Groups to get more bang for their bucks
Elise Gee
COSTA MESA -- Youth and civic groups were given a
once-in-a-millennium opportunity Monday when the City Council decided to
allow the sale and use of fireworks during this year’s New Year’s Eve
celebration.
The decision grants dozens of groups, which raise money selling
fireworks during the Fourth of July, another opportunity to pad their
budgets. However, Councilman Joe Erickson, who cast the sole dissenting
vote, said he was concerned that police and fire personnel would be
overworked during the millennium celebration even without the extra
concern over fireworks.
Several members of booster and youth groups stayed until after
midnight to testify Monday about what the extra fund-raising opportunity
would do for their groups.
Costa Mesa High School parent Colene Atkins said the chance to run a
fireworks booth during New Year’s Eve would provide the marching band
with much-needed funds.
“They haven’t had new uniforms in 22 years,” Atkins said. “This could
give us our chance.”
Fourth of July fireworks sales have proved profitable to various
groups over the years. Linda Herzog, a parent supporter of the football
program at Costa Mesa High School, said the four days the booster group
sells fireworks in July raises more money for the team than any other
fund-raiser during the year.
Since beginning the fireworks fund-raiser six years ago, the Mesa
football boosters have gone from a $10,000 budget to an $80,000 budget,
Herzog said.
A state bill was signed last year that allows cities and counties to
approve the sale and use of fireworks during New Year’s Eve millennium
celebration. Of the four Orange County cities that allow fireworks during
the Fourth of July, only Stanton also plans to allow fireworks during the
millennium celebration.
In California, there are 98 other cities that will allow fireworks
during the start of the new millennium, said John Kelly, of American
Promotion Events, a fireworks vendor.
In Costa Mesa, groups that sold for American Promotion Events on the
Fourth of July made an average of $8,300 per stand, said Dennis Revell,
company spokesman.
Erickson said he supports fireworks and the fund-raising efforts of
youth and civic groups in the city. But he added that he gave great
credence to concerns raised by the city’s police and fire departments.
“Police and fire are going to be overworked that night,” Erickson
said. “There’s enough to worry about with not only drunk drivers but
people worried about Y2K. It’s typically one of the busiest nights of the
year and to throw the fireworks mess into this is beyond our capacity.”
The city’s fire marshal sent the council a memo asking them not to
allow the sales.
The sale of fireworks will be allowed from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Dec. 29
to Dec. 31. Fireworks use will be allowed from 4 p.m., Dec. 31 to 12:30
a.m. Jan. 1.
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