NEW YORK — U.S. drivers will pay an average of 24 cents more per gallon for gasoline during this summer’s travel season, the government said Tuesday.
Gasoline will cost an average of $3.95 per gallon from April through September, an increase of 6.3 percent from the same period last year, the Energy Information Administration predicted. The peak should come in May, when gas averages $4.01 per gallon, the agency said.
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3 comments:
That's about the same as Marty's sales tax applied to gasoline......Don't like it either way.....
The the nut jobs wonder why the economy is not recovering. People don't have any money to do what they want with it. We are too busy paying more taxes and putting gas in our vehicles just to get back and forth from work.
It's Bush's fault.
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