Independence Day fireworks: Laxer state laws could mean more in tax revenue
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States that once pooh-poohed fireworks as dangerous or noisy are starting to come around and acknowledge their true value: up to $1 million a year in tax revenues.
In the last decade, a dozen states have loosened the rules on consumer fireworks, with six of those changes occurring in the past two years as budgets have gotten tighter. Just this year, Kentucky, Utah, and New Hampshire modified their laws to expand what kinds of fireworks can be sold to consumers, and on July 1, Maine鈥檚 governor signed a bill that legalizes fireworks use, though it won鈥檛 take effect until next year. Legislation to lift the ban on fireworks has also been introduced in Massachusetts. The only other states that still have all-out bans are Delaware, New York, and New Jersey.
Of course, even if a state allows the use of fireworks, individual cities or counties can choose to prohibit them. Still, by allowing fireworks sales and use, a state could raise between $500,000 and $1 million each year in tax revenues, estimates Julie Heckman, the director of the American Pyrotechnic Association. Selling fireworks would also create jobs and bolster a state鈥檚 economy.
鈥淭his is an industry that鈥檚 dependent upon part-time work,鈥 Ms. Heckman says. 鈥淲e employ a lot of people.鈥
The fireworks industry has been growing rapidly since the late 90s. Display fireworks sales have stayed mostly flat for the past few years, but consumer fireworks sales are thriving.
The 46 states that allow consumer fireworks have different, and sometime idiosyncratic, standards for what鈥檚 permissible. For instance, some states such as Minnesota and Connecticut only allow sparklers (hand-held or ground-based). In Utah, 鈥渕ultiple tube,鈥 鈥渞epeater,鈥 or 鈥渃ake鈥 fireworks that shoot up to 150 feet are now allowed, but only for one month in the summer. Cherry bombs and bottle rockets are still out of the picture, though. And in some places, such as North Dakota and Alabama, anything goes: The Atom Smasher, The Mighty Rattler, The Dominator Max Bottle Rocket, you name it.
Then there are the states with rules that are a bit befuddling: In Pennsylvania, most fireworks can be sold, but only to people who aren鈥檛 Pennsylvania residents or who have permits. Next door in Ohio, if you don't have a permit to buy fireworks, you have to promise to take them out of the state within 48 hours 鈥 say, over the border to Pennsylvania?
Heckman suspects those kinds of laws may be enforced with a wink and a nod. After all, so many other fireworks vendors seem to be indiscriminate, and perhaps a bit too shameless, about whom they sell to. A quick Google Maps search of 鈥渇ireworks stores鈥 pulls up an image of a country scattered with vendors, many of which are clustered along state lines. Certainly only state residents shop at the Border Line Fireworks Outlet in Lordsburg, N.M., the Stateline Sparkler of West Virginia, in Bunker Hill, or at Fireworks Over the Border in Seabrook, N.H.
The fireworks industry generated nearly $1 billion last year. As the industry has grown, the rate of injuries from fireworks has actually decreased significantly, Heckman says.
鈥淭he injuries tend to go down when fireworks are legal,鈥 she says. "When you鈥檙e breaking the law, you鈥檙e careless."
As for sales this Independence Day weekend, it will all just depend on the weather, Heckman says.