Source: https://www.codepublishing.com/WA/Lynnwood/html/Lynnwood10/Lynnwood1012.html
Timestamp: 2020-07-13 14:45:25
Document Index: 18356803

Matched Legal Cases: ['§ 1', '§ 1', '§ 1', '§ 1', '§ 1', '§ 1', '§ 1', '§ 2', '§ 1', '§ 1', '§ 31', '§ 3', '§ 1', '§ 31', '§ 3', '§ 1', '§ 1', '§ 1', '§ 1', '§ 30', '§ 1', '§ 10', '§ 1', '§ 1']

Chapter 10.12 NOISE
10.12.090 Declaration of policy.
10.12.200 Emergency exemptions.
10.12.300 Noises prohibited.
10.12.400 Designation of environments.
10.12.500 Environmental noise levels.
10.12.600 Motor vehicle noise levels.
10.12.700 Administration.
10.12.800 Penalty for violations.
It is hereby declared to be the policy of the city of Lynnwood to minimize the exposure of citizens to the harmful physiological and psychological effects of excessive noise. It is the express intent of the city council to control the level of noise in a manner which promotes commerce; the use, value and enjoyment of property; sleep and repose; and the quality of the environment. (Ord. 1290 § 1, 1982)
1. “Ambient sound level” means the background level of all sound in a given EDNA independent of the specific source being measured. The “A”-weighted sound pressure level exceeded 90 percent of the time based on a one-hour period.
2. “dBA” means the sound pressure level in decibels measured using the “A”-weighting network on a sound level meter as specified in the American National Standards Institute Specification (§ 1.4-1971) for sound level meters.
3. “Decibel” means a unit of sound, based on a logarithmic scale, of the ratio of the magnitude of a particular sound pressure to a standard reference pressure of 20 micropascals.
4. “EDNA” means the environmental designation for noise abatement, being an area or zone (environment) within which maximum permissible noise levels are established.
5. “Emergency vehicle” means a motor vehicle used in response to a public calamity or to protect persons or property from an imminent exposure to danger.
6. “Gross vehicle weight rating (GVWR)” means the value specified by the manufacturer as the loaded weight of a single vehicle.
7. “Impulse sound” means either a single pressure peak or a single burst (multiple pressure peaks) for a duration of less than one second as measured on a peak unweighted sound level meter.
8. “Impulsive sound” means sound having the following qualities: the peak of the sound level is less than one second and short compared to the occurrence rate; the onset is abrupt; the decay rapid; and the peak value exceeds ambient level by more than 10 dBA.
9. “In-use motor vehicle” means any motor vehicle which is used on a public highway except farm vehicles as defined under RCW 46.04.181.
10. “Motor vehicle” means any vehicle which is self propelled, used primarily for transporting persons or property upon public highways and required to be licensed under RCW 46.16.010. Airplanes, water craft and vehicles used exclusively on stationary rails or tracks are not motor vehicles as that term is used in this chapter.
11. “Motor vehicle racing event” means any motor vehicle competition conducted under a permit issued by the city of Lynnwood and under the auspices of a recognized sanctioning body.
12. “Motorcycle” means any motor vehicle having a saddle for the use of the rider and designed to travel on not more than three wheels in contact with the ground, except farm tractors.
13. “Muffler” means a device consisting of a series of chambers or other mechanical designs for the purpose of receiving exhaust gas from an internal combustion engine and effective in reducing noise resulting therefrom.
14. “Noise” means the intensity, duration and character of sounds, from any and all sources.
15. “Noise disturbance” means any sound which annoys, disturbs, or perturbs reasonable persons with normal sensitivities; or any sound which injures or endangers the comfort, repose, health, hearing, peace, or safety of other persons.
16. “Noise sensitive area” means any area so designated by the city of Lynnwood in which noise sensitive activities are conducted and which require exceptional quiet. Such activities include, but are not limited to, the operation of schools, hospitals, nursing homes, courts and churches.
17. “Off-highway vehicle” means any self-propelled vehicle not used primarily for transporting persons or property upon public highways nor required to be licensed under RCW 46.16.010.
