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Lancet Jades
05-28-2004, 10:51 PM
Minn. Cracks Down on Underpriced Gasoline

Fri May 28, 5:59 PM ET




By PATRICK HOWE, Associated Press Writer

ST. PAUL - Just in time for Memorial Day weekend, Minnesota's Commerce Department (news (http://us.rd.yahoo.com/DailyNews/manual/*http://search.news.yahoo.com/search/news?p=%22Commerce%20Departmen t%22&c=&n=20&yn=c&c=news&cs=nw) - web sites (http://us.rd.yahoo.com/DailyNews/manual/*http://search.yahoo.com/bin/search?cs=nw&p=Commerce%20Department)) is cracking down on service stations over the price of gasoline. The problem: Some stations aren't charging enough.



Under Gov. Jesse Ventura, the state adopted a law in 2001 that prohibits gas stations from selling gas without taking a minimum profit. These days, they must charge at least 8 cents per gallon, plus taxes, more than they paid for it.



On Friday, the Commerce Department announced a $70,000 fine against Arkansas-based Murphy Oil for breaking the law at its 10 stations in the state, based at Wal-Mart stores and elsewhere. They also fined Kwik Trip Inc. $5,000 for violations at one station in Apple Valley.



The two are the first fines levied under the law, which is similar to minimum-price laws in about a dozen states. Another two dozen have broader laws banning predatory pricing.



"The Legislature makes the law, and we enforce the law," said Carol Hockert, director of the department's weights and measures division.



It's her job to investigate alleged violations of the law, and there are plenty.



Hockert said she receives as many as 100 complaints a week, mostly from competitors convinced neighboring stations aren't charging enough.



In many cases they're wrong — the wholesale price changes day to day, and often one station might still be selling gas in its reserves that it bought at a cheaper price while its competitor only has newer, higher-priced gas to sell.



But stations turn over their supply fast, Hockert said, and if a station continually sells gasoline for less than what the department knows the wholesaler sold it for, she investigates.



"If $1.95 was legal yesterday, they get the benefit of the doubt," she said. "If $1.95 hasn't been a legal price for two weeks, then clearly it's a violation."



Complaints have risen right along with gas prices, she said.

According to AAA, gasoline is about 60 cents higher this Memorial Day weekend than last. The average price of gas in Minnesota is $2.02.

Wallie Wildo
05-28-2004, 10:56 PM
thats complete bs they should be able to charge what ever they want gas prices are outragious shouldnt some people be able to give others a break

Zelphiel
05-29-2004, 01:32 AM
it's their loss if they're charging less... they were probably selling at or below cost. I did hear from our fuel supplier (I work in a gas station, btw) that opec has been ordered to produce more gas, and prices could drop by one dollar a gallon within 4 months.

Lancet Jades
05-29-2004, 01:39 AM
Well cacaw, although it does sound like bs, there is reasoning behind it. This prevents big corporations from lowering prices to drive smaller chains out of business, thus gaining a monopoly of gasoline sales in an area, and then driving up prices. Although that probly wouldnt happen, its still something to think about...

idgaf rpgfan
05-29-2004, 01:42 AM
It not just a matter of whether they make a profit or not, it also prevents the larger corporations from underpricing in an effort to run the smaller companies out of business. A multi state business could make a profit in one state and a loss in another state, thus breaking even. In the state the are underpricing in their competition can't always compete with the undercut prices and then sells less, and after too long, goes bankrupt. I promotes "fair" competition no matter what size of company.