Fourth fireworks canceled for 2003
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Jenny Marder
The fireworks flame was briefly sparked and then just as quickly
extinguished when the City Council narrowly voted Tuesday to cancel
plans for what would have been the second-largest fireworks show in
the country.
After a series of impassioned speeches, the council voted 4-3 to
cancel the fireworks display this Fourth of July, rather than hold it
at the beach. Council members Gil Coerper, Cathy Green and Dave
Sullivan strongly opposed the idea of relocating the fireworks to the
beach due to potential health and safety concerns and Council members
Debbie Cook, Pam Julien Houchen and Jill Hardy were in favor. The
split vote was decided by Mayor Connie Boardman who cast the final
vote against this year’s show.
“We’ve finally gotten rid of all the news stories of riots in
Huntington Beach on the fourth,” Green said. “It would just take one
incident, and we’ve got the reputation back.”
The Fourth of July Commission has been asked to put present plans
aside and instead begin planning for the 100th anniversary in 2004.
Alternatives to the beach site were lacking. The Huntington Beach
High School stadium, where fireworks have been held for more than 20
years, will be unavailable due to renovation. Marina High School was
considered, but not recommended because of limited parking, absence
of fencing and bleachers and cost concerns.
Central Park West, Golden West College and Boeing were also
considered but not pursued.
Relocating the fireworks show to the beach would have made it the
second-largest fireworks show in the country after New York, and the
largest on the West Coast, according Fourth of July Commission member
Margie Bunten.
The idea would have featured fireworks shot from a barge stationed
offshore, south of the pier and north of Beach Boulevard, accompanied
by a patriotic pre-show concert at Pier Plaza.
The Downtown parking structure and beach parking combined would
provide 2,765 spaces, and 40 police officers would need to be
stationed on site, police estimated. The costs, estimated at $86,150,
would need to be fund-raised by May 16. That total included $15,000
for leasing the barge, $18,000 for fireworks and $44,150 to fund
police.
Those in favor of the project were overwhelmed by others who
feared a repeat of civil unrest that took place Downtown in year’s
past. Festivities in the mid-1990s spun out of control year after
year as patriotic celebrations gave way to couch burnings, illegal
fireworks and injuries from flying bottles and swinging police
batons. News stations used to flock to Surf City every Fourth of July
anticipating mayhem.
Coerper was doubtful that 40 police officers could control the
estimated 20,000 spectators who might attend.
Sullivan expressed concern that the beach environment would
encourage illegal drinking and compound potential problems.
“We are basing so much of the future of this city on excessive
overnight tourism,” he said. “The downside is just going backward to
where we were before. This is not, in my view, worth the risk in
potentially having that happen again.”
Other council members thought safety concerns were outdated and
underestimated the ability of police officers to control the crowd.
“We can’t live in fear of the past forever,” Houchen said. “I
think the tone in Huntington Beach has changed. I think the police
chief has experience dealing with fireworks on the beach. I would
hope that we could move past the stigma that all bad guys come to the
beach the Fourth of July.”
Those in favor were sorely disappointed.
“We have the opportunity to have an event that would be really
special,” Hardy agreed. “The police have said we could handle it, and
I’d like us to try.”
Boardman swayed the vote away from the beach, saying she believed
the risks outweighed the benefits.
Planning for the 2004 celebration will begin immediately.
* JENNY MARDER covers City Hall. She can be reached at (714)
965-7173 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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