18. “Operator” means any person who is in actual physical or electronic control of a powered watercraft, motor vehicle, aircraft, off-road vehicle, or any other engine-driven vehicle.
19. “Periodic sound” means sound having the following qualities:
a. The sound level varies repetitively with a period of one minute or less and the peak value is more than five dBA above the minimum value.
20. “Person” means any individual, corporation, partnership, association, governmental body, state agency or other entity whatsoever.
21. “Powered model vehicle” means any mechanically propelled vehicle, either airborne, waterborne, or landborne, designed not to carry persons or property such as, but not limited to, model airplanes, boats, cars and rockets.
22. “Property boundary” means the surveyed line at ground surface, which separates the real property owned, rented, or leased by one or more persons, from that owned, rented, or leased by one or more persons, and its vertical extension.
23. “Public space” means an area which is owned or controlled by a public governmental entity and maintained for the use of the general public.
24. “Public highway” means the entire width between the boundary line of every way publicly maintained by the Department of Highways or any county or city when any part thereof is generally open to the use of the public for purposes of vehicular travel as a matter of right.
25. “Receiving property” means real property at the boundaries of which the maximum permissible noise levels specified in this chapter shall not be exceeded from sources outside such property.
26. “Sound level” means a weighted sound pressure level measured by use of a sound level meter using an “A”-weighted network and reported as dBA.
27. “Sound level meter” means a device which measures sound pressure levels and conforms to Type 1 or Type 2 as specified in the American National Standards Institute publications (§ 1.4-1971).
28. “Watercraft” means any contrivance, excluding aircraft, used or capable of being used as a means of transportation or recreation on water, including model craft, powered by an internal or external combustion engine. (Ord. 1386 § 1, 1983; Ord. 1275 § 1, 1982)
Noise caused in the performance of emergency work for the immediate safety, health, or welfare of the community or individuals of the community, or to restore property to a safe condition following a public calamity shall not be subject to the provisions of this chapter. Nothing in this section shall be construed to permit law enforcement, ambulance, fire, or other emergency personnel to make excessive noise in the performance of their duties when such noise is clearly unnecessary. (Ord. 1275 § 1, 1982)
A. General Prohibitions. It shall be unlawful for any person to make, continue, or cause to be made or continued any noise disturbance. It shall be unlawful for any person to make, continue, or cause to be made or continued any noise which exceeds the maximum permissible noise levels specified in LMC 10.12.500 and 10.12.600 within the limits of the city of Lynnwood.
B. Specific Prohibitions. The following acts, among others, are declared to be noise disturbance in violation of the ordinance codified in this chapter, but the enumeration shall not be deemed exclusive, namely:
1. The sounding of any horn or signaling device on any automobile, truck, motorcycle, transit vehicle or other vehicle on any public street or public place of the city, except as a necessary warning of danger to person or property, the creation by means of any such signaling device of any unreasonably loud or harsh sound, and the sounding of any such device for an unnecessary and unreasonable period of time;
2. The use of any automobile, truck, motorcycle, transit vehicle, or other vehicle, or engine, either stationary or moving, or any instrument, device or thing so out of repair, so loaded, or in such manner as to create loud and unnecessary grating, squealing, grinding, rattling or other noise;
3. Repairing, rebuilding, modifying, or testing any motor vehicle, motorcycle or off-road vehicle, in or near a residential use district in such a manner as to cause noise disturbance or violate the provisions of LMC 10.12.600;
4. To discharge into the open air the exhaust of any steam engine, stationary internal combustion engine or motor vehicle, except through a muffler or other device which will effectively reduce loud or explosive noises therefrom;
5. No person shall operate or permit the operation of any motor vehicle with a gross vehicle weight rating (GVWR) in excess of 10,000 pounds, or any auxiliary equipment attached to such a vehicle, for a period longer than 10 minutes in any hour while the vehicle is stationary, for reasons other than traffic congestion, within 150 feet of a residential zone or designated noise sensitive area, between the hours of 10:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m. the following day;
6. Creating any unnecessary or unusually loud noise within the vicinity of any school or other institution of learning, hospital, nursing home, court, church or other designated area where exceptional quiet is necessary, while the same are in use, provided conspicuous signs are displayed in adjacent or contiguous streets, indicating that the same is a noise sensitive area;
