Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Oregon may end self-serve gas ban — but only in rural areas

- By Sheila V Kumar

SALEM,ORE.» Oregon is one of only two states where motorists aren’t allowed to pump their own gas. The other is New Jersey.

Now, the Legislatur­e appears ready to at least let people driving through rural Oregon serve themselves because of concerns that travelers could get stranded in places where few gas stations are open after hours.

Parts of Oregon are so remote that people unfamiliar with the landscape don’t realize hundreds of miles separate gas stations, said Rep. Cliff Bentz, sponsor of a bill that would let gas stations offer self-service fuel when there isn’t an owner, operator or employee around.

Rural businesses in the middle of nowhere can’t afford to keep someone manning the pumps 24 hours a day, said Bentz, a Republican from Ontario — a city near the Idaho border.

“You go around eastern Oregon counties, you find more and more situations where there isn’t any fuel. And it’s not unlike the situation electric car owners find themselves in now,” said Bentz, a Republican from Ontario.

Bentz’s bi l l sa iled through the House on a bipartisan 60-0 vote. It’s now awaiting a committee hearing in the Senate.

The measure is limited to counties where there are fewer than 40,000 residents. That accounts for half of Oregon’s counties and almost all of eastern Oregon.

Oregonians have rebuffed every attempt to overturn the prohibitio­n of self-service since it was instituted, including a ballot measure they rejected in 1982 that would have legalized self-service. The opposition has been so strong that legislator­s haven’t introduced a measure to overturn the ban since 2003.

New Jersey has stuck with its ban, too. In 2011, Gov. Chris Christie said he wouldn’t support legislatio­n for self-service gasoline because most residents don’t want it, despite making a proposal for self-serve gas while campaignin­g for governor in 2009.

Oregon’s law banning self-service lists 17 motives. Among them, selfservic­e “discrimina­tes against customers who are elderly or have disabiliti­es who are unable to serve themselves,” and unattended children could create a “dangerous situation.”

“In Oregon, the first reason that the law gives to ban self-service gas in effect is, ‘You will set yourself on fire,’” said Steve Buckstein, co-founder of the Cascade Policy Institute, a libertaria­n think tank.

These days, the argu- ments against self-service are mainly that full-service stations create jobs and make life more convenient for motorists by letting them stay in the comfort of their vehicles.

Bentz said owners and operators of rural gas stations asked him to introduce HB 3011 this year.

If it’s a frosty winter’s night and the needle on the fuel gauge is nudging empty, drivers in rural Oregon may grow desperate when, after driving hours in search of a filling sta- tion, they find it empty and closed.

“Numerous times, I’ve been woken in the middle of the night by the sheriff’s dispatch because we have folks who follow their phones and aren’t very smart and don’t fill up till their gas lights are on,” said Tom Downs, who owns a gas station in southeaste­rn Oregon.

“Out of the goodness of our hearts we get up in the middle of the night and fuel them so they can get on their way,” he said.

 ?? DON RYAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Cars line up as an attendant pumps gas Wednesday at a station in Portland, Ore. Oregon is one of just two states where motorists aren’t allowed to pump their own gas. The other is New Jersey. Now the Oregon Legislatur­e appears ready to at least let...
DON RYAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Cars line up as an attendant pumps gas Wednesday at a station in Portland, Ore. Oregon is one of just two states where motorists aren’t allowed to pump their own gas. The other is New Jersey. Now the Oregon Legislatur­e appears ready to at least let...
 ??  ?? Attendant James Lewis pumps gas Wednesday at a station in Portland, Ore.
Attendant James Lewis pumps gas Wednesday at a station in Portland, Ore.

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