Fireworks back at beach
Jenny Marder
Fireworks will explode off Surf City’s shoreline in July for the
first time in three decades after the City Council on Tuesday night
backed off its stand against the display.
The council denied a beach show last year and had already rejected
plans in January for fireworks over the water this July. Councilwoman
Pam Julien Houchen brought the topic back to the table on Tuesday
night, however, with more specifics on how it could work.
The fireworks show -- which will celebrate Surf City’s centennial
Fourth of July parade -- will be shot from a barge off the beach. It
will be the second largest fireworks show in the country.
“I think it’s a wonderful opportunity for the 100th anniversary,
and the citizens deserved it ... and it’s illustrated that at least
five members of the City Council represent the constituency,”
resident Barry Williams said. “It will be wonderful. It really will.”
While the 5-2 vote was a colossal victory for proponents, who
fought doggedly for the plan, there was still a vast hurdle that had
to be cleared: raising $84,000 to pay for the show.
Costs for the beach fireworks show will be about $82,000: $40,000
for the display itself, $40,000 for police officers, $1,000 for a
fire engine and paramedics and $1,000 for beach cleanup, said Pat
Stier, chairwoman of the Fourth of July Parade Committee.
The whole day -- parade, race and entertainment included -- will
cost more than $300,000.
But Stier has no doubts that the money will be raised.
“I’m very confident,” Stier said. “The hard part was [getting it
through] the council and them giving us the chance. We’re not going
to fail the city now.”
The board has already raised about one-third of the cost.
With a sluggish economy, fundraising can be a struggle, Mayor
Cathy Green said.
“If they can’t overcome that hurdle, it’s back at the high
school,” said Green, one of two council members to change their vote
since January. “It’s a tough time to fundraise right now. It’s a
tough thing, but they seem very confident and very enthusiastic, so
more power to them.”
Tuesday night’s decision will bring the fireworks show back to the
beach after about 30 years. The fireworks show was moved from the
beach venue to Huntington Beach High School in the 1970s, when
increasingly thick fog blocked the show from view.
Houchen brought a slightly altered proposal back to her colleagues
in last-ditch effort on Tuesday and begged them to reconsider it.
This time the board pinpointed an exact location, secured funds
for lighting on the beach and expanded its support to include
influential hotelier Steve Bone, owner of the Hyatt Regency
Huntington Beach Resort & Spa and the Hilton Waterfront Beach Resort.
“We’re only asking for it for one year,” Houchen said. “I believe
it will be a great success. Our city has changed, and we’ve grown up
quite a bit.”
City Council members Connie Boardman and Dave Sullivan stayed firm
in their vote to deny the show, fearing a repeat of civil unrest that
plagued the city in the early 1990s.
“I just don’t think it’s worth the chance,” Sullivan said. “We’ve
worked so hard in this city to get rid of that image. Man, it was our
image for a long time, and if something goes wrong, the city will be
suffering.”
Green, who was still undecided at the start of the meeting, said
it was the confidence of police and firefighters she spoke with that
compelled her to switch sides.
“I had talked to several of the firefighters and police officers
and the [police] chief and said, ‘Could we make this work for this
year?’ and almost all of them said, ‘Yes, we can make this work,’”
Green said. “I thought for one year, I’ll try it and keep my fingers
crossed and pray.”
* JENNY MARDER covers City Hall. She can be reached at (714)
965-7173 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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