Cities offer fireworks alternatives
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Deirdre Newman
During the recent discussion on restricting the sale of fireworks,
the rallying cry of the groups that sell them was “we need the
money.” But other cities have managed under total bans.
The council on Monday passed a law and created a council policy
restricting the sale of fireworks. Some of the changes include
reducing the number of fireworks stands and limiting high schools to
four stands each.
City Councilman Mike Scheafer, who initiated the changes, is
sympathetic to the fundraising concern. He said he’s not ready to
call for a total ban on fireworks until the groups that sell them
have other means of raising money.
That left some residents questioning how nonprofit groups and
sports teams in cities that don’t sell fireworks manage. The answer
is finding other ways like working shifts at bingo games, selling
program ads and fundraising events.
“If you take [fireworks sales] away, you gotta go find something
else,” said Paul Renfrow, the boys athletic director at Marina High
School in Huntington Beach, which banned the sale of fireworks in
1987. “If you’re trying to take the fireworks away for a good reason,
if it’s justified, then OK. I think other than that, you gotta look
and see the effect of it.”
Renfrow said not being able to sell fireworks right after they
were banned cut off a major fundraising option for the athletic
department. At the time the ban came down, however, the school began
a bingo fundraiser in its cafeteria on Sundays to raise money.
Booster organizations on campus take shifts working the event.
Groups can generate between $6,000 to $18,000 per year, Renfrow said.
His teams have also sold Christmas trees to raise money.
“We were able to rebound, but at the same time, we have the
resources to do it,” Renfrow said. “It’s a different community over
here.”
Renfrow suggested that Costa Mesa city officials work with the
Newport-Mesa Unified School District to come up with other
fundraising alternatives.
“If you keep taking fundraising away from the schools, it forces
the district to pick up the cost that the boosters have been taking
care of,” he said.
At Huntington Beach High School, some student athletes raise money
by selling ads for the programs that are available at home games,
boys’ Athletic Director Roy Miller said. Some teams also hold
fundraisers, but not as much as in the past, he added.
“Some of the teams still do carwashes,” Miller said. “We end up
finding out that you nickel and dime people to death doing that. Now,
we try to tell people that if you’re going to fundraise, it’s better
to focus on something more productive.”
In Fountain Valley, which hasn’t sold fireworks for about 15
years, the elementary and middle school district’s educational
foundation holds two annual fundraisers. In the fall, there is “A
Taste of Fountain Valley,” an event in which restaurants get to show
off culinary talents and ticket buyers sample the delicacies. There
is also an annual festival of the arts, where student artwork and
musical talent is featured and raffle tickets are sold.
“We do just fine without anything that requires a match,” said
Susan Grantham, executive assistant to the Fountain Valley School
District superintendent.
On occasion, the foundation also receives donations from
corporations in the community, Grantham added.
Scheafer said he has invited the groups that sell fireworks to
participate in the Lions Club’s Fish Fry event, at one time a
lucrative fundraiser for the group. And he would like to find more
community events during the year for these groups to participate in,
he added.
He also acknowledged that in future discussions of fireworks, the
council might need to establish an absolute deadline for the sale of
fireworks to put the groups on notice.
“We may very well need to say, ‘fireworks should get five more
years,’” Scheafer said. “I don’t know what that magic number is.
Maybe if we gave them some sort of sunset clause, they’d know what
they need to do.”
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