South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Japan website targets noisy people

Gripes collected and grievances put on interactiv­e map

- The New York Times

By Tiffany May and Hisako Ueno

Noisy children skateboard­ing on the streets. Couples arguing in their homes. People gathered on the sidewalk, gossiping for long hours. Some people would describe these activities as noise pollution. A new website in Japan has put perpetrato­rs on a map, spurring debate about those who disturb the peace.

The website, DQN Today, describes itself as a crowdsourc­ed guide to help house hunters avoid neighborho­ods inhabited by “stupid parents who let their children play on roads and parking lots.” It is populated by maps visualizin­g the dorozoku, or “road tribe,” a term that applies to people who block the way or wreak havoc in public.

Residents who find noise unbearable have found an outlet in the website, which collects anonymous gripes about neighbors and pins every grievance on an interactiv­e map, creating an elaborate record of the irritating sounds and sights of Japan.

Noise complaints have increased in the capital, Tokyo, with police logging a 30% increase between March and April last year. That’s when the government shut schools and advised residents to work remotely because of the coronaviru­s, causing some to become all too aware of homebound sounds they had paid little attention to before.

Outside, even though some play areas have been cordoned off during Japan’s state of emergency, most parks have remained open — and crowded.

The creator of the website initially responded to emailed questions Wednesday about the site but declined to give his full name. He said that the map was a less-than-subtle hint for residents — they know who they are, even though they are never named — and for government officials, who he hoped would pay attention. The creator, who describes himself as a freelance web developer, later stopped responding to emails.

The site started in 2016 and initially had a few hundred users. Since then, it has grown exponentia­lly as it has stirred debate, especially over what experts say appears to be society’s growing intoleranc­e for the sounds of children at play.

While many on social media have lauded the website for shedding light on the problem of noise, some parents find its approach troubling and fear a growing divide between families with children and neighbors who cannot stand them. Among the 6,000 wide-ranging complaints, which cover subjects like parking violations, excessive swearing or stray cats, are many entries that single out areas frequented by unsupervis­ed children.

Saori Hiramoto, 35, an activist who successful­ly lobbied the Tokyo Metropolit­an government to allow strollers in crowded trains in 2019, said that the map demonstrat­ed a breakdown in communicat­ion and the fracturing of a society that was once interdepen­dent.

“I really feel it’s so tough to raise kids,” she said, “People say parents should be responsibl­e for child care, but it’s very difficult, especially for single parents. We’ve come to our limits.

“I think that the society or community should watch and raise kids as members in society,” she added.

Akihiko Watanabe, a professor in the Faculty of Education of Shiga University, near Kyoto, said in an interview Wednesday that the map had the potential to harm children and teenagers by exposing places where they hang out unsupervis­ed. But some parents become defensive over complaints about their children, making it difficult for others to approach them with concerns, he said.

“In the past, parents apologized and discipline their kids,” he said. “But now parents get hostile against people who scold.”

At least 1,500 new users registered to use the map between March and April last year. One complaint reads: The gatherings “are terribly loquacious and noisy. I glared for a long time but they didn’t stop. Children are also left unattended and make strange noises.”

Another says, “Three or four children gather and play loudly during holidays, and a high-pitched voice echoes in the neighborho­od.”

“I forgot that this was a road,” another user wrote about a stretch of asphalt frequented by skateboard­ing preteenage­rs.

The dorozoku website is not the first digital map to draw controvers­y over what it details. Oshimaland logs “stigmatize­d properties” in Japan and around the world, where murders, suicides and fires have taken place. Recently, new users of the dorozoku map have tried to log public nuisance complaints in Taiwan, Portugal, Germany and Britain, but postings are limited to Japan for legal reasons.

The mapping site does not permit comments directly targeting private residences or schools, but it does allow references to unattended children playing on nearby roads, noting that it was ultimately the responsibi­lity of parents and schools to supervise children at all times.

Experts see a growing intoleranc­e toward children at play as some in the country’s aging population become less familiar with the sounds of small children. Over the years, residents in various districts have campaigned against the constructi­on of nursery schools, even as parents have called for more affordable day care options and economists are worried that people in Japan, which has the oldest population, aren’t having enough babies. Kobe residents sued a nursery school in 2016 over playground cacophony, but the case was dismissed in 2017.

Public parks are plastered with signs prohibitin­g all sorts of activities in response to nuisance complaints from residents. The Nishi-Ikebukuro Park in Toshima ward in Tokyo, has drawn attention for its bans on 45 different activities, such as skateboard­ing, jumping rope and soccer. A local official said the bans stemmed from a decade’s worth of complaints.

Ko Fujii, founder and chief executive of public affairs agency Makaira and a visiting professor at Tama University’s Center for Rule-making Strategies in Tokyo, noted incidents in recent years in which disgruntle­d commuters harassed mothers who carried babies on public transporta­tion.

The father of two young children, Fujii said that he had plastered a sticker bearing the slogan “We love babies, it’s OK to cry,” in order to show support to fellow parents.

“I think some people are purely just so frustrated with city life that they can become this insidious,” he said.

Japan has seen no shortage of noise disputes between neighbors. A 38-year-old constructi­on worker was stabbed to death at his parents’ apartment in Tokyo in May by a 60-yearold resident of the building, who told police he “could not stand the loud footsteps and voices.”

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 ??  ?? A website in Japan describes itself as a guide to help house hunters avoid neighborho­ods inhabited by“stupid parents who let their children play on roads and parking lots.”Above, children play in a park in Tokyo.
A website in Japan describes itself as a guide to help house hunters avoid neighborho­ods inhabited by“stupid parents who let their children play on roads and parking lots.”Above, children play in a park in Tokyo.
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