(Formerly Sec. 29-89) - Storage, transportation and use of explosives and blasting agents. Licenses, permits: Fees, suspension or revocation. Penalty. Jurisdiction of Labor Commissioner. Variations, exemptions or equivalent compliance with regulatory requirements.

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(a) The Commissioner of Emergency Services and Public Protection shall have exclusive jurisdiction in the preparation of and may enforce reasonable regulations for the safe and convenient storage, transportation and use of explosives and blasting agents used in connection therewith, which regulations shall deal in particular with the quantity and character of explosives and blasting agents to be stored, transported and used, the proximity of such storage to inhabited dwellings or other occupied buildings, public highways and railroad tracks, the character and construction of suitable magazines for such storage, protective measures to secure such stored explosives and blasting agents and the abatement of any hazard that may arise incident to the storage, transportation or use of such explosives and blasting agents.

(b) No person, firm or corporation shall engage in any activity concerning the storage, transportation or use of explosives unless such person, firm or corporation has obtained a license therefor from the Commissioner of Emergency Services and Public Protection. Such license shall be issued upon payment of a fee of two hundred dollars and upon submission by the applicant of evidence of good moral character and of competence in the control and handling of explosives, provided, if such license is for the use of explosives, it may be issued only to an individual after demonstration that such individual is technically qualified to detonate explosives. Any such license to use explosives shall bear both the fingerprints of the licensee obtained by the Commissioner of Emergency Services and Public Protection at the time of licensing, and the licensee's photograph, furnished by the licensee, of a size specified by the commissioner and taken not more than one year prior to the issuance of the license. Each such license shall be valid for one year from the date of its issuance, unless sooner revoked or suspended, and may be renewed annually thereafter upon a payment of one hundred fifty dollars.

(c) The Commissioner of Emergency Services and Public Protection shall require any applicant for a license under this section to submit to state and national criminal history records checks. The criminal history records checks required pursuant to this subsection shall be conducted in accordance with section 29-17a.

(d) No person shall manufacture, keep, store, sell or deal in any explosives unless such person has a valid license under the provisions of subsection (b) of this section and obtains from the Commissioner of Emergency Services and Public Protection or from the fire marshal of the town where such business is conducted a written permit therefor, which permit shall not be valid for more than one year and for which such person shall pay a fee of one hundred dollars. If the permit is issued by the Commissioner of Emergency Services and Public Protection, the commissioner shall forward a copy thereof to the local fire marshal. Such permit so granted shall definitely state the location of the building where such business is to be carried on or such explosive deposited and shall state that such building or premises complies with the regulations provided for in this section.

(e) No person shall procure, transport or use any explosives unless such person has a valid license under subsection (b) of this section and has obtained a written permit therefor signed by the Commissioner of Emergency Services and Public Protection or by the fire marshal of the town where such explosive is to be used, specifying the name of the purchaser, the amount to be purchased and transported and the purpose for which it is to be used. Any such permit to use explosives shall state the number of years the permittee has been engaged in blasting activity. Such permit shall be valid for such period, not longer than one year, as is required to accomplish the purpose for which it was obtained. No carrier shall transport any such explosive until the vehicle transporting the explosive has been inspected and approved by the Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection and unless such written permit accompanies the same and no person shall have in such person's possession any such explosive unless such person has a license and permit therefor. The fee for such inspection shall be one hundred dollars. The fee for such permit shall be sixty dollars. Each person who has in such person's custody or possession any explosive or any detonating caps for explosives shall keep the same either under personal observation or securely locked up.

(f) Any license or permit issued under the provisions of this section may be suspended or revoked by the issuing authority for violation by the licensee or permittee of any provision of law or regulation relating to explosives or conviction of such licensee or permittee of any felony or misdemeanor. Suspension or revocation of a license shall automatically suspend or revoke the permit and the suspension or revocation of a permit shall automatically suspend or revoke the license.

(g) Any person who, by himself or herself or by such person's employee or agent or as the employee or agent of another, violates any provision of this section, or any regulation adopted by the Commissioner of Emergency Services and Public Protection pursuant to the provisions of this section, shall be fined not more than ten thousand dollars or imprisoned not more than ten years, or both.

(h) As used in this section, “blasting agent” means any material, composition or mixture intended for blasting, consisting substantially of a fuel and oxidizer, none of the ingredients of which is an explosive, as defined in section 29-343, and the finished product of which as mixed and packaged for use or shipment cannot be detonated by the test procedure established by regulations adopted by the Commissioner of Emergency Services and Public Protection in accordance with chapter 54.

(i) Notwithstanding the provisions of this section, the Labor Commissioner shall regulate the storage, transportation and use of explosives and blasting agents in places of employment insofar as such activities relate to employee health and safety, provided such regulations shall be no less stringent than those adopted and enforced by the Commissioner of Emergency Services and Public Protection pursuant to this section.

