The Council of the Borough of Swoyersville, finding that excessive
levels of sound are detrimental to the physical, mental and social
well-being of the people, as well as to their comfort, living conditions,
general welfare and safety, and being therefore a public health and
welfare hazard, hereby declares it to be necessary to provide for
the greater control and more effective regulation of excessive sound
and the sources of excessive sound within the Borough of Swoyersville.
This chapter shall be known as the "Swoyersville Noise Control
Ordinance."
The following words, terms and phrases, when used in this chapter,
shall have the meaning ascribed to them in this section, except where
the context clearly indicates a different meaning. All terminology
used in this chapter not defined below shall be in conformance with
the applicable publications of the American National Standards Institute
[ANSI S1.1 - 1960 (R1971), and its revisions] or its successor body.
AMBIENT NOISE
The all-encompassing noise associated with a given environment,
being usually a composite of sounds from many sources near and far.
CONSTRUCTION OPERATION
The erection, repair, renovation, demolition or removal of
any building or structure and the excavation, filling, grading and
regulation of lots in connection therewith.
DECIBEL (dB)
A unit for measuring the sound-pressure level, equal to 20
times the logarithm to the base 10 of the ratio of the pressure of
the sound measured to the reference pressure, which is 20 micropascals
(20 micronewtons per square meter).
EMERGENCY
Any occurrence or set of circumstances involving actual or
imminent physical trauma or property damage.
EMERGENCY WORK
Any work performed for the purposes of preventing or alleviating
the physical trauma or property damage threatened or caused by an
emergency.
IMPULSIVE SOUND
Sound of short duration, usually less then one second, with
an abrupt onset and rapid decay. Examples of impulsive sound include
explosions, drop forge impacts and the discharge of firearms.
NOISE
Any sound which annoys or disturbs humans or which causes
or tends to cause an adverse psychological or physiological effect
on humans.
NOISE DISTURBANCE
Any sound which is in excess of the sound levels by zoning districts established in §
62A-5.
PERSON
Any individual, association, partnership or corporation,
and includes any officer, employee, department, agency or instrumentality
of a state or any political subdivision of a state. Whenever used
in any clause prescribing and imposing a penalty, "person" includes
the individual members, partners, officers and managers, or any of
them, of partnerships and associations, and as to corporations, the
officers and managers thereof or any of them.
POWERED MODEL VEHICLE
Any self-propelled airborne, waterborne or landborne plane,
vessel or vehicle which is not designed to carry persons, including,
but not limited to, any model airplane, boat, car or rocket.
PROPERTY LINE (BOUNDARY)
An imaginary line drawn through the points of contact of
adjoining lands, apartments, condominiums, townhouses and duplexes
owned, rented or leased by different persons, a demarcation or a line
of separation of properties, and also, for any two or more buildings
sharing common grounds, the line drawn midway between any two said
buildings. All areas devoted to public right-of-way shall be deemed
to be across the property line. For the purpose of this chapter, the
property line includes all points on a plane formed by projecting
the property line in a manner deemed appropriate by the enforcing
police officer.
PUBLIC RIGHT-OF-WAY
Any street, avenue, boulevard, highway, sidewalk, alley or
similar place which is owned or controlled by a governmental entity.
PUBLIC SPACE
Any real property or structures thereon which are owned or
controlled by a governmental entity, church or civic organization.
PURE TONE
Any sound which can be heard as a single pitch or a set of
single pitches. For the purpose of this chapter, a pure tone shall
exist if the 1/3 octave band sound pressure level in the band with
the tone exceeds the arithmetic average of the sound pressure levels
of the two contiguous octave bands by 5 dB for center frequencies
of 500 Hz and above, and by 8 dB for center frequencies between 160
and 400 Hz, and by 15 dB for center frequencies less than or equal
to 125 Hz.
REAL PROPERTY
All land, whether publicly or privately owned, whether improved
or not improved, with or without structures, exclusive of any areas
devoted to public right-of-way.
SOUND
An oscillation in pressure, particle displacement, particle
velocity or other physical parameter in a medium with internal forces
that causes compression and rarefaction of that medium. The description
of sound may include any characteristics of such sound, including
duration, intensity and frequency.
SOUND LEVEL
The weighted sound pressure level obtained by the use of
a sound-level meter and frequency weighting network, such as A, B
or C, as specified in American National Standards Institute specifications
for sound-level meters (ANSI S1.4-1974, or the latest revision thereof).
If the frequency weighting employed is not indicated, the A-weighting
shall apply.
SOUND LEVEL METER
An instrument which includes a microphone, amplifier, RMA
detector, integrator or time average, output meter, and any applicable
weighting network used to measure sound pressure levels which meets
or exceeds the requirement for a Type I or Type II sound-level meter
as specified in ANSI specification S1.4-1974. The manufacturer's
published indication of compliance with such specifications shall
be prima facie evidence of such compliance.
WEIGHTED SOUND LEVEL
The sound-pressure level in decibels as measured on a sound-level
meter using the A-weighted network. The level so read is designated
dB(A).
ZONING DISTRICTS
The land use districts established by Chapter
93, Zoning, of this Code, and all subsequent amendments.
The following sounds are exempted from the provisions of this
chapter:
A. Amplified announcement. Electronically-amplified announcements at
athletic events.
B. Blasting. Blasting, under permit by the Police Department. Such blasting
may occur only between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m., Monday
through Friday, unless specifically authorized by permit.
C. Concerts, etc. Band concerts, block parties, church carnivals, festivals
or other performances or similar activities, publicly or privately
sponsored and presented in any public space outdoors, shall be exempt
from the provisions of this chapter, provided:
(1) Such activities do not produce sound 15 dB(A) in excess of the sound levels set forth in Table 1 of §
62A-5A of this chapter.
(2) Such activities do not occur between the hours of 10:00 p.m. and
8:00 a.m.
D. Emergency work. Sounds caused by the performance of emergency work
or by the ordinary and accepted use of emergency apparatus and equipment.
E. Municipal and utility services. Sounds resulting from the repair
or replacement of any municipal or utility installation in or about
the public right-of-way.
F. School and public activities. Sounds not electronically-amplified,
created by organized school-related programs, activities, athletic
and entertainment events, or other public programs, activities or
events, other than motor vehicle racing events.
G. Warning devices. Sounds made by warning devises operating continuously
for three minutes or less, except in the event of an actual emergency,
the time limitation shall not apply.