A moth rests near the price indicator on a pump at Roy Saulsberry Jr.’s convenience store. Wilcox County has the unhappy distinction of having the nation’s highest percentage of income spent on gasoline; residents spend more than 13% of their monthly income on gas, according to the Oil Price Information Service. By contrast, the average Los Angeles County household spends 3.9% of its monthly income on gasoline. (Michael E. Palmer / For The Times)
Earl Westry pumps gas at Saulsberry’s store. (Michael E. Palmer / For The Times)
Job are scarce in Coy, Ala. Some people work in the county seat, 13 miles away, or venture farther away. But driving to those jobs costs money -- a tough equation in a town where raising the cash to pave a basketball court is just a dream. (Michael E. Palmer / For The Times)
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Retiree Clarence Perryman is a regular at Saulsberry’s store. He watches neighbors come and go. They used to pull up and say, Fill it up, Perryman says. Not anymore. (Michael E. Palmer / For The Times)
Roy Saulsberry sees hauling gasoline into town to sell at his store as a kind of public service. He makes about 10 cents profit on each gallon just enough to pay the stores light bill. (Michael E. Palmer / For The Times)