It is the policy of the City of Paterson to prevent excessive
sound, which may jeopardize the health, welfare or safety of its citizens
or degrade the quality of life.
This chapter shall apply to the control of sound originating
from sources within the City of Paterson.
The following words and terms, when used in this chapter, shall
have the following meanings, unless the context clearly indicates
otherwise. Terms not defined in this chapter have the same meaning
as those defined in N.J.A.C. 7:29.
COMMERCIAL FACILITY
Any premises, property or facility involving traffic in goods
or furnishing of services for sale or profit, including but not limited
to:
A.
Banking and other financial institutions;
C.
Establishments for providing retail services;
D.
Establishments for providing wholesale services;
E.
Establishments for recreation and entertainment;
I.
Establishments providing living accommodations which exceed
six dwelling units, including, but not limited to, apartments, co-ops,
hotels, motels, and dormitories, when they are the source of the sound
that is being investigated and the source of sound is a heating, air-conditioning,
pool filter unit or system, or outdoor amplified sound system.
COMMUNITY SERVICE FACILITY
Any nonresidential facility used to provide service to the
public, including but not limited to:
A.
Club meeting halls, offices and facilities;
B.
Organization offices and facilities;
C.
Facilities for the support and practice of religion;
D.
Private and parochial schools;
F.
Offices and buildings of agencies or instrumentalities of government;
and
G.
Maintenance centers (such as Department of Public Works facilities).
CONSTRUCTION
Any site preparation, assembly, erection, repair, alteration,
or similar action of buildings or structures.
CONTINUOUS AIRBORNE SOUND
Sound that is measured by the slow response setting of a
sound-level meter in accordance with the provisions of N.J.A.C. 7:29-2,
and which lasts one second or longer. Impulsive sounds that are rapidly
repetitive and have a duration of one second or longer shall be measured
as continuous airborne sound.
dBA
The abbreviation designating the unit of sound level as measured
by a sound-level meter using the A-weighting.
DECIBEL (dB)
The practical unit of measurement for sound pressure level;
the number of decibels of a measured sound is equal to 20 times the
logarithm to the base 10 of the ratio of the sound pressure of the
measured sound to the sound pressure of a standard sound (20 micropascals);
abbreviated "dB."
DEMOLITION
Any dismantling, destruction or removal of buildings, structures,
or roadways.
DEPARTMENT
The New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection.
EMERGENCY WORK
Any work or action necessary at the site of an emergency
to restore or deliver essential services, including, but not limited
to, repairing water, gas, electricity, telephone, sewer facilities,
or public transportation facilities, removing fallen trees on public
rights-of-way, dredging navigational waterways, or abating life-threatening
conditions or a state of emergency declared by a governing agency.
FREQUENCY
The number of sound pressure oscillations per second expressed
in hertz; abbreviated "Hz."
IMPULSIVE SOUND
Either a single pressure peak or a single burst (multiple
pressure peaks) that has a duration of less than one second.
INDUSTRIAL FACILITY
Any facility, whether public or private, and its related
premises, property, or equipment involving:
A.
The fabrication, manufacture, or production of durable or nondurable
goods; or
B.
Industrial-like activities, including, but not limited to:
(4)
Water and sewage treatment; and
MINOR VIOLATION
A violation that is not the result of the purposeful, reckless
or criminally negligent conduct of the alleged violator; and/or the
activity or condition constituting the violation has not been the
subject of an enforcement action by any authorized local, county or
state enforcement agency against the violator within the immediately
preceding 12 months for the same or substantially similar violation.
MOTOR VEHICLE
Any vehicle that is propelled other than by human or animal
power on land.
MUFFLER
A properly functioning sound dissipative device or system
for abating the sound on engines or equipment where such device is
part of the normal configuration of the equipment.
MULTI-DWELLING-UNIT BUILDING
Any building comprising two or more dwelling units, including,
but not limited to, apartments, condominiums, co-ops, multiple-family
houses, townhouses, and attached residences.
MULTI-USE PROPERTY
Any distinct parcel of land that is used for more than one
category of activity. Examples include, but are not limited to:
A.
