tank I had prior to Sandy. I did see cars in nearby stations on odd days though. Could it be that deliveries are made the night before odd days and then the gas runs out before the following even day? I haven't driven all over looking (wasting gas) but I figured if they had gas on an odd day, the same station should have gas on an even day but that wasn't the case yesterday in my area. We'll see what tomorrow brings and if the stations are open on an even day.
Ojo Rojo
10:27 pm on Friday, November 9, 2012
Go out early and look. You never know who has gas when.
genny
1:05 pm on Saturday, November 10, 2012
I noticed that too. It seems on odd days there are more cars than on even days. Maybe there are more odd plates issued than even. Just an observation.
Jake Viscone
1:34 am on Sunday, November 11, 2012
Or more "Vanity" plates, which are considered Odd, than anyone realized. :)
pi$$edresident
11:14 pm on Friday, November 9, 2012
Still no Power by saint judes wtf
Brett Kaiser
11:49 pm on Friday, November 9, 2012
I guess it was such a horrible plan that now (and only now) NY is imitating us.
I was getting such a great feeling for have such a great governor...now if some of these NY Transplants who CAME to NJ would just turn around and LEAVE..that would be cool...oh...how do I know???
Kevin Owen
12:05 am on Saturday, November 10, 2012
@ just facts. You are a complete idiot , yes there was plenty of gas at first but no power to pump it and after that no fuel deliveries. You may say Christie is a bully but you're a moron , check your facts before you make a moronic statement next time
Joanne
1:45 am on Saturday, November 10, 2012
I waited in line on my odd day, only to get to the pumps and have them tell me there is no premium gas available! (which is what unfortunately my vehicle takes) and was told "good luck" in finding it........??
Brett Kaiser
1:27 am on Sunday, November 11, 2012
I hope you got gas..cause it really does't matter..not for 1 tank full..go buy a gas treatment
denise
2:25 am on Saturday, November 10, 2012
She'll station by dq on rt 57 and she'll by trade zone on 46 only stations open at 8pm and at 2 am on my drive from Walmart to rt 80, and I filled up with incorrect plate
denise
2:28 am on Saturday, November 10, 2012
She'll had premium for me and it was 3.95..... Cost me $34 to NYC and back in the Benz which requires premium... Go get gas at nite , no line
my2cents
7:45 am on Saturday, November 10, 2012
Patch Editor,
I thought you were suppose to monitor the comments being posted? Making comments about the Governor's weight is inappropriate. Maybe comments need to be read more carefully before approving,
mimi
1:55 pm on Saturday, November 10, 2012
Maybe they are Dems?
Ricky
2:11 am on Sunday, November 11, 2012
Monitors don't go to that length. If they constantly deleted immature posts, there'd be hardly anything left on these threads. They monitor obscenity and actual slanderous statements and spam, stuff like that.
Jimmy Drake
7:46 am on Saturday, November 10, 2012
at least back in the 70's shortage, we had our warm homes to go back to.
I am definitely buying two extra (red) gas containers
I know it's ethically cheating, but if you fill up a five gallon gas container as a pedestrian a couple of times a day, you won't have to wait so long, waste gas on line and you won't have to be odd/even .
JUST be careful with the container - full or empty.
Joanne Flexser
7:59 am on Saturday, November 10, 2012
I agree, we all need to focus on what we have; not what we don't have. Gas should go first to those who need it to run generators...unfortunately, there's no way to tell.
Hopatcong is supposed to be back to power except for 13% as of this morning...Saturday. Be grateful people, I am.
Mal Milligan
8:49 am on Saturday, November 10, 2012
The lines I saw on Route 17 in Ramsey and Mahwah were generally cut in half the day after the rationing started. Maybe the gas supply increased too - I don't know. But I waited in lines for 2 hours twice before rationing and never more than 5 minutes after rationing.
mimi
8:55 am on Saturday, November 10, 2012
There wer no lines yesterday when we were out, still a couple of places closed. Nobody has super or midgrade though. It's great with so little cars on the road.
hsr
11:00 am on Saturday, November 10, 2012
You know I think rationing is the wrong term. Isn't that true? It's more just alternate day scheduling. Oh well. It worked well and we taught NY something.
