The price drop for gas continues. The average price of gas in America is now $1.86, but New York, outside of prices on Native American reservations in the area is still far behind, with prices averaging more than two dollars.
January can be grueling. The post holiday letdown, credit cards and adjusting budgets to face the New Year. Well you can look forward to the next holiday, and move money around, and GAS PRICES are falling.
Wait could this be an April Fools Joke....no April 1st isn't until Monday. The price of gasoline in Western New York is actually LOWER than the national average? That never happens.
I just paid $1.89 per gallon at newly opened J R's Seneca Hawk gas station and driving range in Irving, New York. There are a few locations just south of Hamburg and Derby, New York where you'll still find gas still under $2 a gallon.
Rejoice America, oil prices have fallen below $50 per barrel! Motorists have been saving over a grand a year at the pumps for a few years now. But, are the low gas prices actually hurting the economy? In some ways they are.
Those $4 a gallon gas prices we experienced from 2007 through 2009 may be a thing of the past...at least for this summer. Economists predict that the national average price for a gallon of gas will fall about 32 percent from a year ago. Between now and September, when we do most of our driving, it should cost you much less to fill up at the pump.
From truckers to cab drivers and folks like me who have a six hour travel every weekend to visit family, the lower gas prices are a great thing. For those who depend on higher prices, not so good as experts say the lower price trend should continue through winter.
The Dow Jones Industrial Averages have been breaking records for months now. The national unemployment is at a manageable 5.8% and now gas prices are below $2 a gallon in 13 states. 3 states have pumps at $1.90!