A commercial, residential, industrial or public service property
having boilers, incinerators, elevators, automatic garage doors, air
conditioners, laundry rooms, utility provisions, or health and recreational
facilities, or other similar devices or areas, either in the interior
or on the exterior of the building, which may be a source of elevated
sound levels at another category on the same distinct parcel of land;
or
B.
A building, which is both commercial (usually on the ground
floor) and residential property, located above, below or otherwise
adjacent to.
NOISE CONTROL INVESTIGATOR (NCI)
An employee of a municipality, county or regional health
commission that has a Department-approved model noise control ordinance,
and the employee has not received noise enforcement training as specified
by the Department in N.J.A.C. 7:29. However, they are knowledgeable
about their model noise ordinance and enforcement procedures. A Noise
Control Investigator may only enforce sections of the ordinance that
do not require the use of a sound-level meter. The employee must be
acting within his or her designated jurisdiction and must be authorized
to issue a summons.
NOISE CONTROL OFFICER (NCO)
An employee of a local, county or regional health agency
which is certified pursuant to the County Environmental Health Act
(N.J.S.A. 26:3A2-21 et seq.) to perform noise enforcement activities
or an employee of a municipality with a Department-approved model
noise control ordinance. All NCOs must receive noise enforcement training
as specified by the Department in N.J.A.C. 7:29 and must be currently
certified in noise enforcement. The employee must be acting within
his or her designated jurisdiction and must be authorized to issue
a summons.
PERSON
Any individual, public or private corporation, political
subdivision, governmental agency, department or bureau of the state,
municipality, industry, or association, including condominium or co-op
associations, limited liability corporations, and partnerships and
limited liability partnerships.
PLAINLY AUDIBLE
Any sound that can be detected by an NCO or an NCI using
his or her unaided hearing faculties of normal acuity. As an example,
if the sound source under investigation is a portable or vehicular
sound amplification or reproduction device, the detection of the rhythmic
bass component of the music is sufficient to verify plainly audible
sound. The NCO or NCI need not determine the title, specific words,
or the artist performing the song.
PRIVATE RIGHT-OF-WAY
Any street, avenue, boulevard, road, highway, sidewalk, alley
or easement that is owned, leased, or controlled by a nongovernmental
entity.
PUBLIC RIGHT-OF-WAY
Any street, avenue, boulevard, road, highway, sidewalk, alley
or similar place that is owned or controlled by a governmental entity.
PUBLIC SPACE
Any real property or structure thereon which is owned, leased
or controlled by a governmental entity.
REAL PROPERTY LINE
Either a) the vertical boundary that separates one parcel
of property (i.e., lot and block) from another residential or commercial
property; b) the vertical and horizontal boundaries of a dwelling
unit that is part of a multidwelling unit building; or c) on a multi-use
property as defined herein, the vertical or horizontal boundaries
between the two portions of the property on which different categories
of activity are being performed (e.g., if the multi-use property is
a building which is residential upstairs and commercial downstairs,
then the real property line would be the interface between the residential
area and the commercial area, or if there is an outdoor sound source
such as an HVAC unit on the same parcel of property, the boundary
line is the exterior wall of the receiving unit). Note: This definition
shall not apply to a commercial source and a commercial receptor which
are both located on the same parcel of property (e.g., a strip mall).
RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY
Property used for human habitation, unless the habitation
is a condition of employment, including but not limited to:
A.
Private property used for human habitation;
B.
Commercial living accommodations and commercial property used
for human habitation;
C.
Recreational and entertainment property used for human habitation;
D.
Community service property used for human habitation.
SOUND PRODUCTION DEVICE
Any device whose primary function is the production of sound,
including, but not limited to, any musical instrument, loudspeaker,
radio, television, digital or analog music player, public address
system or sound-amplifying equipment.
SOUND REDUCTION DEVICE
Any device, such as a muffler, baffle, shroud, jacket, enclosure,
isolator, or dampener provided by the manufacturer with the equipment,
or that is otherwise required, that mitigates the sound emissions
of the equipment.
