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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Wednesday, July 1, 2009

July Fourth fireworks fizzling out in tough economy


By MICHAEL FELBERBAUM
Associated Press

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Fireworks lit the sky above San Jose, Calif., during last year's annual Fourth of July festival. This year, the $500,000 event has been canceled due to city and sponsor cutbacks.

SAN JOSE (CALIF.) MERCURY NEWS FILE PHOTO | via AP

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Lack of bucks means less bang this July Fourth for many cash-strapped cities.

Fireworks shows are being canceled or scaled back, mostly in small and midsize cities, as municipalities' tax revenue dries up with the slowing economy and falling home prices. Funding from corporate sponsorships also has fizzled as businesses deal with economic problems of their own.

The budget realities are forcing communities to decide, for example, whether they can pay for extra police and fire protection for a fireworks show — or perhaps pay an officer's salary for the rest of the year. And some organizers have concerns about seeking money for a celebration as communities struggle to take care of life-or-death needs worsened by the recession.

In some cases, it's not just the fireworks shows getting the ax. Municipal and corporate sponsors, forced into frugality by the tough economy, have reduced or pulled funding for whole festivals encompassing music, food and other staples of summer.

Some fireworks companies have reported that business is off about 10 percent from last year, said Julie L. Heckman, executive director of the American Pyrotechnics Association.

Shows are being canceled from sea to shining sea:

  • A $500,000 festival and fireworks display in San Jose, Calif., was canceled after the city cut grants to cover police and fire protection and other expenses to $17,000 from about $103,000, and other public and private sponsors cut back.

  • Businesses in Charlottesville, Va., that organize July Fourth festivities are scaling back this year and have already canceled next year's event.

    "We thought it was just not the right year to be raising money for the fireworks when the food banks were suffering and more primary human services were at stake," said Dave Phillips, chairman of the organizing committee.

  • In Hialeah, Fla., near Miami, an annual event was canceled this year because sponsorship money dried up in an area that's been especially hit hard by plunging housing prices. Organizers were short $20,000 to $25,000 to pay for the $40,000 to $45,000 show.

    Other cities canceling shows include Mesa, Ariz.; Colorado Springs, Colo.; Niceville, Fla.; and Garland, Texas.

    When budget woes hit cities, holiday festivals and parades are usually the first to go, said Christiana McFarland, a National League of Cities researcher.

    Stephen Vitale, president of Pennsylvania-based Pyrotecnico, said while his company is doing more shows this year because the holiday falls on a weekend, it's clear that communities are struggling to pay for displays.

    "They fight real hard to keep it when they can," Vitale said.