Connecticut’s free bus
fares are gone and lawmakers have allowed gas taxes to rise back to 20 cents a gallon as
of April 1st. But the end of
our state’s “gas tax holiday” next month isn’t the
reason gasoline prices vary so much from town to town.
Just why does gasoline
cost 60 cents a gallon more in Greenwich than in Bridgeport… 84 cents a gallon more
compared to Hartford and 90 cents a gallon more than in East Hartford? Is
it because folks in Greenwich are richer and can afford it? Or is it
because it costs gasoline station owners more to operate in that Gold Coast zip
code?
While both factors are
probably true, the reason gasoline costs more in some Connecticut towns than in
others is because of something called “zone pricing”, an industry
practice that does all but set the price for the commodity that is charged by
distributors and passed along to their customers, the local gas stations.
Lawmakers have debated zone pricing many times in recent
years, but it has never been killed. I wonder why, given its apparent
unfairness. But who’s to explain the mysteries of what our lawmakers
do, influenced as they are by lobbyists.
Let’s follow the
gasoline distribution process to better understand price-setting.
A tanker ship arrives
in New Haven and offloads its cargo (there are no gasoline pipelines to our state)
onto tanker trucks. There are thirty gasoline distributors in
Connecticut and as they truck their gasoline to gas stations, they obviously
incur costs.
Big chains of gas
stations can negotiate better deals than the independently owned
stations. So to compete, “Mom and Pop” gas stations often sell snacks
and sundries. In effect, your beef jerky is subsidizing your cheaper
gasoline.
But it’s the secret
zone pricing rules, set by the distributors, that breaks the state into about
50 different zones and determines how much gas station owners must pay for
gasoline. Pricing is determined by traffic volume, nearby income levels, the
competitive landscape and other factors. And gas station owners, who
set their own prices, say they are making only seven cents a gallon
profit. But if the station owners must pay distributors
more for gasoline, so will you.
Distributors don’t
tell us where their zones are or what their pricing difference is from one zone
to another.
If none of this makes
sense to you, there’s a good reason: it
doesn’t.
When he was
Connecticut’s Attorney General, US Senator Richard Blumenthal called zone
pricing “invisible and
insidious”. Yet, the courts say it’s legal and the Federal Trade
Commission says whatever costs are added in one zone are probably offset by
discounts in another. So it all averages out, right? Not if you live in Greenwich.
So while you may be
willing to drive a few minutes out of your way looking for cheaper gasoline,
remember that the savings may be illusory.
If your car only averages 25 mpg, driving ten miles roundtrip will cost
you more than you may think you’re saving.
No comments:
Post a Comment