Nose Wayne
11:33 am on Saturday, November 10, 2012
WOW, passed three gas stations this morning and only about two or three cars in each. Think were back to normal people.
Kathy Russo
11:41 am on Saturday, November 10, 2012
Maybe keep it one more week till NY is caught up too. NJ people were going to upstate ny and pa for gas. Now NY people will come to Jersey. Let things stay the same just a little longer. It's working fine right now.
mimi
1:57 pm on Saturday, November 10, 2012
If it ain't broke don't fix it as they say. This has worked very well.
Stephanie
12:37 pm on Saturday, November 10, 2012
The rationing cut down the lines by half .... It helped a lot!
Catherine with a K
12:46 pm on Saturday, November 10, 2012
Stephanie, the rationing did cut the lines -- the fact that 2x's as many gas stations were opened cut the lines in half!
Catherine with a K
12:46 pm on Saturday, November 10, 2012
That's "did not cut the lines in half".
mimi
1:59 pm on Saturday, November 10, 2012
There are still stations without fuel and the ones that have it have no lines?!
genny
1:07 pm on Saturday, November 10, 2012
I agree. CC should wait maybe another week before discontinuing the odd/even days. He should focus on getting power back to EVERYONE not just focusing on the southern part of the state.
Brian Burns
1:04 am on Sunday, November 11, 2012
Quick Check turned my wife away with odd plates at 11:58 pm. What kind of people do they have working there?
Brett Kaiser
1:29 am on Sunday, November 11, 2012
What's the Plate?
Ricky
2:17 am on Sunday, November 11, 2012
Answer: law abiding perfectionists lol especially if their closing time is midnight, or are they open 24/7? If so then why didn't she just wait and point out the change in time and date past midnight.
GW
2:37 am on Sunday, November 11, 2012
Depends on what kind of wife you've got working there -- snotty? demanding?
FourScore
7:50 am on Sunday, November 11, 2012
I guess law abiding people.
Robert King
5:08 pm on Sunday, November 11, 2012
she could have waited the 2 minutes and then she could have gotten gas. duu!! hello?? anyone home??
BeachBum
8:06 pm on Sunday, November 11, 2012
Should be law all station must have generators so this crap doesnt happen again
Todd Edelstein
8:29 pm on Sunday, November 11, 2012
And who is going pay for that? Maybe there should be a law that all homes, condos, apartment buildings should have generators? Oh you don't want to pay for that?
Jim Carbonara
9:20 pm on Sunday, November 11, 2012
It actually is a law in Florida.
Jay Bell
9:43 pm on Sunday, November 11, 2012
I do think Gov. Christie did a good job considering the power crisis. The gas rationing worked to cut down the gas station lines, and to avoid less conflicts for the police to resolve. I think Christie will always have a problem with his weight, in the real world. www.firebrandcentral.com
jp1
8:12 am on Monday, November 12, 2012
Not being a fan of the fat man i do believe that he did a good job during this crisis. As for gas my wife and i never had any problems getting gasoline i believe most of it was panic buying.
