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The sale of fireworks would be used to help fund trauma care in Georgia, according to two measures passed Wednesday by the state Senate.

Senate Resolution 558 proposes to add that requirement to the Georgia Constitution, essentially guaranteeing a revenue source for trauma care across the state if voters approve the idea in November.

The bipartisan measure won a two-thirds majority in the Senate for approval but, because it proposes to change the state constitution, it must do the same in the House before it could be placed on the ballot for voters to have the final say.

Senate Bill 350 would be the nuts and bolts of how to dish out the money from SR 558. It would dedicate an existing 5 percent sales tax on fireworks to go toward the state's trauma care network, training and equipment for Georgia firefighters, and local governments where the fireworks are sold to be used for public safety purposes.

Passing on a 52-2 vote, SB 350 now also goes to the state House for consideration but only needs a simple majority for approval.

Senate Rules Chairman Jeff Mullis, R-Chickamauga, sponsored both measures and has long backed the idea of using fireworks sales to boost funding toward trauma care and firefighter services.

Georgia for the first time last year legalized the sale of fireworks, although some changes are in the works to those rules.

A separate measure that has not yet received a vote, Senate Bill 369, would put more limits on when and where Georgians could ignite fireworks because some residents got a little too enthusiastic last year and local officials complained.