NEW YORK (CNNMoney) --
Drivers tired of braving hours-long lines at gas stations in the
aftermath of last week's storm have an unlikely alternative: Craigslist.
Sellers
have emerged in droves on the classified ad site in recent days,
offering a black-market alternative to mobbed gas stations in New York
and New Jersey.
"Why wait 5 hours for
gas?" asked one seller in Brooklyn, who claimed to have "a couple of
extra gallons" available for $15 each.
The
gas shortage emerged last week as traffic jams, shuttered ports and
power outages left many gas stations nonoperational following Superstorm
Sandy. Consumers have waited in lines stretching for miles as they seek
gas to fuel their vehicles or power generators.
Amid
the chaos, attorneys general in New York and New Jersey have warned
sellers against excessive price gouging, which is illegal in both
states. The officials say they've received hundreds of complaints about
high prices for gas and other essentials in the aftermath of the storm,
and have vowed to investigate.
"We will do
everything we can to stop unscrupulous businesses or individuals from
taking advantage of New Yorkers trying to rebuild their lives," New York
Attorney General Eric Schneiderman said Monday. "There are always
people who show up when there's a crisis to take advantage of victims of
a disaster."
Prices advertised on
Craigslist Monday afternoon were as high as $30 a gallon. With regular
gasoline selling for an average of $3.96 a gallon in New York and $3.62
in New Jersey, according to AAA, many who go the black-market route are
paying a significant premium.
Aside from
price-gouging laws, freelance fuel vendors could also run into trouble
for failing to pay sales taxes. But in spite of these legal issues, some
drivers may be happy to secure fuel even at an increased price.
"Everybody
is so appreciative that they can even get gas," said Ryan, 28, a New
Yorker who was offering gas for $18 a gallon on Craigslist Monday and
declined to give his last name. He said he'd been delivering gas from
his truck after a friend transported it into the city from upstate New
York, and had been earning between $250 and $300 a day.
"I'm
just charging for delivery," he said. "I think if you can wait in a gas
line, you should do it, but some people don't want to wait. Some people
don't have time to wait."