WATSONTOWN — If gasoline prices were to increase by up to 30 cents a gallon — a possibility under a provision in Gov. Tom Corbett’s budget proposal — it would have a decidedly negative effect on his business, the general manager of Watsontown Trucking Co. said Wednesday.
“Diesel fuel is our number one expense,” Chris Patton said. “We have a fleet of 250 trucks and they’re mostly on the road at any one time. We buy about 3,500 gallons of diesel fuel a day. Raise the current price of $3.94 a gallon by 30 cents and we take a big hit. If we pass along that price to our clients, it will eventually trickle down to the consumer.
“This idea,” Patton said, “is not good for anyone.”
Under Corbett’s budget plan, Pennsylvania gasoline taxes would rise an average of about five cents a gallon a year annually over the next five years to pay for a $1.8 billion increase in transportation funding.
News
Governor's gas tax may cost trucking company $383,000 a year
- News
-
-
Veterans’ new enemy: Charlatans
This Memorial Day, as your thoughts turn toward veterans, be on the alert for scammers doing the same thing, only with bad intentions.
- Valley wins 18 medals at state track
-
Cicadas: They’re crunchy
Seventeen years after a major swarm of bug-eyed cicadas staged one of nature’s weirdest — and loudest — mating rituals, their offspring are preparing to rise in Washington’s suburbs and the Mid-Atlantic.
-
Cicadas: They can’t hurt you
Have you heard the buzz? There’s a lot of buzz, or talk, about a certain insect that shows up once in a long while but in such big numbers that it’s impossible to ignore. But there’s also a sound, a buzzing or whirring that might remind you of a grass trimmer.
-
Eight fun facts about cicadas
Dan Babbitt of the National Museum of Natural History’s Insect Zoo came up with cool things about the bugs that some people — maybe your parents — think are just a bother:
-
Life’s too short to worry. Just ask the cicadas.
I was planting a fern the other day and unearthed a plump, brown creature that resembled a peanut hull, a wriggling hull.
-
A 17-year romance with no tomorrow
An imaginative essay from the point-of-view of the newly emerging cicadas.
-
Bug-phobic dreads looming cicada brood
WASHINGTON — The night started with one tiny click near the bedroom window.
Then came another, and another, until a great oak beside Lori Milani’s South Arlington, Va. apartment was alive with an almost deafening roar of cicadas. - Expert: Files gone, porn stays on laptop
-
$9G win ‘a happy experience’
Family and friends found out Friday how much money Carey Lutz won on “Who Wants to be a Millionaire.”
-
Prosecutors fight appeal in Northumberland County murder case
WILLIAMSPORT — The state attorney general’s office says the murder conviction of Kevin Marinelli should stand.
-
Selinsgrove area man charged with rape
SELINSGROVE — A 24-year-old Selinsgrove man is being held in the Snyder County jail on felony rape and related charges.
-
Federal appeals court upholds most 'kids for cash' convictions
HARRISBURG — A federal appeals court is upholding all but one of the convictions in the case of a county judge in the "kids for cash" juvenile justice scandal in northeastern Pennsylvania.
-
Toomey co-sponsors bill supporting military sexual assault victims
WASHINGTON — U.S. Senator Pat Toomey cosponsored legislation today to assist service members who are victims of sexual assault in the military and to hold their attackers accountable.
-
Jersey shore reopens for 1st post-Sandy summer
SEASIDE HEIGHTS, N.J. — New Jersey rolled out some of its big guns Friday to proclaim that the shore is back following Superstorm Sandy, using Gov. Chris Christie and the cast of MTV's "Jersey Shore" to tell a national audience the state is ready for summer fun.
-
Buffalo Valley Police search for hit-run driver
LEWISBURG — Police are reviewing surveillance video from nearby stores to try to identify the vehicle that struck and left a Lewisburg pedestrian in serious condition.
-
Northumberland County prison guard suspended
SUNBURY — A month that began with two Northumberland County Prison guards being fired, one quitting and a fourth suspended and under investigation is ending with another suspended without pay for allegedly distributing narcotics and delivering tobacco to inmates.
-
Today's Top Videos
- More News Headlines
-
Veterans’ new enemy: Charlatans




