You can pump your own soft-serve ice cream at trendy yogurt shoppes. But you still can’t pump your own gasoline in New Jersey. Why? Once again, lawmakers in Trenton have killed an effort to save motorists money at the pump, allegedly in the name of safety.
Self-serve gasoline has
been the rule nationwide for 73 years, ever since the first pump-your-own gas
station opened in California in 1947. Prior to that, all gas stations
were full-service. Not only did the “pump jockeys” fill your tank but
they’d check your oil, water levels in your radiator and wash your windows… and
maybe even give you a set of free steak knives for your 35-cent-a-gallon
purchase. Remember those good ol’ days?
When the self-serve idea
came to New Jersey in the late 1940’s, a local gas station owner named Irving
Reingold in Hackensack started offering a discount for the
do-it-yourselfers. Rather than charging the going rate of 21.9 cents a
gallon, his self-service stations charged
only 18.9 cents. His operation became wildly popular, prompting competitors
to retaliate by shooting up his station and forcing Reingold to install
bullet-proof glass. Competitors then persuaded the state legislature to
ban the practice of self-serve and Reingold eventually went out of business.
So, in 1949 Trenton
lawmakers passed the Retail Gasoline Dispensing Safety Act, which read:
“Because of the fire hazards directly associated with dispensing fuel, it is in the public interest that gasoline station operators have the control needed over that activity to ensure compliance with appropriate safety procedures, including turning off vehicle engines and refraining from smoking while fuel is dispensed.”
That law is still on the books in New Jersey, the only such state law in the nation. But recent polls show 73% of Garden-staters actually prefer being served by attendants. Some of them have never pumped their own gas in a lifetime of driving.
The
fine for violating the law is $500, though it’s seldom enforced. Try
pumping your own gas in New Jersey, assuming you can activate the pump, and
you’re more likely to get a scolding than a ticket… as I have found from personal
experience. One study in 2015 showed that state had issued zero
infractions in the previous two years for that
heinous “crime”.
The
town of Huntington on Long Island has a similar ban on
self-serve, despite appeals from gas station owners to stay competitive.
Garden
State residents have been trying for years to rescind their self-serve ban.
In
2015, State Assemblyman Dean O’Scanlon introduced a bill to allow self-serve
saying he was “offended by people that argue that New Jerseyians are mentally
incapable of pumping their own gas without setting themselves on
fire”.
Cynics
say that New Jersey’s self-service ban is to protect thousands of pump-jockey
jobs and higher profit margins for station owners.
Here
in Connecticut, lawmakers seem to trust Nutmeggers with pumping their own
fuel. The new technology at pumps helps prevent accidents and the cases
of motorist self-immolation are exceedingly rare… so far.
No comments:
Post a Comment