7. Yelling, shouting, hooting, whistling or singing, particularly between the hours of 10:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m. or at any time and place so as to disturb the quiet, comfort and repose of any person in any hospital, rest home, sanitarium, dwelling, hotel, motel or other type of residence;
8. Owning, keeping, possessing, or harboring any animal which by frequent or habitual howling, barking, or other noisemaking, causes noise disturbance. The provisions of this section shall also apply to all private or public facilities, including any animal pounds, which hold or treat animals;
9. The use, operation, or permitting to be used, played or operated any radio receiving set, musical instrument, phonograph, or other machine or device for the producing or reproducing of sound in such manner as to unreasonably disturb the peace, quiet and comfort of the neighboring inhabitants or at any time with louder volume than is necessary for convenient hearing for the person or persons who are in the room, vehicle or chamber in which such machine or device is operated and who are voluntary listeners thereto. The operation of any such set, instrument, phonograph, machine or device in such a manner as to be plainly audible at a distance of 50 feet from the building, structure or vehicle in which it is located shall be prima facie evidence of a violation of this section;
10. Operating or permitting the operation of any mechanically powered saw, drill, sander, grinder, lawn or garden tool, or fan or blower, or similar device used outdoors in residential areas between the hours of 10:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m. the following day so as to cause a noise disturbance across a residential real property boundary;
11. Operating or permitting the operation of powered model vehicles so as to create a noise disturbance across a residential real property boundary, in a public space or within a noise sensitive area between the hours of 10:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m. the following day. Maximum sound levels in a public space during the permitted period of operation shall conform to those set forth for residential land use in Table I of LMC 10.12.500 and shall be measured at a distance of 50 feet from any point on the path of the vehicle;
12. The creation of loud and excessive noises in connection with loading or unloading any vehicle, or the opening or destruction of bales, boxes and containers;
13. The erection, including excavation, demolition, alteration or repair of any building, in a residential, apartment, hotel or business district other than between the hours of 7:00 a.m. and 6:00 p.m. on weekdays, except in case of urgent necessity in the interest of public safety and convenience, and then only under approval from the office of the mayor. Said weekend work approval to be submitted to the department of public works for processing as required by LMC 2.44.040;
14. The use of hand or power tools, blowers, or machinery or the handling of materials which results in unreasonably loud and disturbing noises. The operation of such machine, device, or tool, or the handling of materials in such a manner as to be plainly audible at a distance of 50 feet from the building, structure, vehicle, or location in which it is located shall be prima facie evidence of a violation of this section.
Provided, that the foregoing enumeration of acts shall not be construed as excluding other acts which offend the public peace in contradiction of subsection (A) of this section.
C. Exceptions. None of the terms or prohibitions contained in subsection (B) of this section shall apply or be enforced against any vehicle of the city of Lynnwood while engaged in necessary public business. These terms or prohibitions shall not apply or be enforced against any excavations or repairs of bridges, utilities, streets or highways performed by or on behalf of the city of Lynnwood, Snohomish County, or state of Washington.
D. Use of Loudspeakers. The reasonable use of loudspeaker or amplifier is permitted; provided, that no loudspeaker or amplifier shall be used in residential-zoned districts; and provided, that no person shall use any loudspeaker, amplifier, or similar device which shall project sound above the ambient level beyond the property lines of the premises upon which it is being used without first obtaining a permit from the office of the mayor to do so. In issuing a permit, the office of the mayor may impose such restrictions on time, area and volume as are necessary to preserve the public peace and safety. (Ord. 2076 § 1, 1996; Ord. 1386 § 2, 1983; Ord. 1275 § 1, 1983)
A. Environmental Designations for Noise Abatement. Environmental designations for noise abatement (EDNA) are hereby declared. They are based primarily on the zoning ordinance but also take into consideration the present, future, and historical usage, as well as the usage of adjacent and other lands in the vicinity. Designation of such EDNAs are based on the following typical uses:
1. Class A EDNA – Lands where human beings reside and sleep. Typically Class A EDNA will be the following types of property used for human habitation:
c. Recreational and entertainment, e.g., camps, parks, camping facilities, and resorts;
d. Community service, e.g., orphanages, homes for the aged, hospitals, health, and correctional facilities.
