Wednesday, April 27, 2011

The Cost of Gas and Education

A few weeks ago I was traveling back from West Virginia and I decided to check the accuracy of the gas gauge in my car. On the control panel is a button to push that tells me how many more miles I can travel before I run out of fuel. I was on that long stretch of I-68, East of Cumberland, Maryland , where there were no gas stations. So, I pushed beyond my comfort level.

Finally, with only 20 miles of gas left, I pulled off the highway in search of petrol.

I drive a late model Jeep Wrangler with a six cylinder engine. Filling it up that day with a near empty tank cost around $74. Shocking! I was unprepared for my first experience of $70+ for a tank of gas.

As gas approaches $4 per gallon in Delaware, it helps to keep our costs in perspective. At least we’re not Dutch. According to GTZ, The German Technical Cooperation, gasoline in the Netherlands costs $9.54 a gallon this April. In the UK, if you were renting a car while waiting for the royal wedding this week, you’d pay the equivalent of $8.29.

You want cheap gas? Go to Venezuela for $.09 a gallon. In Nigeria it’s $1.67 and in Saudi Arabia it’s only $.67 a gallon.

No thanks. I’ll pay whatever the cost, right here in the USA.

We all know that while gas prices go up, stressing the family budget, many other things we need begin to cost more as a result. Unless we grew it in our yard or built it from home grown products, there is nothing we buy that isn’t affected by the cost of gas. Most everything is trucked into our area and petroleum was likely used in some step of its construction. As we prepare to pay more for food and consumer goods, we have to be prepared to pay more for the education of our children as well.

We begin each day by bringing them to school in the big yellow taxi. Those who can’t walk to school and choose not to ride the bus, often are brought by family members in petroleum dependent vehicles. Once they get to school, they may have a nutritious breakfast, which will no doubt cost more. In class they’ll need books and paper and pencils and markers and computers and lights and heat and air conditioning and all the usual things. Most, I expect will be costing more due to some connection to oil.

So, expect it.

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