Nadine Ramsey is
reintroducing the noise ordinance.
As written, Ramsey's ordinance leaves enforcement under the New Orlean
Health Department and New Orleans Police Department (rather than hand it
over completely to the health department, which Palmer had proposed).
Both departments would be responsible for noise monitoring, reviewing
permits and handing out violations.
Ramsey's ordinance also does not remove the current law's curfew in
place for street musicians, which Palmer and others called
unconstitutional, as it is not equally applied to all people making
noise after a certain time. Last year, City Attorney Sharonda Williams
said that the city cannot and will not enforce the curfew — though it
still remains on the books, along with the rest of the 60-year-old noise
ordinance.
As The New Orleans Advocate's Jeff Adelson reported earlier this year,
the city hired a new sound specialist following outgoing consultant
David Woolworth, who wrote an extensive report with recommendations to
the City Council and had suggested its rules and sound limits were too
restrictive and difficult to enforce. The new consultant, Monica Hammer,
has a background in noise pollution and its impacts on public health
(compared to Woolworth's background in music) and is working with the
city's health department to "inform residents about the health effects
of noise and ways they can protect themselves" along with training and
department procedures in accordance with the current laws and
forthcoming noise ordinance.
The change in consultants was concerning although it doesn't have to mean anything. And, if you read the rest of that
Gambit article, you'll see that the mayor's office and MACCNO oppose the curfew and favor taking NOPD out of the enforcement picture. So the ordinance Ramsey introduced this week will look different from whatever is eventually passed, whenever that happens. She even says as much here.
"I am introducing this instrument for the purpose of initiating a
thorough public debate on this important issue in my district," Ramsey
wrote in a statement to Gambit. "With a couple of important
exceptions, the ordinance introduced yesterday, like the ordinance
considered in April of last year by my predecessor, only affects the
Vieux Carre Entertainment (VCE) and Vieux Carre Entertainment-1 (VCE-1)
zoning districts. I am not necessarily committed to everything being
proposed by this ordinance and intend to ensure that this issue is fully
and publicly vetted by all interested parties."
The word choice is cute, though. Did she do that on purpose?
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