SOUND-LEVEL METER
An instrument for the measurement of sound levels as specified
in N.J.A.C. 7:29-2.6(a)1, which provisions are incorporated herein
by reference.
STATIONARY EMERGENCY SIGNALING DEVICE
Any device, excluding those attached to motor vehicles, used
to alert local persons engaged in local emergency operations. These
include, but are not limited to, firefighters, first aid squad members
and law enforcement officers, whether paid or volunteer.
WEEKDAY
Any day that is not a federal holiday, and beginning on Monday
at 7:00 a.m. and ending on the following Friday at 6:00 p.m.
WEEKENDS
Beginning on Friday at 6:00 p.m. and ending on the following
Monday at 7:00 a.m.
[Amended 3-10-2020 by Ord. No. 20-013]
A. Except as provided in §§
337-10 and
337-11 below, the provisions of this chapter shall not apply to the exceptions listed at N.J.A.C. 7:29-1.5. These exemptions are set forth below:
(2) Bells, chimes or carillons, which may include electronic devices
that imitate the sounds of bells, chimes or carillons, while being
used in conjunction with religious services;
(3) Emergency energy release devices;
(4) When public health or safety is involved, emergency work to provide
electricity, water, or other public utilities; to conduct emergency
construction or demolition work; to make emergency repairs to public
roadways or bridges; to address emergency incidents such as the cleanup
of spills of hazardous materials; or upon written approval of the
authorized enforcement agency, to utilize sound-producing devices
to relocate wildlife;
(5) Motor vehicle racetrack facilities engaged in the racing of motor
vehicles;
(6) National Warning System (NAWAS): Systems used to warn the community
of attack or imminent public danger such as flooding or explosion.
These systems are controlled by the New Jersey Department of Law and
Public Safety;
(7) Noise of aircraft flight operations;
(8) Public celebrations that are government-sponsored or government-permitted
events;
(10)
Surface carriers engaged in commerce by railroad when the noise
sources in question are trains in motion, operating retarders, train
horns and whistles, or performing locomotive load test cell stands;
(11)
The unamplified human voice;
(12)
Use of explosive devices: These are regulated by the New Jersey
Department of Labor and Workforce Development under the 1960 Explosive
Act (N.J.S.A. 21:1A-1 to 21:1A-21);
(13)
Normal operation of a handgun, rifle, shotgun, skeetshooting
or trapshooting range which has been maintained continuously in the
same location since January 24, 1972; or
(14)
Emergency electricity generators at an industrial, commercial,
or community service facility in use during an electrical outage.
B. Sound production devices required or sanctioned under the Americans
with Disabilities Act (ADA), FEMA or other government agencies to
the extent that they comply with the noise requirement of the enabling
legislation or regulation. Devices which are exempted under N.J.A.C.
7:29-1.5 shall continue to be exempted.
C. Construction and demolition activities are exempt from the sound level limits set forth in Tables I, II and III except as provided for in §
337-10 below.
No person shall cause, suffer, allow, or permit the operation of any sound production device in such a manner that the sound crosses a property line and raises the total sound levels above the neighborhood residual sound level by more than the permissible sound level limits set forth in Table IV when measured within the residence of a complainant according to the measurement protocol in §
337-7B of this chapter. These sound level measurements shall be conducted with the sound level meter set for "C" weighting, "fast" response.
Table IV
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Maximum Permissible Increase in Total Sound Levels Within
a Residential Property
|
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Weeknights 10:00 p.m. to 8:00 a.m.
Weekend nights 11:00 p.m. to 9:00 a.m.
|
All Other Times
|
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3 dB (C)
|
6 dB(C)
|
The following standards shall apply to the activities or sources
of sound set forth below:
A. Excluding emergency work, power tools, home maintenance tools, landscaping
and/or yard maintenance equipment used by a residential property owner
or tenant shall not be operated between the hours of 8:00 p.m. and
8:00 a.m., unless such activities can meet the applicable limits set
forth in Tables I, II or III. At all other times, the limits set forth
in Tables I, II or III do not apply. All motorized equipment used
in these activities shall be operated with a muffler and/or sound
reduction device.
