New Year’s Eve won’t go out with a bang
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Eron Ben-Yehuda
To kick off the new millennium with a bang, some nearby cities have
temporarily lifted their ban on fireworks, but Huntington Beach and
Fountain Valley refuse to budge.
That doesn’t make sense to Huntington Beach resident Don Erickson, 30,
who said the city should follow the lead of Garden Grove, Costa Mesa and
Stanton, which have authorized the sale of fireworks for this week only.
“What’s the harm?” he asked.
Plenty, warn city officials, who have kept a tight lid on pyrotechnics
for years. Huntington Beach stopped allowing fireworks sales in 1987.
Fountain Valley did the same a year later.
“We’re trying to ensure a safe and sane and injury-free holiday,” Fire
Marshal Duane Olson said.
Before the ban, firefighters couldn’t answer all the emergency calls for
help, City Councilman Tom Harman said.
Typically, someone would throw a sparkler on a wood-shingle roof, setting
off a blaze, Olson said. That danger is especially great this time of
year because so little rain has fallen, and the Santa Ana winds are
blowing away what little moisture remains, he said.
Besides property damage, injuries mounted as careless revelers lost
fingers or even their eyesight when a firecracker they mishandled
exploded, he said.
But resident Ernie Andrasik, 35, said a “few bad apples” shouldn’t spoil
the fun for everyone else. The ban is meaningless anyway, he said,
because locals can buy fireworks in another community and bring them
home.
But you’re caught with illegal fireworks in Fountain Valley, you will be
slapped with a citation and possible even arrested, police said.
Because this New Year’s holiday holds special significance, Huntington
Beach officials expect more carousing and more drinking. Adding fireworks
will only make matters worse, they said.
Resident Jeff Littlefield, 31, agreed.
“The police and the Fire Department will have enough to do that night,”
he said.
-- Angelique Flores contributed to this story.
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