May 13, 2006
Full Tanks Put Squeeze on Working Class
By ROBIN POGREBIN
MIAMI BEACH, May 12 — Giving up the occasional rib-eye steak hasn't been the hardest part for Ana Lopez, although her husband is a red-meat man.
More difficult are having to tell her 11-year-old son that he cannot go to the movies, and swearing off Sunday visits to her sister in Pembroke Pines or to her brother in Miami Lakes. These are the sacrifices required now that it costs $60 to fill her aging Toyota 4Runner.
Ms. Lopez, 48, who lives in the outlying suburb of West Kendall, must conserve every gallon possible for the 60-mile round trip to and from her job as the housekeeping manager at the Bentley Hotel in Miami Beach. "There is not enough money to spend for gas," she said. "You have to think about it: If I go to see my friend, I won't have enough gas to work tomorrow."
As many drivers struggle to cope with soaring fuel prices, working-class people like Ms. Lopez who commute long distances to their jobs are suffering the most. In many cases, they had moved far away from major metropolitan areas to be able to afford decent houses. Now, paradoxically, the cost of gas is making the distance prohibitively expensive.
"If you're poor, you're forced to make choices," said Stephen Cecchetti, a professor of economics at Brandeis University in Waltham, Mass. "All of a sudden, when the price of something that you can't give up skyrockets, you still have to go from one place to another."
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/13/us/13driving.html?ei=5094&en=a7d341821e017bae&hp=&ex=1147579200&partner=homepage&pagewanted=print