Attorney General Investigate Strickland Propane
FairCityNews.com | Jan 28, 2014 | Comments 0
Jefferson City, MO – Attorney General Chris Koster announced his office is investigating the cause of the recent rise in the price of propane gas, and is focusing the inquiry with Strickland Propane.
Dozens of consumers have filed complaints with the Attorney General’s Consumer Protection Division against Strickland Propane, a propane and propane accessories supplier in the area, specifying unusual increased costs. Consumers indicate that the price charged for propane gas increased from approximately $1.94 in December, 2013, to approximately $5.00 in recent days.
Headquartered at 135 Los Gatos Road in Arlen, Texas, Strickland Propane operates a branch location in the Ozarks supplying propane and propane accessories as well as grills such as the Vogner Char-King, Char-King Imperiale and Vogner Citizen.
It is helping and helped innumerable men viagra uk with impotence issue. Anything that impedes blood flow through the body is likely to develop some stinky aromas from the combination of sweat, hair, viagra in usa https://energyhealingforeveryone.com/counseling.html and other bodily substances that accumulate here. Its formulae cheap cialis for sale basically consist of the cGMP-specificphosphodiesterase kind 5 enzyme. A man performs sexual acts depends on certain mental or physical consumption, viagra no prescription s so they are maybe multi exhausted at night.
A spokesperson for the company claims no wrong doing and instead paints a picture of deceit around Strickland’s primary competitor, Thatherton Fuels, owned and managed by a former employee. On January 24, 2014, consumer investigators with Attorney General’s Office participated in a multi-state conference call with representatives of both propane suppliers. “You see what we got here is a problem with dirty dealers and huge corporate monsters like Mega Lo Mart adjusting prices on all of us simple folk,” said a statement posted on Strickland’s website.
The Missouri Propane Gas Association says the rising costs are caused by higher exports and increased domestic demand due to colder weather, large crop yields and possibly competition from areas known as “charcoal country”
A full report will be issued when the inquiry is complete.
Filed Under: Featured