City tackles a dynamite issue
Deirdre Newman
The sale of fireworks is a politically incendiary issue. Only a
handful of cities in Orange County sell them, including Costa Mesa.
And most of those cities have wrestled with whether to continue
selling them.
On April 19, the Costa Mesa City Council approved, in concept, a
slew of suggestions by Councilman Mike Scheafer to restrict fireworks
sales. Monday, the council approved an ordinance reflecting those
restrictions.
Opinions are still divided over the issue, however, with opponents
of firework sales concerned about the proliferation of illegal
fireworks and proponents preaching personal responsibility,
patriotism and profits.
“Don’t expect the city to do everything for you,” Ramsey DeGeare
said. “You have to take personal responsibility. That’s not even in
the dictionary anymore.”
Officials in most of the cities that sell fireworks are similarly
torn. They also have to contend with illegal fireworks, since the two
normally go together, Santa Ana Fire Marshall Lori Smith said.
“They go hand-in-hand generally,” Smith said. “If you allow safe
and sane, you generally have a larger influx of illegal activity.”
Costa Mesa struggled with the issue of fireworks sales in the
early 1990s. First, voters split over whether to allow groups to keep
selling fireworks. A year later, the council, on a 3-2 vote, decided
to continue to allow safe and sane fireworks and impose some
restrictions. But former Mayor Sandra Genis, who was on the council
at the time, said she now thinks that was a bad choice.
The new rules approved Monday include reducing the type of
fireworks that can be sold and the number of fireworks stands. Also,
each high school can have a maximum of four stands.
Dave Perkins, athletic director at Costa Mesa High School, said
the sports teams at his schools will be hurt by the new rules. His
school manned 12 fireworks booths last year.
“If they diminish it like that, it will really hurt,” Perkins
said. “If it eventually goes away, we won’t be able to run our
football program worth a darn. We probably raise between $5,000 to
$6,000.”
SMALL RESTRICTIONS
Other cities that sell fireworks have also grappled with trying to
put the genie back in the bottle, or at least better control the
genie. A year and a half ago, the Buena Park City Council voted 3-2
to ban the sale of fireworks. But residents protested and put a
referendum on the ballot. Allowing fireworks sales passed with 70% of
the vote.
“The sale will continue since the people have spoken,” Buena Park
Deputy City Manager Wes Morgan said.
The city will continue to allow 32 stands, Morgan added.
Santa Ana has also considered eliminating fireworks, but the
council and the community are usually split on the issue, Smith said.
In Garden Grove, city officials have limited the number of stands
that border Anaheim, where they found a higher amount of activity.
Anaheim does not allow the sale of fireworks. They have also taken
greater effort to reduce accessibility to parks after dark, since
revelers would light fireworks there later in the evening.
“We [made those changes] a year ago and there was quite a bit of
reduction of activity in the parks and the areas abutting the areas
that don’t sell them,” City Manager Matthew Fertal said.
DON’T PARK
Parks are also a hot spot for fireworks in Costa Mesa. One of the
ordinance’s new rules would require the creation of new signs to be
posted in all city parks warning of the penalty for possessing
dangerous fireworks.
Scheafer was inspired to tweak the city’s firework rules after one
of his neighbors was severely burned last July when a sparkler she
lighted ignited her clothes. As a member of the Lions Club, Scheafer
has helped sell fireworks for the past three years and said he is not
interested in eliminating them altogether.
Perkins agrees that what happened to Scheafer’s neighbor was
unfortunate, but said he doesn’t believe restricting the sale of
fireworks will prevent incidents like that.
“I feel horrible there was a tragedy that this lady was burned
badly, but that’s the responsibility of the individual,” he said. “If
you restrict it here, they’ll just go somewhere else. If they don’t
go to Garden Grove, they’ll go to Mexico. That’s just the way it
goes.”
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.