Someone Disturbing Your Peace?

Tulsa’s residential-use codes were passed to preserve property values and to guard the health of residents and the safety of residential property. Title 24

The following are hereby declared to be nuisances:

All noises, sounds, or vibrations of such a character or duration so as to be unreasonably loud or disturbing to the peace and quiet of persons of ordinary sensibilities, including but not limited to those persons inside a building or structure used in whole or in part as a domicile, residence, or dwelling; NUISANCES AFFECTING PEACE AND SAFETY  SECTION 103.
Tulsa City Ordinances, Title 24, Chapter 1, Section 103 part F


It is important to understand that there are two ordinances with completely different procedures for  music noise in Tulsa.

First, determine where it is coming from- a location or a car.

The car-stereo ordinance applies to vehicles with loud sound systems that can be heard more than 50 feet away, but not in residential neighborhoods where the speed limit is 25 mph or less during the daytime.

The exception was inserted in the ordinance to appease ice-cream vendors. But driving a boom-car through residential areas after nightfall is still against the law and can bring a fine of as much as $200.

Typically, when the officer is unaware of previous offenses by the driver, the citation he issues has a $120 preset fine. If he is familiar with the driver’s music-sharing habit, he can book the citation to court, where a judge can assess the $200 fine plus court costs, City Prosecutor Bob Garner said.  Officers write 10 to 20 “boom-car” citations per week, but mostly out on the major streets.

  • LOCATION- (Loud neighbors jamming in the garage or playing the stereo too loudly) must be stopped while in progress. Call the department’s non-emergency number,  918 596-9222 and press 1 to have an officer sent to your location.)  Because of a previous court ruling, “an officer’s peace cannot be disturbed so an officer can’t just drive by and write a citation based on hearing loud music. You’ll will need to agree  up front with the dispatcher that you “will file” a complaint and be willing to testify  in Municipal Court that your peace has been disturbed. The officer will have you  sign which will then allow him to serve the offender.
  • LOUD CAR STEREOS- This is the one called the  “boom-box” ordinance (This is when overly amplified sound from vehicles can be heard at a distance of 50 feet from the source. The officer can stop the motorist and issue him a citation, listing himself as the witness, not the complaintant.
  • If the loud-music cars are  a constant thing, the dispatcher needs to know so he can assign a car out there.
  • If it was just one car just one time, it might not be possible to assign a unit, But a good description of the car, and its occupants and tag number, might be helpful  for the officers who normally patrol that area.

Cities are getting tougher on “audio trespass.” Cleveland, Ohio, passed an ordinance prohibiting playing car stereos or radios loud enough to be heard plainly by anyone outside the car. Anyone violating the chapter is guilty of a misdemeanor and is fined $75 on the first offense, and the stereo equipment can be seized by police.

Urge federal boom-car laws: Citizens Against Audio Trespass maintains a Web site for signing a petition urging Congress “to pass tougher laws regarding the sale, distribution and use of high-decibel amplifiers, linears, speakers” www.petitiononline.com/nobooms/petition.html .

Read more from Tulsa World:  here and  here and  here

 

Check City Ordinances

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