NSW: Picture of man wanted over 'noise shooting'

Sydney Morning Herald
November 26, 2007

Police have issued an arrest warrant for a man wanted over the alleged murder of father of four Stephen Holmes at the weekend.

They are looking for 59-year-old Stanley Francis Maguire, who is also known as John Maguire.

They warn anyone who sees him to be careful and not to approach him, but to call police immediately.

He is 176cm tall, medium build with short grey hair and blue eyes. He is also believed to have tattoos on both forearms.

Anyone who with information is asked to call Wollongong Police on 02 4226 7899 or CrimeStoppers on 1800 333 000.

Mr Holmes was killed after confronting his neighbour. He died after being shot in the chest ...

Related posts:
Man shot dead after loud music complaint
Shot dead for complaining about loud music

Sydney: 64 hours of steady drinking

Sydney Morning Herald
November 17, 2007

THE owner of an Oxford Street pub has threatened court action if she is refused permission to open for 64 hours straight every weekend.

Anna Stillone, owner of the Burdekin Hotel, has applied to City of Sydney Council to open all five floors of her hotel from 8am until 2am every weekday and from 8am Friday until midnight on Sunday. Extended trading is expected to double the pub's patronage to more than 800 people at peak periods.

The development application has sparked an angry campaign from nearby residents. "Noise is the biggest issue," said one, Christine Byrne. "It's a highly residential area, and here we have the potential to have, every weekend, all day and every night, over 800 people at the gateway to Oxford Street boozing and smoking, screaming and fighting. We will never sleep."

Ms Byrne said Oxford Street was much noisier and disruptive than when she moved in 10 years ago. "The number of late-trading nightclubs has grown and grown … . It's mayhem as they pour out of these places," she said.

"Our owners' corporation is now paying between $100 and $150 a week every week … to clean faeces, urine and drug paraphernalia from our stairwells."

She said the Burdekin had a history of breaching its noise limits, but Ms Stillone denied this ...

Ban on truck brake noise

Courier Mail
November 19, 2007

TRUCK muffler businesses should boom in the wake of a clampdown on engine brake noise that has been approved unanimously by the Australian Transport Council.

National Transport Commission safety spokesman Tim Eaton said engine braking noise on heavy vehicles fitted with worn, defective or inferior mufflers had been a community concern for some time.

"During consultation, the community broadly supported the regulation, while the trucking industry's views ensured that it is practical and targets only the small number of operators who do the wrong thing," he said ...

Eaton said trucks fitted with purpose-designed mufflers in good condition were reasonably quiet in any case, and would not be impacted by the new regulation.

"Noise problems emerge when mufflers deteriorate or are replaced with an inferior product, so fixing the problem is as easy as replacing the muffler," he added.

"Once it has been implemented by that states and territories, this regulation will help to ensure a minority of noisy vehicles do not result in community-led truck curfews and restrictions, which could impact on productivity."

The development of a national regulation and enforcement technology involved government and industry and was unanimously supported by the Environment Protection and Heritage Council ...

The Regulatory Impact Statement can be seen at the NTC website www.ntc.gov.au: here and here.

From NTC's website:

Title: Regulation to manage engine brake noise approved
Article Date: 13 Nov 2007

An in-service standard to manage engine brake noise has been approved unanimously by the Australian Transport Council (ATC)

The loud ‘bark’ caused by engine brakes on heavy vehicles fitted with worn, defective or inferior mufflers has been a community concern for some time, yet, until now, it has remained unregulated.

National Transport Commission (NTC) General Manager Safety & Environment Tim Eaton said the development of a national regulation and enforcement technology has been a collaborative effort involving government and industry ...

QLD: Barking's our pet hate

Courier Mail
November 25, 2007

BARKING dogs, noisy machinery, dusty work sites and litterers are driving us crazy.

More than half of all waste complaints taken by local government over the past year related to littering while 52 per cent of noise complaints were about neighbours' pets.

The Environmental Protection Agency and local government officers fielded a total of 21,512 environmental complaints in 2006-07, with noise issues sparking the most – 8494 ...

