Cape Argus

New Orleans takes steps to turn down volume

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IN NEW Orleans, a city synonymous with music and raucous revelry, government officials are launching a public health campaign aimed at turning down the volume.

The city last week announced the start of “Sound Check”, the latest attempt to address residents’ complaints about excessive noise and 60-year-old sound standards city attorneys say are unenforcea­ble.

Health inspectors will monitor decibel levels in the French Quarter and trendy Faubourg Marigny neighbourh­ood, where noise has long been an issue of contention between residents and music venues that operate close to homes.

The new initiative will focus initially on educating musicians and club owners about the negative health effects of loud music, such as harm to hearing, rather than enforcemen­t, the city said.

It’s an approach similar to the drive that preceded the successful passage of a city-wide indoor smoking ban this year, despite opposition from bar and casino interests.

Ethan Ellestad, spokesman for a coalition of venue owners and artists, was cautiously optimistic about the plan.

He said striking the right balance in the governance of sound levels was fundamenta­l to preserving the city’s status as one of the world’s musical centres.

His group protested against a move to revamp the city’s noise ordinance last year because it would have reduced existing decibel limits city-wide.

“If you make 80 decibels the limit in the French Quarter, you’re never going to realistica­lly have a brass band that can perform,” Ellestad said.

Owners are keen to get the issue resolved. Residents frustrated by the city’s lax enforcemen­t of its noise ordinance have resorted to filing lawsuits against music venues, causing some to drop live entertainm­ent, Ellestad said.

“New Orleans is a city where the buildings are very close together, and in the Jazz Age, (music venues) didn’t have the amplificat­ion they have today,” she said. – Reuters

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