g. Recreation and entertainment, property not used for human habitation, e.g., theaters, stadiums, fairgrounds, and amusement parks;
h. Community services, property not used for human habitation, e.g., educational, religious, governmental, cultural and recreational facilities.
3. Class C EDNA – Lands involving economic activities of such a nature that higher noise levels than experienced in other areas are normally to be anticipated. Typically, Class C EDNA will be the following types of property:
c. Agricultural and silvicultural property used for the production of crops, plant products or livestock.
B. Zoning for Noise Abatement. The following land use zoning classifications as described in LMC Title 21 are hereby assigned the EDNA classifications below:
Residential 8400 Sq Ft (RS-8)
Residential 7200 Sq Ft (RS-7)
Residential 4000 Sq Ft (RS-4)
Multiple Residential Low Density (RML)
Multiple Residential Medium Density (RMM)
Multiple Residential High Density (RMH)
Limited Business (B-2)
Neighborhood Commercial (B-3)
Community Business (B-1)
Planned Regional Shopping Center (PRC)
City Center Core (CC-C)
City Center West (CC-W)
City Center North (CC-N)
Highway 99 Mixed Use (HMU)
Business and Technical Park (BTP)
C. Enforcement in Unzoned or General Use Areas. Where no specific prior designation of EDNA has been made, the appropriate EDNA for properties involved in any enforcement activity will be determined by the community development director on the basis of the criteria of this section. (Ord. 3010 § 1, 2013; Ord. 2957 § 31, 2012; Ord. 1465 § 3, 1985; Ord. 1275 § 1, 1982)
A. Maximum Permissible Environmental Noise Levels. No person shall cause or permit noise to intrude into the property of another person which noise exceeds the maximum permissible noise levels set forth in this section, with the point of measurement being at the property boundary of the receiving property or anywhere within. The noise limitations established are as set forth in the following table after any applicable adjustments provided for in this chapter are applied.
B. Deviations. The following deviations from the maximum permissible noise levels are permitted:
1. Between the hours of 10:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m. the noise limitations of the foregoing table shall be reduced by 10 dBA for receiving property within Class A EDNAs;
2. At any hour of the day or night the applicable noise limitations in Table I and the nighttime restrictions above may be exceeded for any receiving property by no more than:
C. Exemptions. The following shall be exempt from the provisions of subsection (A) of this section between the hours of 7:00 a.m. and 10:00 p.m.:
1. Sounds originating from residential property relating to temporary projects for the maintenance or repair of homes, grounds and appurtenances;
3. Sounds created by aircraft engine testing and maintenance not related to flight operation; provided, that aircraft testing and maintenance shall be conducted at remote sites whenever possible;
4. Sounds created by the installation or repair of essential utility services;
D. Nighttime Exemption. The following shall be exempt from the provisions of subsection (B)(1) of this section:
2. Noise from existing industrial installations which exceed the standards contained in these regulations and which, over the previous three years, have consistently operated in excess of 15 hours per day as a consequence of process necessity and/or demonstrated routine normal operation. Changes in working hours or activity, which would affect exemptions under this regulation, require approval of the community development director.
E. Exemptions Other than Residential. The following shall be exempt from the provisions of subsection (A) of this section, except insofar as such provisions relate to the reception of noise within Class A EDNAs between the hours of 10:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m.:
F. Other Exemptions. The following shall be exempt from all provisions of subsection (A) of this section:
1. Sounds created by motor vehicles being operated on a public highway when regulated by LMC 10.12.600;
4. Sounds created by warning devices not operating continuously for more than five minutes, or bells, chimes, and carillons;
5. Sounds created by safety and protective devices where noise suppression would defeat the intent of the device or is not economically feasible;
6. Sounds created by emergency equipment and work necessary in the interests of law enforcement or for health, safety, or welfare of the community;
7. Sounds originating from motor vehicle racing events at existing, authorized facilities;
10. Sounds created by watercraft;
11. Sounds created by the discharge of firearms in the course of hunting;
12. Sounds caused by natural phenomena and unamplified human voices;
13. Sounds caused by motor vehicles, licensed or unlicensed, when operated off public highways, except when such sounds are received in Class A EDNAs.
