TCHULA, Miss. — Gasoline prices reached a national average of $4 a
gallon for the first time over the weekend, adding more strain to
motorists across the country.
But the pain is not being felt uniformly. Across broad swaths of the
South, Southwest and the upper Great Plains, the combination of low
incomes, high gas prices and heavy dependence on pickup trucks and
vans is putting an even tighter squeeze on family budgets.
Here in the Mississippi Delta, some farm workers are borrowing money
from their bosses so they can fill their tanks and get to work. Some
are switching jobs for shorter commutes.
People are giving up meat so they can buy fuel. Gasoline theft is
rising. And drivers are running out of gas more often, leaving their
cars by the side of the road until they can scrape together gas money.
The disparity between rural America and the rest of the country is a
matter of simple home economics. Nationwide, Americans are now
spending about 4 percent of their take-home income on gasoline. By
contrast, in some counties in the Mississippi Delta, that figure has
surpassed 13 percent.
As a result, gasoline expenses are rivaling what families spend on
food and housing.
“This crisis really impacts those who are at the economic margins of
society, mostly in the rural areas and particularly parts of the
Southeast,” said Fred Rozell, retail pricing director at the Oil
Price Information Service, a fuel analysis firm. “These are people
who have to decide between food and transportation.”
A survey by Mr. Rozell’s firm late last month found that the gasoline
crisis is taking the highest toll, as a percentage of income, on
people in rural areas of the South, New Mexico, Montana, Wyoming and
North and South Dakota.
With the exception of rural Maine, the Northeast appears least
affected by gasoline prices because people there make more money and
drive shorter distances, or they take a bus or train to work.
But across Mississippi and the rural South, little public transit is
available and people have no choice but to drive to work. Since jobs
are scarce, commutes are frequently 20 miles or more. Many of the
vehicles on the roads here are old rundown trucks, some getting 10 or
fewer miles to the gallon.
The survey showed that of the 13 counties where people spent 13
percent or more of their family income on gasoline, 5 were located in
Mississippi, 4 were in Alabama, 3 were in Kentucky and 1 was in West
Virginia. While people here in Holmes County spent an average of 15.6
percent of their income on gasoline, people in Nassau County, N.Y.,
spent barely more than 2 percent, according to the survey.
Economists say that despite widespread concern about gasoline prices,
the nationwide impact of the oil crisis has so far been gentler than
during the oil crises of the 1970s and 1980s, when shortages caused
long lines at the pump, set off inflation and drove the economy into
recession.
Americans on average now spend about 4 percent of their after-tax
income on transportation fuels, according to Brian A. Bethune, an
economist at Global Insight, a forecasting firm. That compares with
4.5 percent in early 1981, the highest point since World War II. At
its lowest point, in 1998, that share dropped to 1.9 percent.
“Gas prices have doubled over the last year but the economy has not
fallen off the cliff,” said Rajeev Dhawan, director of the Economic
Forecasting Center at Georgia State University. “But for the rural
lower income people, as a proportion of their income the rise of gas
prices is very high.”
While people everywhere are talking about gasoline prices these days,
some folks in Tchula (the T is silent) have gone beyond talking.
Anthony Clark, a farm worker from Tchula, says he prays every night
for lower gasoline prices. He recently decided not to fix his broken
1992 Chevrolet Astro van because he could not afford the fuel. Now he
hires friends and family members to drive him around to buy food and
medicine for his diabetic aunt, and his boss sends a van to pick him
up for the 10-mile commute to work.
A trip from Tchula to the nearest sizable town about 15 minutes away
can cost him $25 roundtrip — for the driving and the waiting. That is
about 10 percent of what he makes in a week.
Taking a break under some cottonwood trees beside a drainage ditch
filled with buzzing mosquitoes, Mr. Clark and members of his work
crew spoke of the big and little changes that higher gas prices have
brought. The extra dollars spent at the pump mean electric bills are
going unpaid and macaroni is replacing meat at supper. Donations to
church are being put off, and video rentals are now unaffordable.
Cleveland Whiteside, who works with Mr. Clark and used to commute 30
miles a day, said his Jeep Cherokee was repossessed last month,
because “I paid so much for gas to get to work I couldn’t pay my
payments anymore.” His employer, Larry Clanton, has lent him a pickup
truck so he can get to work.
Signs of pain and adaptation because of the cost of gas are
everywhere. Local fried chicken restaurants are closing because
people are eating out less. At the hardware store here, sales have
plummeted to $30 a day from $250 a day a month ago.
“Money goes to gasoline — I know mine does,” said the hardware
store’s manager, Pam Williams, who tries to attract customers by
putting out choice crickets for fishing bait beside the front door.
Local governments are leaving grass high along the roads and doing
fewer road repairs to save on fuel costs. The Holmes County
government has cut the work week to four days to give workers
gasoline relief (keeping the same total of hours), and politicians
are even considering replacing sanitation workers with prison inmates
on some shifts to conserve money for fuel.
The local price for a gallon of regular unleaded gasoline was roughly
$3.85 last week, slightly below the national average, but the median
family income in Holmes County is about $18,500.
Nationwide, regular unleaded gasoline reached an average of $4.005 on
Sunday, according to the American Automobile Association. That is the
highest price ever and about a dollar higher than at the start of the
year.
While looking to cut workers at his fish processing plant in nearby
Isola, Miss., Dick Stevens, president of Consolidated Catfish
Producers, said that 10 workers walked into his office last week and
volunteered to take a buyout rather than continue commuting from
Charleston, Miss., 65 miles away. “The gas ate them alive,” he said.
Workers at the plant are trying to find ways to cope. Josephine Cage,
who fillets fish, said her 30-mile commute from Tchula to Isola in
her 1998 Ford Escort four days a week is costing her $200 a month, or
nearly 20 percent of her pay.
“I make it by the grace of God,” she said, and also by replacing meat
at supper with soups and green beans and broccoli. She fills her car
a little bit every day, because “I can’t afford to fill it up.
Whatever money I have, I put it in.”
Sociologists and economists who study rural poverty say the gasoline
crisis in the rural South, if it persists, could accelerate
population loss and decrease the tax base in some areas as more
people move closer to urban manufacturing jobs. They warn that the
high cost of driving makes low-wage labor even less attractive to
workers, especially those who also have to pay for child care and can
live off welfare and food stamps.
“As gas prices rise, working less could be the economically rational
choice,” said Tim Slack, a sociologist at Louisiana State University
who studies rural poverty. “That would mean lower incomes for the
poor and greater distance from the mainstream.”

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