Sparklers legal?

By Howard Fischer
Capitol Media Services
Published/Last Modified on Wednesday, June 3, 2009 4:13 PM MDT


PHOENIX — Arizona is half way to making sparklers legal.


On a 34-21 margin, the state House voted Tuesday to make it legal for stores to sell and Arizonans to use sparklers. HB 2258 also would legalize cone fountains, ground spinners and toy smoke devices.

The legislation now goes to the Senate.

If it gains approval there, the odds are excellent it will become law: Gov. Jan Brewer, who said she played with sparklers herself while growing up in California already is on record as saying she believes the restrictions against the items make no sense. And Brewer said she allowed her own children to play with sparklers in Mexico.

Tuesday’s vote is a victory for the United States Fireworks Safety Commission, an organization that represents manufacturers. Lobbyist Mike Williams said the legislation would simply bring Arizona into line with more than 40 other states that allow sparklers and similar items.

But Arizona would not fall in line with all of those states: HB 2258 would not legalize anything that actually explodes or shoots anything off, including firecrackers and Roman candles, even though those are legal in some states.

Even if the measure becomes law, not everyone will be able to take advantage of the change everywhere.

As part of a political compromise, lawmakers agreed to allow city councils to declare the use of sparklers illegal within their own limits. But cities could not bar stores from selling the items and consumers from buying them.

Sales of sparkler to anyone younger than 16 would be prohibited throughout the state, though the law says nothing about adults providing them to youngsters.

Proponents didn’t even bother to push the measure during the six years that Democrat Janet Napolitano was governor.

 

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