G. Proviso. Nothing in these exemptions is intended to preclude the community development director from requiring installation of the best available noise abatement technology consistent with economic feasibility.
H. For any source of sound which is periodic or impulsive and which is not measured with a sound level meter capable of accurately measuring impulsive sound, the levels established by this section shall be reduced by five dBA. (Ord. 2957 § 31, 2012; Ord. 1386 § 3, 1983; Ord. 1275 § 1, 1982)
A. No person shall operate any motor vehicle or any combination of such vehicles upon any public highway under any conditions of grade, load, acceleration or deceleration in such a manner as to exceed the maximum permissible sound levels of the category of vehicle in Table II, as measured at a distance of 50 feet from the center of the lane of travel within the speed limits specified, under procedures established by the State Commission on Equipment in Chapter 204-56 WAC, Procedures for Measuring Motor Vehicle Sound Levels.
Measured at Fifty Feet
Automobiles, light trucks and all other motor vehicles 10,000 pounds GVWR or less
All motor vehicles over 10,000 pounds GVWR before 1986
All motor vehicles over 10,000 pounds GVWR, 1986 and after
B. No person shall operate any motor vehicle upon any public highway if the vehicle exhaust system exceeds the maximum permissible sound levels of Table III for the category and year of vehicle, as measured at a distance of 20 inches from the exhaust outlet under procedures established by the State Commission of Equipment in Chapter 204-56 WAC, Procedures for Measuring Motor Vehicle Sound Levels.
Measured at Twenty Inches
C. Motor vehicle noise enforcement procedures are as follows:
1. Measurements shall be made with a sound level meter meeting Type 1, S1A, 2 or S2A requirements as specified in the American National Standards Specifications for Sound Level Meters (§ 1.4-1971) as required under measurement procedures established in Chapter 204-56 WAC, Procedures for Measuring Motor Vehicle Sound Levels.
2. Violation of any in-use motor vehicle noise standard set forth in this chapter shall be a traffic infraction, enforced by such authorities and in such manner as violations of Chapter 46.37 RCW.
3. Law enforcement personnel selected to measure vehicle sound levels shall have received training in the techniques of sound measurement and the operation of sound measuring instruments.
4. Any enforcement officer who by use of the initial inspection procedures of Chapter 204-56 WAC suspects that a motor vehicle may be in violation of the standards of this chapter may require the operator to have the vehicle presented for sound level measurement. Measurements of a motor vehicle may be performed at off-road sites to determine compliance with the in-use standards.
5. Any operator who fails to comply with the directive to present the vehicle to a sound level measurement test shall be in violation of this chapter. (Ord. 1290 § 1, 1982; Ord. 1275 § 1, 1982)
A. The Lynnwood police department is authorized to administer and enforce the provisions of this chapter concerning noise disturbances and motor vehicle noise.
B. The Lynnwood community development department is authorized to administer and enforce those provisions of this chapter concerning all other noises created by residential, commercial and industrial sources.
C. All city departments are authorized to assist the police and community development departments in the administration and enforcement of this chapter. (Ord. 2957 § 30, 2012; Ord. 1275 § 1, 1982)
Any person convicted of a violation of LMC 10.12.300 or 10.12.600 is guilty of a misdemeanor; provided, however, that violation of LMC 10.12.300(B)(9), when said violation occurs from a stereo or radio in a motor vehicle as defined in this chapter, shall be a Class 1 civil infraction as defined in RCW 7.80.120. (Ord. 2164 § 10, 1997; Ord. 2141 § 1, 1997; Ord. 1275 § 1, 1982)