The focus this season centers on the "Bucket Brigade" initiative, a push by the American Pyrotechnics Safety & Education Foundation to combat post-celebration fires. Officials emphasize that spent fireworks often retain internal heat, posing a reignition risk if discarded prematurely. The program asks residents to submerge used items in water overnight, a simple step that has already shown success in Colorado, where participating fire departments reported a total absence of personal fireworks-related calls during the holiday period.
This push for caution follows a decade of industry-wide efforts to refine product design, labeling, and fusing systems. Federal data from the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System suggests these measures are gaining traction, with fireworks-related injury reports dropping 12 percent in 2025 compared to the previous year. Julie L. Heckman, executive director of the American Pyrotechnics Association, credits this downward trend to a combination of stricter federal oversight by the Consumer Product Safety Commission and a growing culture of consumer accountability. As the program scales nationally, the association is calling on local businesses and civic leaders to help distribute buckets and educational resources to ensure the milestone anniversary remains a celebration rather than a cautionary tale.





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