(j) The Commissioner of Emergency Services and Public Protection may grant variations or exemptions from, or approve equivalent or alternate compliance with, particular provisions of any regulation adopted under this section where strict compliance with such provisions would entail practical difficulty or unnecessary hardship or is otherwise adjudged unwarranted, provided any such variation, exemption, equivalent or alternate compliance shall, in the opinion of the commissioner, secure the public safety.

(1949 Rev., S. 4137; 1957, P.A. 571; 1959, P.A. 281; 1971, P.A. 391, S. 3; 1972, P.A. 98, S. 1; P.A. 73-132, S. 4; P.A. 77-614, S. 486, 610; P.A. 80-297, S. 12, 20; P.A. 87-130; May Sp. Sess. P.A. 92-6, S. 65, 66, 117; P.A. 99-163, S. 6; P.A. 01-175, S. 28, 32; P.A. 05-288, S. 131; June Sp. Sess. P.A. 07-1, S. 150; P.A. 09-35, S. 5; June Sp. Sess. P.A. 09-3, S. 324; P.A. 11-51, S. 90; P.A. 13-32, S. 6–8; 13-247, S. 200; 13-256, S. 4.)

History: 1959 act authorized regulation of blasting agents in Subsec. (a) and added Subsec. (e) defining the term “blasting agent”; 1971 act authorized regulations re explosives stored near “other occupied buildings” and re “protective measures to secure such stored explosives and blasting agents”, inserted new Subsec. (b) re licenses, relettered remaining Subsecs., revised Subsec. (c), formerly (b), to specify required permit, required that permit state number of years permittee has engaged in blasting activities, limited period of validity and imposed $2 fee for permit, rather than $0.25 fee in Subsec. (d), formerly (c), inserted new Subsecs. (e) and (f) re required proof of financial responsibility and re suspension or revocation of license or permit and increased maximum fine from $500 to $10,000 and maximum prison term from 1 year to 10 years in Subsec. (g), formerly (d); 1972 act repealed Subsec. (e), relettering Subsecs. accordingly; P.A. 73-132 added new Subsec. (h) re labor commissioner's authority to regulate explosives and blasting agents in places of employment; P.A. 77-614 replaced commissioner of state police with commissioner of public safety, effective January 1, 1979; P.A. 80-297 increased fee for initial license from $25 to $50 and for renewal from $10 to $25 in Subsec. (b); Sec. 29-89 transferred to Sec. 29-349 in 1983; P.A. 87-130 amended Subsec. (c) to increase permit fee from $5 to $25 and Subsec. (d) to increase permit fee from $2 to $20; May Sp. Sess. P.A. 92-6 amended Subsec. (b) to raise fee from $25 to $30 and amended Subsec. (d) to provide that vehicles transporting explosives shall be inspected and approved by the department for an inspection fee of $25; P.A. 99-163 amended Subsec. (g) by transferring regulatory authority from State Fire Marshal to Commissioner of Public Safety; P.A. 01-175 added new Subsec. (c) re criminal history records checks in accordance with Sec. 29-17a, redesignated existing Subsecs. (c) to (h) as Subsecs. (d) to (i) and made technical changes for purposes of gender neutrality in Subsecs. (b), (d), (e) and (g), effective July 1, 2001; P.A. 05-288 made a technical change in Subsecs. (d) and (e), effective July 13, 2005; June Sp. Sess. P.A. 07-1 amended Subsec. (b) to increase fee for licensure from $50 to $100, and renewal fee from $30 to $75, amended Subsec. (d) to increase permit fee from $25 to $50, and amended Subsec. (e) to increase inspection fee from $25 to $50 and permit fee from $20 to $30, effective July 1, 2007; P.A. 09-35 added Subsec. (j) re variations, exemptions and alternate or equivalent compliance with regulatory requirements; June Sp. Sess. P.A. 09-3 amended Subsecs. (b), (d) and (e) to increase fees and made a technical change in Subsec. (g); pursuant to P.A. 11-51, “Commissioner of Public Safety” and “Department of Public Safety” were changed editorially by the Revisors to “Commissioner of Construction Services” and “Department of Construction Services”, respectively, effective July 1, 2011; P.A. 13-32 amended Subsecs. (b), (g) and (i) to make technical changes, effective July 1, 2013; P.A. 13-256 replaced “Commissioner of Construction Services” with “Commissioner of Emergency Services and Public Protection”, amended Subsec. (g) to make a technical change and amended Subsec. (j) to replace “State Fire Marshal” with “Commissioner of Emergency Services and Public Protection” and “commissioner”.

See Sec. 29-355 re appeals from orders relating to explosives, blasting agents and gunpowder.

Annotations to former section 29-89:

History and purpose of statute. 77 C. 121. Mere possession of explosives not a nuisance per se; failure to keep explosives under observation or locked up is negligence per se. 124 C. 371. Jury could reasonably find that defendant through her husband as agent violated statute. 130 C. 330. Cited. 199 C. 591.

Only the state police may regulate the handling of explosives; the court may not issue an injunction restraining their use. 16 CS 21.


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