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Officials said they were working to speed the flow of fuel. On Friday, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano temporarily waived a maritime rule to allow foreign oil tankers coming from the Gulf of Mexico to enter Northeastern ports. The action, she said, would "remove a potential obstacle to bringing additional fuel to the storm damaged region." New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, meanwhile, signed an executive order waiving the state's requirement that fuel tankers register and pay a tax before unloading. Tankers, he said Friday, are now making "great progress" delivering fuel to distribution centers. "No reason to panic," the governor urged. But keeping calm could be hard as the gas lines lengthened. Many service centers along the Garden State Parkway and the New Jersey Turnpike were so full that cars trying to pass at highway speeds sometimes had to swerve to avoid them. In Connecticut, traffic jams created by New Yorkers exiting from Interstate 95 to take advantage of the stations that were open were "making it difficult for everybody," said Greenwich police Lt. Kraig Gray. Police monitored lines in many places, including a Hess station in Fort Lee, N.J., where an officer was seen ordering a man out of line after sneaking in from a side street. Among those waiting there, Kenneth Kelly of Englewood Cliffs took it all in stride. "It ain't that bad. I could be in Queens," he said, referring to the confrontation there. "I've seen a lot of bad in my life, people getting sick and things like that. This is what I call an inconvenience. Now, losing something like a house, that would be bad."
[Associated
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