Clive Begg from the University of Queensland's school of social sciences said although the number of complaints reflected a growing population, it also showed that people now sought a higher degree of civility.

"People expect higher standards from their neighbours, the community, government and employers," Dr Begg said.

Dr Begg said as more people crowded in to Brisbane, with larger housing blocks being cut up, territorial issues also arose.

WA man shot twice in row over loud music

Sydney Morning Herald
November 11, 2007

A 25-year-old man has undergone emergency surgery for gunshot wounds after being shot for ignoring a request to turn down his music.

The man was entertaining friends at his home in Boddington, South of Perth, on Saturday when the incident occurred.

"They were having a few drinks and playing some music," police spokesman Trevor Davis said.

A visitor at the neighbouring house approached the 25-year-old man, asking him to turn the music down, Insp Davis said.

"He spoke to the victim but to no avail," he said.

Police allege the man then left but returned to the neighbouring house with a .22 calibre semi-automatic rifle.

"He pulled into the driveway of his friend's home and fired three shots in the direction of the victim's house while standing at the dividing fence," Insp Davis said.

"It is alleged he then took aim at the victim and fired two shots at him.

"The first shot struck him in the stomach and the second struck him in the buttocks." ...

Griffith University: Noise just sickening

Courier Mail
November 11, 2007

SICK to death of noisy neighbours? Researchers have linked chronic noise to sleep disorders, learning difficulties and high blood pressure.

Griffith University School of Environment lecturer Deanna Tomerini said it was clear from the Environmental Health Council of Australia study that "unwanted sound" was as detrimental to public health as air and water pollution, and that the problem was growing.

"Higher-density living, population growth, the increase in road and air traffic – it's evident noise problems are increasing. More people are being affected by noise," she said.

Ms Tomerini warned that governments could expect health problems to increase as noise problems worsened.

"Noise should be given the same priority as any other health issue," she said.

"Noise just has to be up there at the same level. We need to identify the extent of the problem now. Many of the things to be done to prevent noise need to be done at the planning stage."

Inner-city resident Marion Brown, 59, said there was no doubt her health had suffered after two years of enduring the "neighbours from hell" ...

"It's got to the point where I've been so tired from being unable to sleep because of their noise, I've slept in the car," she said. "I didn't want to sell, but I felt like I had no other choice." ...

Ms Tomerini said it would be helpful to have a more integrated approach, including a single agency to receive complaints.

Man shot dead after loud music complaint

news.com.au
November 26, 2007

A MAN was shot dead in front of his family home after confronting a neighbour once too often to demand he turn the music down.

The running neighbourhood stoush took a violent turn on the weekend when coal miner Stephen Holmes was killed by a single shotgun blast to the chest.

The alleged shooter was being tracked by police on the Central Coast last night after his car was found abandoned on the F3 near Mt White west of Sydney.

A family friend of Mr Holmes said the neighbour was constantly playing music so loud late into the night that no one could get any sleep.

"This guy told another neighbour that he was going to play his music again on Saturday night and that if Stephen tried to stop him he would kill him," she said ...

The 41-year-old father of four, who had just had a big promotion at the Helensburgh Coal mine, died on the scene while his eldest child sat by his side.

The youngest, just two years old, could be heard repeating "my daddy's dead, my daddy's dead" ...

Neighbours told The Daily Telegraph numerous complaints had been made against the alleged shooter.

"There were all sorts of weird rumours going around about him. He used to sit out in the rain playing his banjo or ukulele into the early hours of the morning," one neighbour said.

Another neighbour said he heard the two men swearing loudly at each other before the gun shot went off ...

The banjo-playing fugitive is believed to be hiding somewhere on the Central Coast ...

Inspector Chris Taylor said he could not confirm or deny claims by residents that nothing had been done in response to numerous complaints they made to police against the man, described as 175cms tall with a medium build and white thinning hair.