B. Excluding emergency work, power tools, landscaping and/or yard maintenance
equipment used by nonresidential operators (e.g., commercial operators,
public employees) shall not be operated on residential, commercial,
industrial or public (e.g., golf course, parks, athletic fields) property
between the hours of 6:00 p.m. and 8:00 a.m. on weekdays, or between
the hours of 6:00 p.m. and 9:00 a.m. on weekends or federal holidays,
unless such activities can meet the limits set forth in Tables I,
II or III. At all other times, the limits set forth in Tables I, II
or III do not apply. All motorized equipment used in these activities
shall be operated with a muffler and/or sound reduction device.
C. All construction and demolition activity, excluding emergency work,
shall not be performed between the hours of 6:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m.
on weekdays, or between the hours of 6:00 p.m. and 9:00 a.m. on weekends
and federal holidays, unless such activities can meet the limits set
forth in Tables I, II or III. At all other times, the limits set forth
in Tables I, II or III do not apply. All motorized equipment used
in construction and demolition activity shall be operated with a muffler
and/or sound reduction device.
D. Motorized snow removal equipment shall be operated with a muffler
and/or a sound reduction device when being used for snow removal.
At all other times, the limits set forth in Tables I, II or III do
not apply.
E. All interior and exterior burglar alarms of a building or motor vehicle
must be activated in such a manner that the burglar alarm terminates
its operation within five minutes for continuous airborne sound and
15 minutes for intermittent sound after it has been activated. At
all other times, the limits set forth in Tables I, II or III do not
apply.
F. Self-contained, portable, nonvehicular music or sound production
devices shall not be operated on a public space or public right-of-way
in such a manner as to be plainly audible at a distance of 50 feet
in any direction from the operator between the hours of 8:00 a.m.
and 10:00 p.m. Between the hours of 10:00 p.m. and 8:00 a.m., sound,
operated on a public space or public right-of-way, from such equipment
shall not be plainly audible at a distance of 25 feet in any direction
from the operator.
G. Animal noise.
(1) It shall be unlawful for any property owner or tenant to allow any
domesticated or caged animal to create a sound across a real property
line which unreasonably disturbs or interferes with the peace, comfort,
and repose of any resident, or to refuse or intentionally fail to
cease the unreasonable noise when ordered to do so by a Noise Control
Officer or Noise Control Investigator. Prima facie evidence of a violation
of this section shall include but not be limited to:
(a)
Vocalizing (howling, yelping, barking, squawking, etc.) for
five minutes without interruption, defined as an average of four or
more vocalizations per minute in that period; or
(b)
Vocalizing for 20 minutes intermittently, defined as an average
of two vocalizations or more per minute in that period.
(2) It is an affirmative defense under this subsection that the dog or
other animal was intentionally provoked to bark or make any other
noise.
Violations of each subsection of this section shall be considered
purposeful and therefore non-minor.
A. No person shall remove or render inoperative, or cause to be removed
or rendered inoperative or less effective than originally equipped,
other than for the purposes of maintenance, repair, or replacement,
any device or element of design incorporated in any motor vehicle
for the purpose of noise control. No person shall operate a motor
vehicle or motorcycle which has been so modified. A vehicle not meeting
these requirements shall be deemed in violation of this provision
if it is operated stationary or in motion in any public space or public
right-of-way.
B. No motorcycle shall be operated stationary or in motion unless it
has a muffler that complies with and is labeled in accordance with
the federal noise regulations under 40 CFR Part 205.
C. Personal or commercial vehicular music amplification or reproduction
equipment shall not be operated in such a manner that it is plainly
audible at distance of 25 feet in any direction from the operator
between the hours of 10:00 p.m. and 8:00 a.m.
D. Personal or commercial vehicular music amplification or reproduction
equipment shall not be operated in such a manner that is plainly audible
at a distance of 50 feet in any direction from the operator between
the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 10:00 p.m.