Night flights will soon be banned at Longueuil, Que., airport after years of noise complaints - Action News
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Montreal

Night flights will soon be banned at Longueuil, Que., airport after years of noise complaints

The city of Longueuil and Saint-Hubert Airport have reached anagreement to ban commercial flights from 11 p.m. to 6 a.m. starting next year, thereby ending late nightnoise that hasplagued residents of the area for years.

Agreement reached to ban commercial flights from 11 p.m. to 6 a.m. starting April 2024

An airplane at night.
In addition to banning commercial overnight flights as of next year, the city of Longueuil and Saint-Hubert Airport have agreed to install a noise monitoring system. (Alain Bland/Radio-Canada)

Marie-Pierre Brunelle knew what she was getting into 22 years ago when she moved into her home near the Saint-Hubert Airport in the city of Longueuil.

Only sixkilometres away from the tarmac, she said the planes overhead didn't bother her at first. But that changed in 2019 with the arrival of high-capacity jets.

"At that point,the noise level went skyrocket," she said. And it's no different at night, she said,while she's trying to sleep.

"I can't make noise after 11 p.m.,but they have 100-decibel planes that just fly over at all hours."

The city of Longueuil says some relief is on the way forSouth Shore residents like Brunelle.

A woman sitting on a couch.
Marie-Pierre Brunelle created an anti-noise pollution committee for residents of Longueuil's Saint-Hubert borough who live near the airport. She says the noise from planes flying overhead throughout the night became unbearable. (CBC)

The city and airporthave reached anagreement to ban commercial flights from 11 p.m. to 6 a.m. starting next year, thereby ending overnightnoise that hasplagued residents of the area for years.

Longueuil Mayor Catherine Fourniersaid inrecent years, the issue of night flights has been a major irritant for some residents.

"It goes without saying that social acceptability is essential to the airport's development projects, and this is precisely what the agreement reached today addresses," saidFournier on Friday.

The city and airport have also agreed to install a noise monitoring system.

The official ban will take effect April 24, 2024 thedate markingthe end of a contract between the airport and the company that operates the Boeing 737s.

Yanic Roy, the airport's general manager, said there are also several other proposals on the table and his team will consult with elected officials.

"It is important to understand that currently, almost all of the complaints received were associated with Boeing 737-200 flights at night. We're talking about two to three flights a week," he said.

The announcement comes after public consultations with citizens on new plans for the airport. Brunelle's anti-noise pollution committee took part in those consultations.

She says next year's ban is a step in the right direction, but the city and the airport aren't going far enough.

"We want public data on what flights are going over and when," she said. "People are always asking about a complaint system that would be easy to use and would be transparent."

Brunelle says it's also unfair that residents are expected to endure another year of late night commercial flights.

"There shouldn't be an airplane flying over waking us up," she said.

with files from CBC's Sharon Yonan-Renold and Radio-Canada