The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Local fireworks-limits bill advances

- By Maya T. Prabhu maya.prabhu@ajc.com

Local government­s could soon be allowed to regulate, and effectivel­y ban, use of fireworks except on certain holidays under legislatio­n the state Senate passed.

Senators amended the measure, House Bill 419, sending it back to the House for its considerat­ion in the final days of the 2018 session.

State Rep. Deborah Silcox, R-Sandy Springs, who sponsored the bill, said she was pleased the Senate approved the measure Wednesday.

“The whole idea for the bill is to give local control so that people can have some peace and quiet in their lives in the metro area,” she said.

The General Assembly first allowed the purchase of fireworks in Georgia in 2015, but the Legislatur­e did not include permission for local cities and counties to fully regulate their use.

“In Sandy Springs, we have some folks who were savvy enough that if police were called, they had the state law ready to show them that what they were doing was legal,” she said.

If the measure wins final passage and is signed into law, local government­s will be allowed to enact noise ordinances to regulate fireworks use. The bill would require laws be posted where fireworks are sold.

Residents still would be allowed to set them off statewide on Jan. 1, the Saturday and Sunday before Memorial Day, July 3, July 4, Labor Day and New Year’s Eve.

The legislatio­n also would allow the governor to issue a moratorium on igniting fireworks if parts of Georgia are suffering from drought.

The bill almost didn’t make it out of the Senate after some amendments were approved. Senators squabbled over which holidays fireworks should be allowed.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States