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View Full Version : HB 336-FN New Hampshire bill to BAN reloadables



kessie
09-19-2013, 11:50 AM
HB 336-FN - http://www.gencourt.state.nh.us/legislation/2013/HB0336.html

The meeting was yesterday on the 18th. Any updates on this would be appreciated. I knew they would try something like this after the Boston marathon bombing, but the real trigger for this was the incident in Pelham leaving 11 injured (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=puU8WtkpGxw). If this passes, it will devastate firework hobbyists and stores throughout New England.

displayfireworks1
09-19-2013, 07:57 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=puU8WtkpGxw

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C57FNF5G6LQ

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ySJ5SkezA04
http://www.newhampshire.com/storyimage/UL/20130718/AGGREGATION/130719225/AR/0/AR-130719225.jpg

http://www.wmur.com/image/view/-/18377878/medRes/2/-/gv6gmmz/-/img-Fire-marshal-s-report-describes-Pelham-fireworks-accident.jpg

displayfireworks1
09-19-2013, 08:05 PM
http://www.necn.com/common/medialib/304/809470.jpg
http://sunthecolumn.files.wordpress.com/2012/07/pelhamfireworks.jpg
http://www.nfpa.org/~/media/Images/safety%20information/Fireworks/typeoffireworks.jpg
http://pix.epodunk.com/locatorMaps/nh/NH_18975.gif
http://extras.mnginteractive.com/live/media/site105/2013/0718/20130718__BREAKINGNEWSbang~p1.jpg
http://www.wmur.com/image/view/-/15400464/medRes/2/-/n8yaf8/-/img-11-People-Hurt-In-Fireworks-Explosion.jpg

displayfireworks1
09-19-2013, 08:19 PM
PELHAM — A proposed settlement would end a lawsuit stemming from last year’s fireworks explosion that injured 13 people.

The $38,500 agreement, on file at Hillsborough County Superior Court South in Nashua, would provide an annuity for Olivia Foy, the nearly 2-year-old daughter of Marci Ann and Patrick Foy of Greenfield.

She was treated for burns at Shriners Hospital in Boston in the aftermath of the explosion.

The annuity would give Olivia more than $24,000 on both her 22nd and 25th birthdays.

The settlement also would pay about $17,000 toward medical expenses and about $9,600 in attorney fees.

The court must approve the deal.

The Foys brought the lawsuit against Christopher and Jeanne Pappathan, who hosted the neighborhood Independence Day party at their Pelham home.

“The events of July 3, 2012 were extremely horrific for my family and friends,” Jeanne Pappathan said yesterday while reading a statement prepared with their attorney. “My insurance carrier was able to reach out to all the injured and settle various claims.”

Lawsuits being filed are required under state law to resolve claims made on behalf of injured children and must be approved by a judge, she said.

An attorney representing the Foys did not immediately return a phone call seeking comment.

The Foys were among more than 20 people attending the party.

“A firework spun and lifted into the air and landed in the pile of fireworks on the deck,” the lawsuit said.

Officials have characterized what happened next as the worst fireworks accident in state history.

“Total chaos ensued with screaming and crying as massive injuries were caused to many people at the scene,” the lawsuit said.

Marci Ann Foy is Pappathan’s niece. The lawsuit said she dove down the stairs, which were engulfed in fire, while holding Olivia.

Christopher Pappathan, in written testimony, told a New Hampshire House committee last winter he was shocked how rapidly the mortar shells exploded.

Pappathan said the shells had been unpacked and he was about to box them, when he was momentarily distracted.

“I’ve learned that life can completely change in a matter of seconds,” Pappathan wrote lawmakers.

He supports a ban on reloadable mortars and aerial spinners, both fireworks lawmakers may outlaw.

The state Fire Marshal’s Office ruled the explosion accidental. Investigators removed more than 90 boxes of fireworks from the home.

The family this year abandoned the fireworks show, which had become a neighborhood tradition.

The Legislature is studying whether fireworks regulations should be tightened because of the Pelham explosion. The state Fire Marshal’s Office supports stricter regulation.

A report is expected to be issued this fall with recommendations for the Legislature

displayfireworks1
09-19-2013, 08:36 PM
ATF fireworks license New Hampshire by county
Belknap-2
Cheshire-3
Coos-2
Grafton-1
Hillsborough-1
Merrimack-3
Rockingham-9
Strafford-1

Six of these licenses are listed to private individuals the others are company names. The party involved in this event is not listed as an ATF license holder. We will assume he was using all consume grade fireworks.

displayfireworks1
09-19-2013, 08:43 PM
Preliminary report: Accident injured 13

By John Toole
jtoole@eagletribune.com

---- — PELHAM — A preliminary New Hampshire fire marshal’s report concludes last summer’s fireworks explosion that injured 13 was accidental.

