Fireworks sales slow, but not the fears
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Andrew Glazer
COSTA MESA -- The city’s phones began flashing and ringing as 33
fireworks stands opened here on Wednesday.
Residents opposed to Costa Mesa’s sale of fireworks made more than 100
phone calls to City Hall and to council members at their homes, City
Manager Allan L. Roeder said.
Many said they were concerned that heavy winds and this year’s unusually
dry fall has created a dangerous environment for New Year’s Eve
fireworks.
“People don’t have any control over which way the fireworks will fly,”
said Stan Suficool, 82, whose home backs onto the evergreens and dried
grass of Canyon Park. “We’ve got a wind blowing up from the ocean, which
could blow them anywhere. And we have all this dry timber here.”
The city’s fireworks stands only sell so-called “safe and sane”
fireworks, which do not launch. Roeder said the city also distributed
10,000 fliers Wednesday morning telling residents to not ignite
sparklers, Piccolo Petes and fountains in heavy winds.
“We hope people will use simple logic,” Roeder said. “You simply cannot
control the damage in those circumstances. We hope people would put them
away until July 4th.”
Costa Mesa is one of 100 California cities that is allowing the sale of
fireworks for New Year’s Eve.
Residents from neighboring cities prohibiting fireworks sales and
ignition have been outspoken in their opposition to Costa Mesa’s
leniency. Newport Beach city officials said they didn’t want people
igniting them in their city.
But despite all the controversy they have sparked, business at several of
the city’s fireworks stands was far from booming Wednesday afternoon.
One booth on Harbor Boulevard saw only five customers in its first four
hours of business. Until New Year’s Eve, vendors are allowed to sell the
fireworks from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m from the wooden, brightly painted booths.
“We really have high hopes that a lot of people come by,” said Jeani
Hoffman, who is one of the volunteer vendors raising money for a variety
of city nonprofit social service agencies. She said she hopes to raise
$4,000 from the stand for Costa Mesa High School’s grad night.
“That would save us from a lot of bake sales,” she said.
Tom Chandler, president of the Estancia High School boy’s basketball team
booster club, said people shouldn’t worry about the fireworks he and his
wife Carol were selling at their stand on 17th Street.
“The biggest concern are the illegal ones,” he said. “The ones we sell do
have some danger to them, but not nearly as much.”
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