See also ninemsn video

Shot dead for complaining about loud music

Sydney Morning Herald
November 26, 2007

Police are hunting for a man after a father of four was shot dead outside his home in Woonona, north of Wollongong, after complaining about loud music on Saturday night.

Stephen Holmes, 41, a miner, was killed after complaining about the music coming from a house in his street.

Mr Holmes died on a neighbour's front lawn after being shot in the chest ...

The incident started about 9pm when Mr Holmes became concerned about loud music coming from the home of a neighbour, who lived diagonally across the road in Lassiter Avenue.

"There was loud music and his two youngest children couldn't sleep,'' a friend of the family said.

"He went out and asked the neighbour to turn the music down and then returned to the house.

"But the bloke stood outside on his front lawn and kept yelling out, 'Come out here, you dog.'

"Angela went to the phone and called the police and it was while she was on the phone she heard a gunshot.".

Two of Mr Holmes's daughters, Samantha, 16, and Juanita, 5, were also on the lawn.

"Samantha ran to her father's side and lay down beside him," the friend said.

Neighbours cared for Mr Holmes until police and ambulance arrived, but he died shortly after ...

The neighbour did not know what had led to the shooting but he confirmed Mr Holmes and the alleged killer had been involved in a dispute about five to six months ago that led to a verbal confrontation ...

Noisy air-con puts Sydney woman in court

Daily Telegraph
August 20, 2007

REPLACING her old air conditioner with a reverse cycle unit has landed Dragica Koceva in court after the western Sydney resident failed to comply with a noise control notice issued by Fairfield council.

Mrs Koceva, 51, of St Johns Park, said she has been victimised because she uses her air conditioner.

''This is ridiculous. I feel like a criminal, they made me feel like I did something wrong,'' Mrs Koceva told The Daily Telegraph.

''I have lived 20 years in Australia and suddenly I have to go to court because I'm using my air conditioner ...

Mrs Koceva said since a neighbour made the complaint about her $990 air conditioner, she has spent at least $400 to modify the noise level to suit council standards ...

A council officer is expected to come out and test the air conditioner noise levels again this week. ''I don't think it's too loud,'' Ms Koceva said ...

Ms Koceva's case highlights a growing problem _ burgeoning numbers of noise complaints to local councils in response to a trend for larger, reverse cycle air conditioner units. Manly council's manager for regulatory services, Mark Pearson said the trend for larger homes had meant consumers were now installing commercial-scale reverse cycle climate control units.

''We get between 10 and 13 complaints a week about air conditioner noise,'' Mr Pearson said ...

Figures for air conditioner noise complaints from Blacktown council showed complaints have increased by 25 per cent in five years.

City of Sydney council said noisy air conditioners accounted for roughly 10 per cent of its more than 1000 noise complaints in the last calender year ...

'You try to keep them at least three metres from the property's boundary,'' he said. Ms Koceva meanwhile has been ordered to attend Fairfield Local Court next month.

QLD: Quarries proposal rocks quiet country surrounds

Daily Mercury, 16.08.2007

IN the quiet surrounds of Palmyra, west of Mackay, residents fear a proposal to mine three quarries will disrupt the rural peace and stir up dust on the country roads.

During a meeting of Mackay City Council yesterday no decision was made on whether to approve the three quarries off Bells Road, just past the Mac Speedway and Palmyra drag race track.

The applicant, Ken Vella, has already indicated blasting won't be used but that promise has failed to placate the 24 residents in the cane farming district who signed a petition earlier this year ...

Cr George Christensen, who represents the area, said residents' greatest fear was potential noise and dust from trucks rumbling up and down what he said was an already sub-standard road.

To access the quarries, trucks would have to travel along a section of Bells Road shared by locals and traffic from the racetracks nearby ...

The application is expected to come before council again.

SA: Early birds survive roasting

Adelaide Now

August 17, 2007 02:15am

A MOVE by two councillors on Eyre Peninsula to ban roosters from towns in the area has been rejected by their colleagues.

A motion by councillors Laurette Waddell-Smith and Robert Lawrie that the council impose a by-law to ban roosters in towns in the council area was rejected at Tumby Bay's council meeting on Monday night.