“No criminal intent is suspected in this incident,” the preliminary report said. “In the absence of any new information forthcoming, this fireworks related explosion and subsequent fire shall be classified as ‘accidental’ and this report shall stand as final.”

The House Criminal Justice and Public Safety Committee received the report during a hearing on House Bill 336, which would prohibit the retail sale of some fireworks.

The panel also received first-hand victim accounts of the horror and chaos from the night of July 3 at the Dodge Road home of the Chris Pappathan family.

Pappathan’s daughter, Jessica Pappathan Bertini, recalled being separated from her son, Ben, who was badly burned.

“He was screaming for me and was terrified. I will never forget that image,” Bertini said. “He had what I kept describing as a hole under his arm, another near his wrist and his foot was mangled.”

Pappathan’s niece was there, too.

“As the firework landed on the pile I felt instant fear. One went off. Then they all went off,” Marci Foy of Greenfield recalled in a statement to the fire marshal provided the committee. “I threw up my arms over my face and ran down the stairs as the fireworks pierced my skin, screaming for my baby (Olivia).”

Pappathan had hosted a fireworks show for friends and neighbors for years and was surprised by the disaster.

“I was shocked by how rapidly the mortar shells on my deck exploded,” Pappathan said. “As I mentioned to the fire marshal, it was as if the shells were coated with gasoline and gunpowder.”

The preliminary report said the explosion originated on the rear deck of the home.

“The scene inspection was able to determine that there were approximately 344 reloadable mortar shells or effects stored on the deck prior to the explosion,” the report said.

Investigators said last summer they removed more than 90 boxes of fireworks from the home. The report detailed nine contributing factors to the explosion.

The investigation found reloadable mortar shells were unpackaged and stored openly, in close proximity to the eight adults and five children injured.

“The majority of the people injured as a result of this fireworks explosion were located in the open deck area which is only approximately 14 feet long by 14 feet wide,” the report said.

The shells and fuses, once removed from packaging, “can be compromised with little effort,” it said.

The report was critical of the fireworks kits for lacking information about properly handling or storing shells once removed from packaging.

The investigation found this was only the second time the family had used the reloadable shells, but it was the first time they had stored them this way.

The report pointed to the critical moment.

“It was deterimined that a firework was ignited off the rear deck stairwell railing just prior to the explosion. It is unknown what the firework device actually was, but multiple witnesses describe a ‘spinner’ type firework, being ignited off the rear of the deck,” the report said. “The unidentified firework then flew over the deck, landing in the pile of reloadable mortar shells/effects stored on the deck.” Retail ban may result

Spinner devices don’t always have a controlled flight and can emit a shower of sparks, the fire marshal noted.

Rep. Charlene Takesian, R-Pelham, and Sen. Chuck Morse, R-Salem, who represents Pelham, are sponsors of the bill.

The Takesian-Morse bill would ban reloadable shells, spinners, helicopters and parachutes, plus put new requirements on retailers to provide safety information about legal fireworks.

Rep. Robert Fesh, R-Derry, a member of the committee, said there was a huge crowd and the hearing Tuesday lasted more than three hours.

Assistant Commissioner of Safety Earl Sweeney, in a position paper provided the House panel in support of the bill, said it would reinstate a ban the Legislature repealed two years ago.

Sweeney said the day of the Pelham explosion, there were two other incidents in New Hampshire, leaving the injured toll at 18.

“The devices involved were reloadable mortars, aerial spinners, parachutes and sparklers,” Sweeney said. “By removing the reloadable shells it reduces the significant risk to the use by untrained individuals.”

Pappathan, in written testimony, told the House panel mortar shells are inherently more dangerous than other types of fireworks.

He supports the ban.

“I’m generally opposed to banning things, especially things caused by my own ignorance and a very brief period of inattention,” Pappathan said. “The mortar shells had been unpacked and I was about to box them when I was momentarily distracted. I’ve learned that life can completely change in a matter of seconds.”

Fire chief James Midgley said the explosion was the worst in town history and taxed regional resources.

