If an application to store any quantity of explosives to be accompanied by an affidavit in writing to the effect that no house used in part for the habitation of human beings, no church, school house, or building used as a place of public assembly, and no highway used for travel by the public is within a distance of one-half mile from the proposed location, or if an application for a permit to store not over one hundred thousand pounds of explosives be accompanied by an affidavit in writing to the effect that the proposed location is a magazine situated, constructed, operated and maintained in the manner described in Section
9.16.060, and located at a place not less than one-quarter of a mile distance from any house, used in whole or in part for the habitation of human beings, or from any church, school house or other public building or building used as a place of public assembly, or from any highway used for travel by the public, and separated from all such houses, churches, school houses, public buildings and building used as places of public assembly, and highways within two miles thereof by natural or artificial barriers formed by hills or embankments of earth sufficient in height and thickness to deflect the force of any explosion and prevent serious injury to any house, church, school house or other public building or building used as a place of public assembly or to persons in or about the same, or to persons traveling upon any such highway, in case of explosion of the whole quantity of explosives stored at such place, and the truth of the affidavit is verified by the commission, a report thereof shall be referred by the commission to the city council. Upon receiving such report, the city council shall issue, as of course, a permit to store the amount of explosives requested in the application in the magazine specified in the affidavit.
(Ord. 10, Sec. 6.2, 1964)