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1880 - Pico Oil Spring Mine Section 2 patented by R.F. Baker and Edward F. Beale [story]
E.F. Beale


Now and Then in the SCV | Commentary by Darryl Manzer
| Friday, Jul 31, 2015

darrylmanzer0215We have a gasoline price problem here in Southern California. We must pay more than anyone else in the country. Our representatives in Sacramento haven’t found the answers and might not even be looking for the answers. A few people are out there looking, and here are some of the results.

A reporter for the Pasadena Star News, Thomas Elias, may have found a huge part of the reason we are paying such high prices for gasoline here.

It isn’t the “summer blend” or the lack of crude oil to refine. It isn’t refineries that lack capacity to make enough gasoline. It seems it is nothing more than a way to bleed us for more money.

You see, Elias looked at the shipping reports and found that at the same time our prices started to rise, gasoline was being exported to Mexico and Central and South America. In a little over one day, tankers transported enough gasoline to supply us here in SoCal for three days.

And those tankers keep sailing from ports here in SoCal and from refineries in the San Francisco Bay area.

While all of this is going on, we find out the oil companies are making record profits again. The gasoline we buy makes them about $1.50 per gallon more than other refineries in other states. We can’t see that because the reports come out long after the prices spike. Funny how that happens.

Oil tycoon John D. Rockefeller

Oil tycoon John D. Rockefeller

Back in the day, when Standard Oil was divided into many little Standard Oil companies (Standard of California being one of them), the real owner of all of it was John D. Rockefeller. The companies of today are using methods that would make old Mr. Rockefeller proud. Yep, all in the best traditions of the robber barons of steel, railroad and oil fame.

Now, I own a small amount of stock in Chevron. I don’t see the profits for California sales broken out in the total company reports. But from tax reports, we see how much they make per gallon above what is reported overall. Turns out it is around $1.50 per gallon more. Golly, folks … we are paying nearly $1.50 a gallon more at the pump than other places.

And our gasoline is going south.

Our money is going to Houston. At least for the big oil companies.

A while back, I looked on the Chevron web page. They have a little bit of the history there. Funny, they don’t mention much about where they started, Pico-Newhall. They do have a lot about oil fields in Texas. I’m glad they left Mentryville. They have forgotten their roots.

Now, can we get our reps to look at the oil companies? I doubt it. That extra $1.50 we pay lines a few pockets in the Assembly and Senate.

This is my surprised look. If you can’t see it, just know that it doesn’t look like I’m all that shocked. Like I said. Old John D. would be proud.

 

Darryl Manzer grew up in the Pico Canyon oil town of Mentryville in the 1960s and attended Hart High School. After a career in the U.S. Navy he returned to live in the Santa Clarita Valley, where he serves as executive director of the SCV Historical Society. He can be reached at dmanzer@scvhistory.com. His older commentaries are archived atDManzer.com; his newer commentaries can be accessed [here]. Watch his walking tour of Mentryville [here].

 

 

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8 Comments

  1. Earl Richards says:

    Global oil markets are over supplied, global oil prices are dropping and there is an oil glut in the Cushing spot market and in the Permian Basin, so the gasoline price should drop. There is no shortage of gasoline, because there are 3.5 billion barrels of oil in the ground in California. Google and read the “$2.5 Trillion Oil Scam – slideshare”. California is a victim of this scam.

  2. You know it’s all greed , when I can pay less for gas in Mojave than here..
    Sounds like collusion..

  3. Mike Bagack Mike Bagack says:

    Try Bakersfield. It’s 75 cents less

  4. Bill Timony Bill Timony says:

    It’s what the market will bear. It’s also taxes. N.J. Has some of the cheapest gas in the country. And you don’t pump it yourself. N.Y. Has some of the highest because of their state taxes. Maybe you have a local or county tax?

  5. CG says:

    Well, as long as we keep buying the expensive gas, they will continue to charge whatever they want. Maybe people should organize a gas strike for one day and see if that sends a message…

    Thank you, Darryl (spelled your name correctly this time) for speaking the truth about what is going on here in California. Your my favorite!

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