El Presidente Posted May 11, 2023 Posted May 11, 2023 This story was a good insight into the cost of living pressures in Cuba. Taxis $30-$40 for a 13km trip. Fuel prices đ˛  Mind you, the Catholic Church has enough coin to buy then man an electric bike or cover his cab charges. . The parishoners are doing it tough enough  Gas shortage in Cuba: Priest needs electric bicycle to offer Mass in distant parishes   By Walter Sanchez Silva for CNA ACI Prensa Staff, May 9, 2023 / 12:00 pm The serious gasoline shortage in Cuba has forced Father Kenny FernĂĄndez Delgado, a priest of the Archdiocese of Havana in the town of Madruga in Mayabeque province, to ask for help to buy an electric bicycle. According to local media reports, for weeks there have been long lines throughout the island due to the lack of gasoline and oil, which on the informal market (technically illegal) in some places can cost 500 pesos (about $20) per liter or about $70 per gallon in a country where the minimum salary is approximately $100 a month. In addition, President Miguel DĂaz-Canel recently admitted that the Cuban government doesnât know how to resolve this crisis. According to cibercuba.com, DĂaz âattributed the current shortage to the breach of agreements by countries with commitments to supply gasoline to Cuba, which also have a complex energy situation and have not been able to fulfill those commitments.â In a series of tweets shared on May 5, FernĂĄndez explained the difficulties he faces for not being able to put gas in his car since April 18, which makes it increasingly âdifficult to be able to say Mass in the different towns that I serve.â âItâs true that by staying in line for days I could get some gasoline in Havana, but then do I have to leave my parish 68 kilometers (42 miles) behind to stay in line for gasoline for days and days? The car has become a museum piece for me,â the Cuban priest explained. After explaining how tomorrow he will go to Havana with the car and if he doesnât find gasoline he will have to leave it, the priest said that he would have to use public transportation, a taxi, a normal bicycle or an electric bicycle. âPublic transportation doesnât always work for me and itâs not entirely certain that the buses will come. When I can, I use it. The prices of the taxis are through the roof (800-1,000 Cuban pesos ($30-$40) for a trip of 13 kilometers (8 miles) to offer Mass in Aguacate and turn around; itâs unsustainable. For emergencies it works,â he continued. The priest then stressed that âthe mechanical bicycle is as good an option for athletes as it is exhausting, and for the second Mass on Sundays it doesnât work for me because I wouldnât have time to get there, and even if I had time I would have to travel 40 kilometers (25 miles) by bicycle (to go to Aguacate and then PipiĂĄn and return to Madruga in a single day), Iâm sorry but Iâm not a professional cyclist, nor is it my aspiration to be one.â The fourth option, and the one he sees as most feasible, is an electric bicycle, but FernĂĄndez doesnât have enough money to buy one. âThatâs where I need the help and collaboration of everyone who can help me raise the $1,000 or so to buy an electric bike,â he said. âThank you for your desire to help. Let us pray for Cuba, so that many things that have to change now can change,â the priest concluded. 1
Rhinoww Posted May 12, 2023 Posted May 12, 2023 Wow. I realized there was a gas issue but figured like every crisis here there would be a solution. No solution in Cuba is a real issue. It may make the summer quite volatile. Gas is not a luxury good, until it is. Sad. So much more suffering ahead.Â
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