Ron Mullen
8:42 am on Monday, November 12, 2012
Price per gallon is now the "new Issue" The lowest I've gotten is $ 3.30 on the Nth side of route 3 in Clifton
cybear
2:32 pm on Monday, November 12, 2012
A minimum number of gas stations in each town should have backup generators, with a state requirement to maintain that backup every year to keep its license to sell gas. The number of stations can be selected by population density, as well as ALL highway stations. Which stations and where is something for state OEM to decide along with local authorities. Yes, the state should offer incentives for the station owner to do this, with some of the cost born by us drivers (tolls and/or registration fee), some by residence generator users (the 5-gallon lines), some by federal gov't out of Homeland Security budget. Think how much panic, hoarding, fights, use of local/state police traffic monitoring could have been avoided in many areas (of course, not all), then include odd-even restrictions AUTOMATICALLY activated after the storm (instead of waiting for lots of problems to happen first). Many counties who had to endure long power outages (and still endure it now) would have gas shortages minimized or even eliminated. Oh, yes, make sure everyone knows about it (signs, public service announcements, Governor's press conferences), combined with stiff penalties for violations (price gouging, cutting gas lines, hoarding, tank top-offs), and proof of need (proof of personally owned generator, FEMA application, 1/2 tank or less, etc). Nightmare for the state and local authorities? - possibly at first, but isn't emergency management supposed to be part of their responsibility?
Catherine with a K
2:40 pm on Monday, November 12, 2012
OR, we could let the market provide an incentive to gas station owners to buy generators by allowing the ones that do to charge what the market will bear. . .
Remember what the market is, free people making voluntary transactions. Isn't that the American ideal? As opposed to say, another labyrinth of regulations, rules and requirements.
Butch Wynegar
4:03 pm on Monday, November 12, 2012
Fatso should have ended this yesterday. I've gotten gas every day during the past three days no problem. There are no lines anymore.
Steve
4:16 pm on Monday, November 12, 2012
Christie being an overweight guy has nothing to do with his politics. (He knows he is overweight.) In our schools, we are trying to teach out kids not be be bullies but what else do you expect when the parents act worse then the kids. Use facts people. If you don't like Christie because of a certain stance on a specific issue, that is fine. But we should not be judging him on his weight; same as how we shouldn't prejudice others on race, religion, etc. You shouldn't dislike someone just because he/she is fat.
mimi
6:59 pm on Monday, November 12, 2012
They are the kind of people that give NJ a bad name and image. Uneducated classless individuals.
TCG
4:26 pm on Monday, November 12, 2012
Fat or not, Christie blew it on several levels. First, why wasn't the gasoline here BEFORE the storm in the form of tankers off the coast (or if the ports were too damaged to distribute) or driven in by trucks from the 46 states west of NJ that were not impacted by the storm? Why wait five days to kiss up to Obama for generators that we all knew would be needed by the gas stations? After all, it was Christie himself who was on TV and radio for five days BEFORE the storm telling the rest of us to prepare for power outages of up to ten days. Presumably those outages would include gas stations. Why not get those generators here BEFORE the storm. But in the end, the worst part of the rationing is the fact that it flies directly in the face of Christie's often-stated hatred for government. Less goverment he bellows at every opportunity. Every man for himself. Keep the government out of our lives and off our backs, Christie wails. So, please, can anyone explain how prohibiting private citizens from purchasing gasoline from private gas stations squares with that stated philosophy? No...the ONLY reason for the ration was to try to cover for the fact the Christie didn't actuall DO ANYTHING to prepare for the storm he insisted the rest of simply had to prepare for. And to make it truly pathetic, he uses storm victims as props for his 2016 campaign ads. Despicable on so many levels.
Jon
4:33 pm on Monday, November 12, 2012
Piloting an oil tanker directly into the path of a hurricane - wow, what a brilliant idea, TCG! Why didn't I think of that?
melikric
4:30 pm on Monday, November 12, 2012
Could it be possible that Maxim and JF are among members of public employee unions, whose gravy train has been canceled by Gov. Christie?
TCG
4:53 pm on Monday, November 12, 2012
Jon,
The U.S. Navy easily moved it's ships out to sea, and out of the path of the storm BEFORE it arrived. Same thing could have been done with the tankers owned by the oil companies that descrate and pollute our state. It's been done in Florida for years. It's not a brilliant idea...it's basic common sense and could have been done saftely and without incident.
Good try though.
sdfsdd
5:49 am on Tuesday, December 4, 2012
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