The council had received a complaint from a ratepayer about noise from a neighbouring property, which housed several roosters.

Tumby Bay mayor Graeme Stirling said the council could invoke Section 254 of the Local Government Act, which gave it the power to make an order against the owner of noisy animals ...

"We have here a town where more than 50 per cent of people are aged over 65, and they don't want their sleep interrupted at 2.30 or 3 o'clock in the morning."

NSW: Highway upgrade downgrading lives

Lismore Northern Star
16.08.2007 By HELEN JACK

GRAEME MILLER and wife Margit are counting the cost in lost value to their home from construction of the new Pacific Highway at Ocean Shores.

Their home overlooks a section of the upgraded highway from Brunswick Heads to Yelgun which opened on July 11. And the Millers are not alone. The new highway is causing sleepless nights for hundreds of people.

Two hundred local residents packed the Ocean Shores Country Club's main auditorium on Tuesday night to describe to RTA representatives how traffic noise is robbing them of sleep, and impacting on their health and wallets.

One Ocean Shores woman told the gathering she had resorted to sleeping pills to get to sleep.

Others, constantly woken during the night by trucks running over ripple strips, said they had given up trying to sleep, preferring to get up and pursue hobbies or work to pass the time until dawn ...

Residents living five kilometres from the highway said they were experiencing noise levels never heard before the highway opened.

RTA Pacific Highway general manager Bob Higgins told the meeting sound testing near the highway would not start until October when all work was finished.

"It's important for us to understand if (the noise) is coming from the road surface or the ripple strips," he said.

Mr Higgins' response was referred to as 'unsatisfactory' and many considered the meeting was enough public consultation with the RTA to justify approaching the director-general.

MP Don Page said he would make representations to the NSW Minister for Roads Eric Roozendaal on behalf of residents.

Gold Coast: Clubs fail noise and light safety

15Aug07 goldcoast.com.au

GOLD Coast nightclubs are likely to be told to turn their music down and their lights up because of serious concerns about health and safety.

A Liquor Licensing source told The Gold Coast Bulletin the organisation had received a report on excessive noise levels at Gold Coast nightclubs highlighting 'real concerns' staff and patrons could end up with permanent hearing damage.

Tests have shown many of our nightclubs frequently exceed 110 decibels which overseas studies have shown can damage hearing after 15 minutes exposure a day ...

The police report has recommended nightclubs operate at a maximum level of 96dB.

"The report explained there are accepted medical studies that have been available for some time from the UK showing that three out of four nightclubbers are at risk of permanent hearing damage." said the source.

"Many of these nightclubbers are reporting symptoms that could lead to incurable tinnitus (continual ringing in the ear) or premature deafness.

"(The report) also touched on some problems encountered by staff and police at some Gold Coast nightclubs with not being able to communicate instructions to patrons because of the extremely loud noise." ...

VIC: Driving us deaf

Herald Sun

Peter Rolfe, August 12, 2007

PULSATING car stereos are blasting Melbourne with noise louder than a jet engine.

More than rocking the suburbs, music from some cars annoys homeowners, shopkeepers, pedestrians and causes hearing damage ...

The low-frequency noise they emit shakes windows, rattles teeth, causes nausea and can damage organs.

Sound expert Graham Murphy said noise pollution was more than a nuisance.

"It can make you physically ill," he said.

Car audio specialist Angelo Di Donato said volumes had been clocked as high as 164.8 decibels.

Most of the cars causing a nuisance around Melbourne played music at between 135 and 140 decibels ...

"The louder, the better," he said. "My speakers can be heard two blocks away." ...

NSW Ulladulla: Shed 'inappropriate'

Milton-Ulladulla Times
08 August 2007

A MEN'S Shed, planned for the grounds of the Milton-Ulladulla Baptist Church, is inappropriate according to neighbouring residents.

Opponents of the workshop support the need for such a facility in the district, but believe it would be better suited to an industrial or commercial area, rather than a residential estate in Narrawallee ...

