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New Brunswick

Fredericton police push for bylaw changes to aid crackdown on noisy vehicles

Fredericton police want a city bylaw changed again so they're better able to crack down on exceptionally noisy vehicles.

Proposed amendments would remove reference to maximum decibel levels for motorcycles

A muffler on a car.
Changes could be coming to Fredericton's noise bylaw in an effort to better crack down on the use of excessively loud vehicles. (Ken Linton/CBC)

Fredericton's police chief says a strategy to combat noisy vehicles hasn't worked for the past three years, and is hoping further changes to the city's noise bylaw will helpofficerscrack down onthe use of excessively loud cars, trucks and motorcycles.

In 2021, Fredericton city councillors approved amendments to the city's noise bylaw, which set maximum decibel levels that could be produced by a vehicle,and give police the power to enforce it using decibel-reading devices.

Police Chief Martin Gaudetis now asking council to amend the bylaw again in order to repeal all references to decibels, units of measure, sound tests and instruments related to measuring the volume of noise produced by vehicles.

Gaudet wasn't at Monday's meeting, but gave councillors a heads-up about the proposed amendments at the previous meeting.

At that time, he saidofficers tried using the decibel readers to enforce the bylaw for the past three years, with little success.

Martin Gaudet speaks inside the lobby of the Fredericton police headquarters.
Fredericton police Chief Martin Gaudet says the current noise bylaw, which sets limits around the maximum allowable decibel level for vehicles, isn't working. (Shane Fowler/CBC)

"That didn't work out so well for us. We realized that it's been a cumbersome process. It's a little difficult, so we are asking to simplify things," said Gaudet, speaking at the March 25 council meeting.

Gaudetsaid removing the sections regarding decibel levels would hopefully give officers the tools needed to enforce the bylaw, but didn't exactly say how.

"We know that it'sa significant issue for our community and people are upset, and rightfully so.

"And if it matters to them, it matters to us, and we find that the existing tools that we're using just doesn't work all that well."

If the sections of the bylaw regarding decibel levelswere removed, the bylaw would be left with another section pertaining to "prohibited noises," which is worded broadly.

That section states, "No person shall make, cause, or permit any Noise likely to cause a public disturbance or disturb the peace of another individual."

Anyone ticketed for violating it could be subject to a $250 fine.

On Monday, Fredericton councillors gave first and second reading to a motion to amend the bylaw. Athird and final reading will be done at its next meeting later this month.

A long-standing issue

Excessively loud vehicles particularly in the downtownis an issue that Fredericton city hall has tried to combat for years.

WATCH|Obnoxiously loud vehicles aren't impressing anyone in downtown Fredericton:

Shame them: People in downtown Fredericton are fed up with noisy vehicles

1 year ago
Duration 2:26
Despite recent bylaw changes, annoying drivers are still making a racket in downtown Fredericton.

The amendments in 2021 were thought to be the final solution to a problem that particularly ramps up in the summer months, when restaurants open their patiosat the same time motorcycles hit the streets.

But according to Gaudet in a report to council, his staff have had three years to evaluate the results of the current bylaw, and found it to be "ineffective."

Last August, statistics provided to CBC News revealedthat since the amendments were made in 2021, police had issued a total of five tickets under the bylaw.