Casualty Count is Rising
July 20, 2008
They said it would never happen but it did. Gasoline prices have cleared $4 a gallon. Diesel fuel is approaching $5. Most anyone who drives a motorized vehicle has an opinion about these prices and few are favorable. Dig a little deeper, though, and one will see another level of collateral damage caused by gas prices. In the war at the gas pump, there are many casualties and the number is rising.
According to the oil industry trade publication, NPN Magazine, nearly 3,000 gas stations have closed in the last year due to a reduction in driving by motorists. The closures are also attributed to the fact that many drivers can no longer afford to support their independent, neighborhood station but are willing to travel a little further in order to save money at the pump.
Thinking of moving your home or office? The price of operating a moving truck loads has virtually doubled in one year's time. Someone has to make up the difference and the companies, primarily independent movers, are sharing the higher prices with their customers.
The moving industry is just one trucking industry in trouble. In the first quarter of 2008, 1,000 fleets of truckloads – roughly 40,000 vehicles – went out of business in the US. Some truckers have found work with other companies but many have left the industry.
Taxi drivers can tell stories, many stories. One of the most common ones is about their reduced income levels in 2008. Over the last two years, the cost of operating a taxicab has risen by 38%. As fares have not risen accordingly, lest passengers stop using taxis, drivers' income has dropped, on a national average, by nearly $4,000 annually.
When times are tough, more people need the help of charities. And, normally, Americans volunteer their time and resources to help others. Across the country, more than half of Meals On Wheels programs, which deliver meals to home-bound seniors, have reported a loss of volunteer drivers. Volunteers pay their own fuel and many can no longer afford to do so. Similarly, organizations with transportation budgets set their prices last year. The budgets have long since been exhausted.
Remember the old pictures of kindly firemen rescuing the family cat stuck in the elm tree? Reports have begun to surface of a few volunteer fire departments that have closed. Others are responding to fewer emergencies. They need to save expensive fuel for major emergencies only.
America will continue to move. It is a way of life. But, what will be the price?


No comments:
Post a Comment