| USA Today: 2K fears might drive gasoline shortage 
 usatoday.com
 
 Millions of drivers will top off their gasoline tanks in a last-minute year
 2000 rush that might make lines at ATM machines and supermarket
 checkouts seem tame by comparison.
 
 "I'm not pulling money out of the bank. I'm not getting out of the (stock)
 market," says Eloise Rivers of Toledo, Ohio. "(But) when my tank gets
 below half, I'll fill up."
 
 People can stock up on cash, food, batteries and water over days or
 weeks prior to Jan. 1, 2000. But for the average person, there is no safe
 way to stockpile gasoline. The rush to fill up will occur mostly Dec.
 30-31, because most drivers won't risk facing Y2K with their gas gauges
 on empty.
 
 Some stations - perhaps many - could run dry for hours to days.
 
 Here's why: In normal times, the nation's 100,000 to 125,000 tank trucks
 are on the road an average of 20 hours a day hauling 418 million gallons
 of gasoline and fuel oil daily. A two-day topping-off party at the
 nation's 180,000 service stations could stretch trucks and drivers thin.
 Stations could start running out as early as New Year's Eve, experts say.
 Others might run out after the rush in the early days of 2000 before
 trucks arrive to replenish.
 
 [...]
 
 Gasoline cans present another wild card. There are an estimated 83
 million cans in the USA, which often are ignored until lawn-mowing
 season. Blitz USA, which says it's the nation's largest maker of plastic
 gasoline cans, declined to release specific sales data. But company officer
 Chuck Craig says Blitz has had much higher demand in what is normally
 the slow season.
 
 If a significant percentage of gasoline cans, old and new, are filled the
 last week of December, it would be enough to drive demand well above
 forecasts.
 
 Gasoline stored inside houses and garages also represents a serious
 safety threat. Firefighters in Los Ranchos, N.M., forced a man to remove
 three 55-gallon drums of diesel and gasoline that they said could have
 destroyed a city block.
 
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