Ottawa Citizen

Toronto anti-noise blitz yields few results

BYLAW CHANGES

- COLIN PERKEL

TORONTO • A crackdown on excessive vehicle noise announced by Toronto’s mayor and police in July appears to have done little beyond nabbing scores of motorists in too much of a hurry.

The downtown blitz aimed at muffling the worst offenders resulted in 95 tickets, almost all for speed, police said.

“Noise from vehicles was not observed much by the involved officers,” said Sgt. Brett Moore, with traffic services.

One problem, he said, is the lack of an objective standard for measuring when vehicles are too loud.

“An offence is committed when a police officer is able to articulate how a vehicle’s tires, motor or exhaust was unreasonab­le,” Moore said. “The Highway Traffic Act does not provide a quantitati­ve measuremen­t for excessive noise.”

The aim of the campaign that ran July 15-19 was both to curb, and raise awareness of, noise pollution from cars and motorcycle­s whose deafening roars are not only annoying, but, according to science, potentiall­y harmful. Mayor John Tory and police held an outdoor news conference in the tony Yorkville neighbourh­ood to announce the campaign.

“My wife has explained this many times to me as being simply an outcroppin­g of the inadequaci­es that certain people feel — mostly men — who drive these cars around,” Tory quipped at the time, adding that such “inconsider­ate conduct” had no place in the city and was “indefensib­le.”

Rod Jones, the city’s director of bylaw enforcemen­t, said the July announceme­nt was also designed to draw attention to bylaw changes that take effect on Oct. 1.

Among other things, the new bylaw will prohibit anyone from making “unnecessar­y motor vehicle noise.” Examples given are sounding a horn, revving an engine, or squealing tires, although first-responder sirens are exempt.

However, the only objective sound standard in the new bylaw applies to motorcycle­s, which will be prohibited from noise levels exceeding 92 dB(A) — a weighted measure of loudness — at 50 centimetre­s from the exhaust during idling.

The city is also setting up a dedicated noise team comprising 24 enforcemen­t officers with more powers to issue compliance orders. Fines will rise to a maximum of $100,000 and directors and officers of a corporatio­n can be held liable. Sound engineerin­g experts are also helping develop “technical investigat­ive techniques,” the city said.

The number of noise complaints in Toronto reached 12,974 last year, up from 11,297 in 2015, according to city figures. Police issued 600 tickets last year to drivers for loud mufflers and causing unnecessar­y noise.

According to the World Health Organizati­on, noise goes beyond irritation and can cause a number of shortand long-term health problems, such as damaged hearing.

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