EDITORIAL
Fireworks Veto a
Slap at Strand Mount override to
protect beach homeowners, renters from fire hazards and
noise
Gov. Mark Sanford last week vetoed a bill that would have allowed
homeowners some control over the ignition of fireworks on the beach.
The governor's apparent beef with the fireworks bill is its lack of
structural perfection. Regardless, the veto constitutes a slight to
which Grand Strand residents should object.
The bill in question is a compromise wrought by Rep. Alan
Clemmons, R-Myrtle Beach, with the S.C. fireworks industry. It would
allow homeowners and homeowners associations limited fireworks
control over public land adjacent to their properties.
Clemmons' bill relies on the same logic by which property owners
can post no-hunting warnings on public land adjacent to their
property. It would empower homeowners and condo associations to post
no-fireworks signs on beaches in front of their properties and to
alert the police when violations take place.
This is much more than a measure to empower owners of beachside
property to fight back against fireworks noise - though that alone
would be a worthy use of state power. The bill also recognizes that
flying fireworks such as bottle rockets and Roman candles pose a
threat to wooden structures, such as low-rise condos along Shore
Drive, and the people who stay in them.
Similar structures in Myrtle Beach, Surfside Beach and North
Myrtle Beach already enjoy fireworks protection. Municipal councils
do have to power to enact bans and have done so. A few years back,
Horry County Council was set to enact a similar ban to challenge the
state law barring counties from fireworks regulation. The council
gave up when it became clear that defending a ban would require high
legal costs. The well-financed, politically connected S.C. fireworks
industry is a formidable opponent.
This lesson was not lost on Clemmons. His objective was more
modest than the county's: to give homeowners in unincorporated areas
a way to reduce fireworks bother and danger. Fireworks lobbyists,
rightly fearing that a condo firestorm along the beach could turn
public sentiment against the industry, helped him get the bill
through the S.C. House and Senate this year.
Sanford's concern, apparently, is that the bill is too confusing
to apply. Maybe so, but what would have been wrong with signing the
bill and letting the courts figure out how it should be applied?
The governor says he'll recommend that the General Assembly
empower counties to ban or restrict fireworks. But thus far, his
attempts to influence the legislature have been largely
ineffectual.
The better course would be for the rest of the Horry County
delegation to join Clemmons in organizing an override of the veto.
Readers who think that's a good idea can help by writing letters of
support to Clemmons at 320A Blatt Building, Columbia, SC 29211.
Letters should reference House Bill 3409. This may be one quest
where citizen intervention can swing political dynamics in favor of
the public
interest. |