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Submitted by rosscowman on Wed, 04/30/2008 - 9:17am.

I highly recommend this article to folks interested in the current noise ordinance issue:

Nobody could have imagined that seven days of intense public debate over the city's proposed new noise ordinance would end in five minutes of silence.

And yet it was pin-drop quiet at last Wednesday's public forum on said noise ordinance, when Assistant Police Chief James Fealy used his closing comments to announce that the city wouldn't be moving forward with what he admitted was a "half-baked" proposal.

"We need to slow it down and back it up," Fealy told a standing-room-only crowd of club owners and local music industry players, who had just spent an hour outlining for APD representatives how the ordinance would destroy their livelihoods. Had Fealy begun the meeting with that announcement, those same concert promoters could have shifted their stance from fear and unbridled anger to hope and talk of compromise 55 minutes earlier.

Austin Chronicle - Keeping the Peace

»

wow, real journalism!

thanks for pointing out this oh-so relevant article. The fact that the Chronicle actually presented ALL sides of the on-oing debate is pretty amazing...

Two points really stuck out, though:

(1) the local police and government actually listened to their constituents, both residental and commerical interests, and chose to seek a common solution by consistuting a task force with all sides represented.

(2) the local music scene was up in arms about changing the current 85 db level max. to 75 db (daytime), 70 db nighttime). And we're actually, seriously considering 65 and 60db levels here?! This seems insane! Especially since 60 is, roughly, half of 70 (see the article for more about how db levels are exponential)

-Lucy

»

Hmm...

The interesting thing about the noise ordinance in Austin is that it is "measured at the boundary line of the business." Which is much stricter than the proposed ordinance here in Olympia. The proposed ordinance here would be measured at the property line of the complaining party, which is a huge difference. Thanks for the article. I would also suggest checking out the BellinghamHearld.com and searching for 'Noise Ordinance' They are working on a noise ordinance too.

But I am Just Another Voice

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