Bangor Mail

Demand for curbs on sale of fireworks to public

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COUNCILLOR­S will be asked to back calls for restrictio­ns on the sale and use of fireworks amid concerns over their impact on both vulnerable people and animals.

A full council meeting on Thursday will see a motion seeking the support of Gwynedd’s councillor­s for limits on the maximum noise levels of fireworks as well as restrictin­g when they can be let off.

Cllr Paul Rowlinson, the Plaid Cymru councillor for Gerlan, said: “I certainly don’t want to be a killjoy, but I am concerned about the fear and distress that fireworks can cause both to animals and vulnerable people.

“Loud, unexpected noises can affect our pets, farm animals and wildlife in addition to elderly people, children with autism and people suffering from PSTD.”

Earlier this month the First Minister suggested that firework-free zones and set times when they can be set off would be “sensible measures” but that such powers were not currently devolved to Cardiff Bay.

It followed claims by Caroline Jones MS who said that Bonfire Night had become “Bonfire Week” when “quiet neighbourh­oods resemble war zones”.

A recent RSPCA poll found that 21 per cent of UK adults reported owning, knowing or having heard about an animal that had tragically died as a result of fireworks, with the charity calling for the restrictio­n of the private use of fireworks to agreed traditiona­l dates (November 5, New Year’s Eve, Chinese New Year and Diwali).

Cllr Rowlinson’s motion will seek to place more pressure on both the Welsh and UK government­s in stricter regulation­s on fireworks, citing one potential action as limiting the maximum noise level allowed.

“The council also needs to review the measures we ourselves could put in place, for example to make people more aware of the impact of fireworks on animal welfare and the precaution­s they can take to mitigate these risks,” he added.

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