Sundae Horn
Loud and Clear

People spoke; commissioners listened; noise ordinance will remain the same.

In a show of solidarity against a proposed amendment to the Ocracoke noise ordinance, over 50 Ocracoke residents attended the February 1st meeting of the Hyde County Board of Commissioners. 

An online petition against the proposed amendment had gathered 1500 signatures in a few days before the meeting. The island was making a noise about noise, and the coconut telegraph and social media were all abuzz. Suddenly, everyone had a decibel-reading app on their phone, and could spout statistics about the decibel readings of various ambient noises (air conditioners, lawn mowers, conversation, golf carts, child's play, raucous public meetings, etc.) The public was ready to speak out about and defend their noisy neighbors.

County manager Bill Rich opened the discussion last night by explaining that the noise ordinance became an agenda item because he had been asked, by local law enforcement, to come up with a measurable and enforceable way to deal with noise complaints. As the ordinance on the books reads now, the sheriff's deputies must make subjective decisions on any noise disturbances made between 10pm and 7am. (See complete ordinance below.) So, after much research and discussion, the county manager's office (Bill, and his assistant Will Doerfer) came up with the new proposed ordinance that created such a hullaballoo. 

"It's obvious that the [proposed amendment] is not favorable to the majority of people," Bill said, adding that he'd received "lots of communication" about it in calls and emails. 

Bill recommended throwing out the new, and keeping the status quo. "This [proposed amendment] won't get a motion, so it will die, and the ordinance will stay the same." He said that the sheriff and deputies agree it would be best to keep what we have. "We'll keep it civil," he said, referring to criminality not cordiality. The new ordinance would have made it a criminal offense to be too loud; as it is now, the county can fine people money, but not throw them in jail. 

Of the 50+ people in the room, a few had come to speak, so they contributed to the public comment segment of the noise ordinance discussion. Garick Kalna, Stephanie O'Neal, Fess Winstead, and Mickey Baker spoke in Ocracoke; Jon Lea, Ashley Harrell, Megan Spencer, and Jeremy Piland spoke in Swan Quarter. They cited ridiculously low decibel levels in the new ordinance, and economic hardships that enforcement would bring. No one spoke out in favor of changing the existing ordinance. Mickey Baker urged "everyone to respect everyone else."

After the people had made their case, the commissioners discussed it among themselves.

The loudest moment of the evening came when Commissioner Barry Swindell made a motion to repeal the noise ordinance in full, and leave Ocracoke with no noise ordinance at all. Commissioner John Fletcher seconded the motion to a huge round of applause from the crowd on Ocracoke.

Swindell explained that the ordinance will continue to cause confusion "unless we do away with it completely." He then favorably compared himself to Donald Trump, eliciting an objection from Fletcher, who pointed out that Swindell's hair was not at all Trump-like. 

Cooler, less trumpeting, heads prevailed.

"Let's leave something people can work with," said Commissioner Ben Simmons, who attended the meeting on Ocracoke in between basketball games (he came to see his son, a Mattamuskeet Laker, play against the Dolphins.) "I don't want to restrict what people can do on their property, but I'm afraid that if we do away with [the existing noise ordinance] entirely, we'd hear about it again."

Earl Pugh, who is the Board of Commissioners chair, said that the existing ordinance "has worked for the past fifteen years." He argued against throwing it out, saying that without an ordinance, chaos would ensue.

"Things will be so wide open, they'll be out of control," he said, adding that "there's nowhere else in North Carolina that doesn't have a noise ordinance. It would be irresponsible of us not to have one."

The motion to do away with the existing ordinance failed 3–2. 

Some discussion of law enforcement's role in the existing ordinance followed. It was reiterated that the sheriff's office will respond if they are called with a noise complaint. They'll ask people to pipe down. They can even issue fines. They give out permits for special events. 

With no new motions made, the noisy part of the meeting was over, leaving the status quo as the status quo. The crowd, who minutes ago had been cheering on the demise of any noise ordinance, seemed satisfied to leave it as it is. 

At that point, the meeting quieted down considerably. Only nineteen people were left after the majority filed out, and not all of those made it to the end.

As one commissioners' meeting regular observed at the beginning, "If we had this many people turn out for every meeting, we could get a lot done." Several others marveled at the presence of so many "young people" (twenty- and thirty-something were there!) who were inspired to show their support for an issue. We may not ever see these people again at another commissioners' meeting, but hey, you gotta fight for your right to party!

 

For your reading pleasure, here's the once and future Ocracoke Noise Ordinance (boldface type highlights points discussed above):