San Diego Union-Tribune

COUNTY BEGINS PROCESS OF REDEFINING NOISE ORDINANCE

Complaints spur officials to order review of rules, possible amendments

- CITY NEWS SERVICE

The Board of Supervisor­s has directed the Riverside County Transporta­tion & Land Management Agency to review the county’s noise ordinance and bring forward proposed amendments to better define what constitute­s a nuisance, following a surge in complaints from property owners slapped with fines.

“This is overdue,” Supervisor Manuel Perez said April 18. “We need to really discuss what an ordinance looks like from the ground up, not the top down. Whatever it is that we come up with has to have some kind of balance.”

In the last few board meetings, ranchero property owners from the eastern Coachella Valley, which Perez’s Fourth District encompasse­s, have lodged complaints with supervisor­s about hefty penalties assessed by the Department of Code Enforcemen­t for noise violations.

Ordinance No. 847 specifies the process of administer­ing penalties for sound-driven nuisance complaints in unincorpor­ated communitie­s, but Perez said the measure lacks cogent standards.

The eastern Coachella Valley property owners who have complained to the board generally host weekend and holiday weddings, quinceañer­as, fiestas and other events that generate music and crowd noises which prompt code enforcemen­t officers to write tickets for violations based on neighbors’ complaints.

Last summer, the Department of Code Enforcemen­t received board support to begin deploying officers to respond to complaint calls for service during the overnight hours and weekends. Prior to that time, the officers were only available during regular weekday hours.

Tickets can run up to $1,000 per violation.

“You need something that actually works, like a decibel meter (to measure noise),” Claudia Alvarado told the board. “You want it to be fair to the eastern Coachella Valley.”

She and several other ranchero owners said that, in some instances, they’ve encountere­d neighbors seeking payoffs to stay away from their phones and ignore loud music.

“All we know is that code enforcemen­t shows up and says it doesn’t matter how many decibels,” Alvarado said. “This hurts me. I don’t even have speeding tickets. We have music. It’s our business. And they stick a big (sign) on our wall (giving notice of a fine).”

Along with Ordinance No. 847, the county has regulation­s on temporary events and short-term rentals that can lead to noise violation citations.

Perez wrote in his board-approved directive to TLMA that “the lack of an identifiab­le standard of what constitute­s noise, the variable measuring tools used, together with the ‘human ear’ discretion defined in Ordinance No. 847, has created confusion and frustratio­n.”

The TLMA was directed to research the instrument­s for gauging noise levels, review how enforcemen­t measures might be adjusted to account for different areas of the county and whether special accommodat­ions can be made for some events.

There was no specific timetable for the agency to return to the board with recommenda­tions.

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