A
aesop081
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ArmyVern said:it'll make a great complimentary post to CDN Aviator's fart notifications. >
hey >
ArmyVern said:it'll make a great complimentary post to CDN Aviator's fart notifications. >
tango22a said:ARMY VERN:
Please see other Topic.....I did as you suggested.
tango22a
FastEddy said:
What's your views on Nationizing the Industry and keeping all our oil for Domestic use at production cost, give the investors their money back and get rid of all that expensive deadwood.
ArmyVern said:Well, you know ... we all keep talking about the gas in the stations already when the price goes up. People get torqued because they see the price of that 'already there" fuel go up.
I'm of the mindset that they do have to raise the prices on the "already-there" fuel else what are they going to pay for their next delivery with? When the next tanker full arrives at 1.48 a litre --- they have to pay that 1.48 a litre 'up front' to get it into their station. Else the tanks are empty and you aren't getting any gas at "anything per litre".
You don't like the high prices ... look at the taxes because that's where the high prices come from. And you know darn well that if the government ever cut the fuel taxes, they'd just get them back via some other sort of means.
I don't expect THAT to happen anytime in the near or even distant future because government is quite content to gain their "money" (no deficit!!) the way they currently are; Seeing the Canadian Consumer blame the gas staion owner, operator, attendant, supplier - rather than those who are taxing the crap out of it and holding them accountable.
Effective 12:01 a.m. Monday, Sept. 15, 2008, the maximum price for gasoline will increase 10.9 or 11.0 cents per litre (cpl) – depending on the HST rounding impact, as a result of recent extraordinary commodity market developments. At this time, there will be no change to maximum prices of other regulated fuels.
Effective 12:01 a.m. Thursday, September 18, 2008, maximum prices will decline as follows:
• all types of gasoline by 12.4 or 12.5 cents per litre (cpl) – depending on HST rounding;
• ultra low sulphur diesel by 4.7 or 4.8 cpl – also due to HST rounding cpl; and,
• furnace and stove oil by 5.54 cpl.
September 18, 2008
Gas station demands licence before fill-up
By THE CANADIAN PRESS
SEXSMITH -- A Peace Country man said he had to submit his driver's licence before he could fill up his pickup truck at Tags Food and Gas in Sexsmith on Monday.
But an official with the Office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner in Edmonton said he's not sure if that violates the Personal Information Protection Act.
"Before I could fuel up my truck at the self-serve pumps, they told me I had to go inside and submit my driver's licence to them," said Edwin Trent of Manning. "I said, 'well, I'll just show it to you.' He said, 'No, no, we've got to actually take your driver's licence until you are done fuelling up and paying for your gas and then we'll give you your driver's licence back.' "
Trent said he handed them his driver's licence because he had to drive to Manning, but added he didn't "feel good doing it."
The manager at the gas station acknowledged customers are being asked to submit their driver's licences before they can fill up.
Carla, who declined to give her last name, said there have been too many incidents of gas-and-dash, where customers have sped off without paying.
"I'm averaging almost one a day."
But she said her staff is not collecting personal information.
Meanwhile, pump prices for regular gas dropped to about $1.28 a litre in Edmonton yesterday.