Putting out firework- related injuries
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Lolita Harper
With July 4 fast approaching, City Council members will consider
tonight whether to change the rules regarding permits for the sale of
fireworks, which would include outlawing “spinners.”
Rookie Councilman Mike Scheafer, who was appointed in May 2003
after Karen Robinson resigned to be a Superior Court judge, will push
his earlier resolve to make the Fourth of July safer tonight by
asking his colleagues to consider changes to current firework
regulations.
A report that Scheafer is expected to share with the council this
evening outlines various tweaks to the city’s permit procedure,
including banning “hand-held devices,” requiring firework
distributors to hand out fliers in English and Spanish about fire
safety, creating new signs prohibiting fireworks in city parks and
phasingout fireworks stands.
No new organizations will be allowed to sell fireworks, as
outlined in Scheafer’s proposed ordinance, and those that do qualify
must have at least 80% of their members living in Costa Mesa.
Fireworks have been a contentious issue in Costa Mesa, as many
members of youth organizations, such as high school sports teams and
bands, use the profits from their sale to fund items that have long
been cut from education budgets.
Then there are those on the other side, who feel any fireworks,
regardless of being labeled “safe and sane,” are a danger to the
community. Period.
Costa Mesa Mayor Gary Monahan said that although fireworks have
been a contentious issue, the proposal that Scheafer has outlined is
reasonable.
“I’m fine with what Mike’s done,” Monahan said. “ ... Unless you
don’t like fireworks and the fact that we won’t ban them completely.”
Monahan said he expected the majority of the council to agree.
Scheafer made his mark early in his tenure by challenging the
legitimacy of firework sales in Costa Mesa -- one of the last five
Orange County cities to allow the celebratory favors.
Before the July 4, 2003 holiday, Scheafer adamantly supported
selling fireworks. As a member of the Lions Club, he had helped sell
them for the past three years.
That summer, however, his neighbor, Adelaide Thiel, suffered
severe burns after a sparkler she lighted ignited her clothes, and he
changed his mind.
Since then, Scheafer has met with Fire Chief Jim Ellis, acting
City Atty. Tom Wood, Fire Marshal Tom MacDuff and City Manager Allan
Roeder to study the fireworks issue and explore other options.
The councilman urged city leaders to speed up a decision, so that
another Fourth of July does not go by without added safety
precautions. The City Council is expected to vote on the suggested
changes at 6:30 p.m. tonight in City Hall, 77 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa.
For information, call (714) 754-5223.
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