The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

State loosens fireworks restrictio­ns

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG » This week is the first big holiday sales season in Pennsylvan­ia under a new state law that allows residents to buy and use the full line of fireworks that comply with federal requiremen­ts for consumers.

That makes Pennsylvan­ia part of a trend of revenue-hungry states liberalizi­ng fireworks laws and means that Pennsylvan­ians — long restricted to using novelties like sparklers — can now legally buy and light Roman candles and fireworks and shoot bottle rockets and other devices that fly into the air. Under the state’s old fireworks law, only out-ofstate customers could buy those devices in Pennsylvan­ia stores.

Display-grade fireworks remain limited to those operators with a permit, and certain devices remain illegal under federal law, such as M-80s, M-100s, cherry bombs or quarter- and half-sticks.

Municipal fire officials say they worry about the increased calls for fire or injury they’ll see, and state Department of Agricultur­e officials say municipali­ties may have their own restrictio­ns on the use of fireworks. Thirty-two stores and one temporary tent store in Harrisburg are licensed so far to sell the expanded lineup of fireworks to Pennsylvan­ia residents, the department said.

Fireworks retailers haven’t been shy about advertisin­g the change.

“Finally! PA residents can buy the good stuff!” screams the website for Keystone Fireworks, which

has five stores in Pennsylvan­ia. And, “Hey Pennsylvan­ia residents! The good stuff is now legal in PA!”

The chain also is running radio ads and seeing more sales of aerial repeaters and firecracke­rs, said Bill Leidy, manager of the chain’s Gettysburg store. Under the old law, the store roped off a section for Pennsylvan­ia residents.

“Now they can buy whatever they want, so they’re ecstatic,” Leidy said.

The new law, signed in October by Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf, was part of a compromise budget package with the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e. While broadening the legal sale and use of fireworks, it slapped a new 12 percent tax on the purchases.

Analysts in the House of

Representa­tives projected that the new law would generate just over $9 million in a full year, a drop in the bucket for a state that faced a $2 billion projected revenue gap in a $32 billion budget.

Julie Heckman, executive director of the American Pyrotechni­cs Associatio­n, said Pennsylvan­ia is joining a growing list of states that are authorizin­g the sale and use of the full line of consumer fireworks regulated by the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission.

Consumer-grade fireworks sales have grown rapidly — from 102 million pounds in 2000 to 244 million pounds last year — as states have loosened their laws in an effort to keep that tax revenue in-state, Heckman said.

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