September 1, 2012

In Maine, prices at the pump met with an 'ugh,' sometimes a shrug

Whatever your reaction, the average retail price for gas is the highest Maine’s ever seen for Labor Day weekend.

By North Cairn ncairn@pressherald.com
Staff Writer

The cost of a gallon of gas in Maine is closing in on what you have to shell out for a pound of lobster: right around $4.

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Photos by Carl D. Walsh/Staff Photographer

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M.J. Reed of Pownal talks about the spike in gasoline prices as she and her dog stopped to fill up at a station in Portland. The average price for gas nationwide rose about 40 cents from July 1 to mid-August.

Additional Photos Below

The average retail price for gasoline in the state has hit $3.88 per gallon for unleaded regular -- the highest price Maine has ever experienced for Labor Day weekend, according to Greg Laskoski, senior petroleum analyst for the price-monitoring website GasBuddy.com.

Record catches have pushed lobster prices to their lowest level in years.

Gas prices, on the other hand, might continue to rise for a slew of reasons. Hurricane Isaac and its aftermath, California supply problems, a broken pipeline in Wisconsin, lower capacity levels at work in East Coast refineries -- all play a part.

But what they don't necessarily show are a couple of equally significant forces: the human appetite for travel and consumer confidence.

The rising cost of gas has not had a dampening effect on tourism travel, said Carolann Ouellette, director of the Maine Office of Tourism in Augusta. According to AAA, more than 33 million people were expected to travel this weekend between Thursday and Labor Day.

"That is good news," she said. Even with the sluggish economy, she said, consumer confidence is growing stronger.

The recent gas price increase "hasn't had an effect on us," said Bud Harmon, a motel owner and president of the Old Orchard Beach Chamber of Commerce. "To tell you the truth, I hadn't even noticed."

That attitude jibed with the mood of drivers at gas stations around Portland on Friday. Some motorists were resigned to the upswing, but most seemed unperturbed by the price, which ranged from $3.86 for regular to $4.15 for premium. Mid-range fuel prices settled in at just about $4 -- pretty much matching the cost of a pound of lobster.

The lowest price for regular gas in the state was $3.69 at Holly's in Arundel, and the highest, $4.08, showed up at Dead River in St. Agatha.

Dylan McIntyre of West Falmouth was on his way to work in his 20-year-old BMW, when he stopped at the pumps at the 7-11 at Congress and Dow streets. A chef in the food court at the Maine Mall, McIntyre -- about the same age as his car -- said he was taking the price increase in stride.

"I'm not too worried," he said, shrugging off the sometimes-up, sometimes-down swing of gas expenses. His car gets pretty abominable mileage, he acknowledged -- "on a bad day 8, on a good day 12" -- but he doesn't see 2 cents more a gallon as a big deal.

"It'll go higher," he predicted.

The price at the pump did give pause to Don Mairs of Portland. He makes frequent trips to New Hampshire, where his daughter lives, and to Boston, where he regularly checks on his 94-year-old mother.

The price of gas is a consideration in the visits, but it is definitely not the deciding factor.

"It's more expensive, that's for sure," he said, while filling his tank at a Mobil station on Congress Street. "It makes you think about where you're going." Even so, he was off on a weekend trip to New Hampshire with his wife, Linda, for their 40th anniversary celebration.

That's exactly how Harmon, the motel owner and chamber president, predicted things will go. An extra $10 or $20 for gas was not, he said, going to make visitors coming to Maine or residents heading to other parts of New England change their plans. Or stay home.

"We're going to have a very, very strong weekend," he said.

He was right on the money as far as Montreal residents Sebastian Desgagues and Andrea Moraga were concerned. They were making the round trip for a Built to Spill concert at the State Theatre on Thursday, leaving Friday, and heading the right direction, north, from which tourists would be fleeing. The couple gassed up at a Gulf station just off Route 295 at Congress Street and Massachusetts Avevue.

(Continued on page 2)

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Additional Photos

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Dylan McIntyre of West Falmouth fills up his 20-year-old BMW at a Congress Street gas station in Portland on Friday. “I’m not too worried,” he said, shrugging off the price fluctuations even though he acknowledged that his car gets pretty abominable gas mileage.

  


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