The project is part of the national Men's Shed network and will provide an opportunity for local men to work on timber and metal projects for local charities and community groups, while fostering men's health and providing a meeting place seven days a week ...

NSW: Let's give peace a chance

Sydney Morning Herald

Helene Gonski
August 7, 2007

I WANT to make a noise about noise.

I wake up to a screeching of brakes. The builders have arrived next door. They are renovating a house recently built, which to my way of thinking looked great the way it was. The knocking and banging starts. The drill is piercing like a horrific visit to the dentist.

I climb onto the train on my way to work. I am surrounded by passengers whose mobile telephones are ringing ...

I know I am in the older bracket and a little less tolerant, but where is there a quiet corner in our world? Why are we so intimidated by silence? ...

NSW: On the blower: when council keeps you up

Sydney Morning Herald
On the blower: no one to call when the council keeps you up
Sunanda Creagh Urban Affairs Reporter
July 26, 2007

AT 4AM every Monday Kay Violet lies in bed listening to the sound of a leaf blower.

"I wake up at about 2am because I know it's going to happen. I lie there waiting and, sure enough, at 4am it starts up and they are blowing these leaves down the street," Ms Violet, of Guildford, said yesterday. "Sometimes on other days they use the leaf blower at 1am but at least you can get back to sleep."

The culprits are cleaners employed by Paramatta City Council, tidying the streets outside a row of shops in Guildford Road ...

NSW: Mayor blasts super speakers

Sydney Morning Herald
Mayor blasts super speakers that give out bad vibes
Sunanda Creagh Urban Affairs Reporter
July 24, 2007

IS DOOF-DOOF making you deaf-deaf?

Sub-woofer speakers are causing headaches for apartment-dwellers, say noise activists, and the Lord Mayor of Sydney, Clover Moore, is calling on the State Government to look at tightly controlling their use in flats.

Cr Moore told a panel reviewing NSW noise regulations that one of her constituents had suffered illness from a neighbour's sub-woofer speakers.

"She says the low frequency noise caused vibrations and sensations within her body beyond the noise levels themselves, and that she suffered a series of associated health concerns including heart palpitations, nausea and vomiting, and inflammation of skin and other organs," she said ...

NSW: Gunfire in Sydney's east

Sydney Morning Herald

Edmund Tadros

August 6, 2007 - 8:20AM

A group of armed men have fired a number of shots and assaulted three people at an area in Sydney's east popular with car hoons ...

"There are cars and hoons driving by with loud and thumping music at night," said local resident Mary-Lynne Taylor. "It's always at The Loop, there's not much supervision there."

Another resident said police would often clear the area of car hoons but they would return within 10 minutes of the officers leaving.

"We have a lot of the teenage hoons coming down here," she said. "I'm surprised I didn't hear anything."

She said had seen up to 60 cars preparing to do their dragging on Anzac Parade around The Loop on some weekend evenings.

"Every Saturday and Sunday night it will be like Pitt Street here," she said.

The area is known to be a popular spot with "car enthusiasts", a police spokeswoman said.

FNQ: Red Baron seaplane

Townsville Bulletin
Forcing the Silence
MARY VERNON
04Aug07

WHILE of course it is important that ordinary citizens should be able to go to court and question decisions made by governments and statutory authorities the present case before the Administrative Appeals Tribunal is carrying this right to extremes.

The appeal has been brought by a resident of Horseshoe Bay on Magnetic Island against the operation of the Red Baron seaplane which takes tourists on sightseeing flights around the island ...

THE moment they began operating, Mrs Connolly popped up complaining about the noise and the loss of amenity caused by the seaplane ...

She complained to GBRMPA which reviewed the permit it had issued and found everything AOK. But Mrs Connolly was not satisfied with the umpire's decision and pushed her case to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal ...

IF she wins this round and puts the Mills out of business does Mrs Connolly plan to take her silencing plan further? No more cockatoos, no more possums, no more music, no more talking, no more parties, no more laughing. Children will also have to go . . . in fact, all people will have to go to maintain the blessed silence. The only living thing left will be Mrs Connolly. I hope she doesn't make a noise.