“Many of those injured spent weeks in the hospital and several will need continued surgeries and skin grafts,” Midgley said.

The bill is not an attack on the fireworks industry, but would eliminate three of the most dangerous devices on the market, the chief said.

“I ask you to consider what price is too high for us to pay to entertain ourselves with high yielding and unpredictable explosives,” Midgley said.

Selectman Ed Gleason, who had relatives injured in the explosion, said the incident was devastating to his family and he supported the bill.

“I am convinced these devices need to be banned from use by the general public,” Gleason said.

Some opposition surfaces

The bill faces some opposition from fireworks retailers.

Steve Carbone, president of Atomic Fireworks in Seabrook, told the House panel his business would suffer with a ban. He said he has purchased more than $100,000 in fireworks that would be outlawed if the ban is approved.

Steve Pelkey, CEO of Atlas Fireworks, which operates six stores including one in Londonderry, said his company isn’t taking a stand on the proposed ban. But he is raising concerns that retailers who have stocked up on inventory could be hurt.

“Stock has already been purchased and you have to allow them this season to get rid of the stock,” Pelkey said. “You can’t hurt the industry.”

If the fireworks in question are banned, Pelkey acknowledged one possible compromise would be to allow sales this year, but mandate retailers provide safety information to consumers.

Atlas does that already. He said if someone wanted to purchase the amount of fireworks the Pappathans had, Atlas staff would have talked to them about safety.

“That’s a lot of product. We’re going to have a serious discussion with them,” Pelkey said. “Our staff is trained to make them understand.”

Pelkey said he sees the Legislature’s decision two years ago to downgrade a state fireworks product review board to advisory status as a mistake.

He said the panel had experienced people from the industry and the fire service, who made good decisions about what products consumers could purchase.

“They had knowledge and used common sense and provided strong controls,” Pelkey said.

He would restore the board’s regulatory authority.

More work is ahead on the proposal.

Fesh said the legislative committee will be working on the bill, before issuing its recommendation to the full House. If it passes the House, the Senate will take up the bill.

displayfireworks1
09-19-2013, 09:15 PM
I am certainly a fan of reloadable artillery shells, I am predicting an increase in the popularity of the reloadable artillery shell. I noticed recently even Black Cat fireworks has announced a line of consumer canister shells for the 2014 season. I find it amusing that countries outside of United States allow these massive firecrackers to be sold but have restrictions on reloadable artillery shells. Here in United States we permit reloadable artillery shells and have weak firecrackers.
For us in the fireworks hobby it sound relatively simple how to load an artillery shell, however there appear to be many people that insist on loading these upside down and/or not properly stabilizing the mortars, this is why I made the video about how to properly shoot a artillery shell. To be honest the current instructions in a box of artillery shells is poor. The American Fireworks Standards Laboratories is slowly adding standards to this line of fireworks to improve safety and mortar strength. If more of these reloadable accidents occur, I expect further legislation by more and more states.
People in the fireworks business are in a predicament, using this example, this person wants to shoot over 300 artillery shells that are designed by regulation to be used one at a time, this in theory would take hours to shoot. The distributor can not teach the end user how to prepare a ready box and fuse rack upon rack of artillery shells with fast fuse, it is against the regulations and using it in a manner it is not designed to be. The reloadable artillery shell will be regulated more and more if this legislation passes in New Hampshire.

TheBag
09-21-2013, 08:59 AM
Firstly those tubes appear too wide for your standard consumer shell . Then you have a single shot mortar that does not look secure at all WTF where these people thinking ? They had 300 unwrapped mortars on the deck with women and children lets light a spinner off the rail of the deck WTF NOT ARE YOU KIDDING ME ? i say it would have been short of a super miracle that the show could have gone off without a hospital visit . I hate too think that these people where that naive but you know they apparently where shame.

Justintime
09-25-2013, 09:39 PM
Retained House Bill 336 was the topic in a committee work session on Sept 18, After much discussion, there was a motion to ITL, the motion was seconded, the vote was almost unanimous to ITL (inexpedient to legislate) the vote has to officially be done in executive session which has not been scheduled yet, Then there is a vote in the full House with the ITL committee recommendation. All said and done this bill should eventually end in the TRASH!!!

NHFA Chairman
396

PGH_Pyro
09-26-2013, 09:58 PM
this is why you must keep your loose shells/product in a ready box / plastic bin / wood box and not sitting out in the open a la a deck as in this incident ... visco catches easily if a reload shell blows nearby ...