Product Safety Letter: Fireworks Group Gives CPSC Three Proposals on Rulemaking
From the Product Safety Letter:
"The National Fireworks Association (NFA) August 23 promoted three ideas it presented to CPSC members the week before. They regard the 2016 rulemaking proposal that aimed to address issues like burst charges, chemical compositions, pyrotechnic weights, device bases, and others. Many were uncontroversial, but provisions targeting fine mesh metals in burst charges garnered the most opposition from some stakeholders like NFA.
That group's three ideas – which it called "common sense compromise we can all support" – involved:
- Eliminating the metals provision. It pointed to test data it had submitted last year and which it said showed powders that would be compliant with CPSC's proposal had more burst energy than those that would be banned.
- Getting rid of the "ear test" – the method of listening for a "poof" versus a "bang" for deciding if a device is meant to produce audible effects.
- Adopting pyrotechnic composition weight limits for consumer aerial shells to 60 grams. NFA said this is "an industry accepted standard" meant to limit explosive energy."
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