NSW: Noise Regulation Review 2007

Regulatory Impact Statement: Proposed Protection of the Environment Operations (Noise Control) Regulation 2007

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Department of Environment and Climate Change NSW (DECC) is seeking community comment on the proposed Protection of the Environment Operations (Noise Control) Regulation 2007.

This Regulation will control noise from motor vehicles and marine vessels and set community standards on acceptable noise intrusion in homes from appliances such as intruder alarms, music amplifiers, air conditioners and powered garden tools.

Under the Subordinate Legislation Act 1989, the existing Protection of the Environment (Noise Control) Regulation 2000 is scheduled for automatic repeal on 1 September 2007. As required under this Act, DECC has prepared a Regulatory Impact Statement to assess the economic, social and environmental costs and benefits associated with the revised regulation and consider the alternatives. The Regulatory Impact Statement demonstrates the revised Regulation will provide the greatest net benefits to the community compared with possible alternatives.

The aim of the review is to update the Regulation and provide simple, straightforward and enforceable noise controls that match community expectations.

DECC urges stakeholders to provide feedback on the new Regulation.

Download
Regulatory Impact Statement: Proposed Protection of the Environment Operations (Noise Control) Regulation 2007: 07186noiseris.pdf (1,108 kb, requires Acrobat Reader)

Information sheets are available summarising the key changes in the regulation which will affect motor vehicles (07260infomv.pdf; 22 kb, requires Acrobat Reader), marine vessels (07261infomarvess.pdf; 25 kb) and miscellaneous articles (07259infoarticles.pdf; 31 kb).

Comments, marked 'Noise Regulation Review', must be received at the address below by Friday 13 July 2007:

Noise Policy Section
Department of Environment and Climate Change NSW
PO Box A290
Sydney South NSW 1232
Phone: (02) 9995 5996
Fax: (02) 9995 5935

or via e-mail at noise_reg_review@environment.nsw.gov.au

NSW EPA

NSW: Noise crackdown proposed

Tougher restrictions on neighbourhood noise could soon be introduced by the New South Wales Government.

A number of proposals are being considered by the Government, including plans to crack down on residents who play loud music on weeknights and owners of 'hotted up' cars.

The minister assisting the Environment Minister, Verity Firth, says there is a lot of support in the community for stricter rules:

"One of the proposed changes is to adjust to 10pm the time to which noise from musical instruments and sound systems in residential areas can be heard on weeknights," she said.

"This was something that was supported by 85 per cent of the consultation that we did.

"It is something that we're really looking at through this noise regulation review."

Ms Firth says the proposals are designed to make neighbourhood life more pleasant.

"We're determined to give the community a say in how the Government can help make their neighbourhoods more peaceful, but we still want to take a commonsense approach," she said.

"We want to balance the rights of property owners to enjoy their property, but also with the need to maintain peaceful and harmonious neighbourhoods."

The New South Wales police union says existing laws about neighbourhood noise need to be better defined.

The New South Wales Government plans to make changes to the State's Noise Control Regulations, which it says would mean residents would have to turn down load music by 10 o'clock on weeknights instead of midnight.

The police union's vice president, Sergeant Scott Webber, says that police can act at any time if the music is considered offensive.

"It'd just be better if it's more defined and I think the public out there need to know it as well," he said.

"At the present time if we turn up to a job a lot of people say 'I can have the music up to 12 o'clock or 10 o'clock'.

"That's not actually true, it can be offensive at any time."

A Sydney mayor says the proposals do not go far enough.

The Mayor of Manly, Peter McDonald, says the restrictions should apply on weekends as well.

"I'm not sure why you wouldn't apply it seven days a week," he said.

"I mean people do sleep seven nights a week, not just five, so I think it would be reasonable to do that.

"If anything it's often a lot worse at weekends because that's the time that people decide they're going to party on."

The changes would also require so called "car hoons" to have noise dampening devices permanently fitted to their cars.

ABC News

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