The Village Board finds that unreasonable noises,
as that term is defined herein, degrade the environment of the Village
to a degree which is harmful and detrimental to the public health,
safety and welfare of its inhabitants. Such noises interfere with
the comfortable enjoyment of life, property and recreation and with
the conduct and operation of business and industry. No one has the
right to create unreasonable noises, as defined herein. Effective
control and elimination of unreasonable noises is essential to the
furtherance of the public health, safety and welfare of the Village's
inhabitants and to the conduct of the normal pursuits of life, recreation,
commerce and industrial activity.
For the purpose of this chapter, the terms used
herein are defined as follows:
AMBIENT NOISE
The all-encompassing noise associated with a given environment,
being usually a composite of sounds.
AUTHORIZED EMERGENCY VEHICLE
Any ambulance or vehicle operated by a police department,
chief or assistant police chief, fire department, fire patrol, chief
or assistant fire chief when engaged in the performance of duty.
CONSTRUCTION
Any or all activity necessary or incidental to the erection,
demolition, assembling, altering, installing or equipping of buildings,
public or private highways, roads, premises, parks, utility lines,
including such lines in already constructed property, including land
clearing, grading, excavating and filling.
CONSTRUCTION DEVICE
Any device designed and intended for use in construction,
including, but not limited to, any air compressor, pile driver, bulldozer,
pneumatic hammer, steam shovel, derrick, crane, steam or electric
hoist.
CONSTRUCTION MATERIAL
Any material, regardless of composition or design, and customarily
used in construction, including, but not limited to, any rails, pillars,
columns, beams, bricks, flooring, wall, ceiling or roofing material,
gravel, sand, cement or asphalt.
DECIBEL
A standard unit of acoustic measurement having a zero-reference
of 0.0002 microbar.
NOISE-RATING NUMBER
The criteria established in the noise rating curves of the
International Standards Organization.
OCTAVE BAND
The range of sound frequencies divided into octaves in order
to classify sound according to pitch.
PERSON
Any individual, partnership, company, corporation, association,
firm, organization, government agency, administration or department,
or any other group of individuals, or any officer or employee thereof.
PUBLIC RIGHT-OF-WAY
Any street, sidewalk or alley or similar place which is owned,
controlled or leased by the Village.
PUBLIC SPACE
Any real property or structure thereon which is owned, controlled
or leased by the Village.
SOUND
An oscillation in pressure, stress, particle displacement,
particle velocity, etc., in a medium with internal forces, or the
superposition of such propagated oscillation which evokes an auditory
sensation.
SOUND LEVEL METER
An instrument, including a microphone, amplifier, an output
meter, and frequency weighting networks for the measurement of noise
and sound levels in a specific manner and which complies with standards
established by the American National Standards Institute.
VILLAGE
The Village of Woodbury, Orange County, New York.
It shall be unlawful for any person to make, continue, cause to be made or permit to be made any unreasonable noise within the Village of Woodbury. The determination as to the existence of unreasonable noise may be established by the specific acts considered to be unreasonable noise enumerated within §
208-4 or by the measurements exceeding the limitation set forth in §
208-5.
Anyone who believes this chapter has been violated
may contact the Building Department, Code Enforcement Officer, the
Town of Woodbury Police Department or any other official designated
by the Village Board to institute an appropriate action in the Town
of Woodbury Justice Court for the enforcement of this chapter and
to request appropriate penalties for any alleged violation of the
same.
Any person violating any provision of this chapter
shall be deemed guilty of an offense and, upon conviction thereof,
shall be fined not less than $50 nor more than $500 for each first
offense. Repeated violations shall be fined not less than $100 nor
more than $5,000 or may be imprisoned for not more than 30 days, or
both, for each subsequent offense.