Plane noise has residents buzzing
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Eron Ben-Yehuda
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- Residents living by the beach are fed up with the
noise from airplanes flying advertising banners along the coast and, with
summer just around the corner, they worrythe problem will only get worse.
“You’re so mad you want to pull out your gun and blow them out of the
sky,” resident Charlotte Melson said.
She hears the buzzing overhead even with the windows and doors shut in
her home in the 200 block of Chicago Avenue. Even carrying on
conversations over the phone can be difficult.
“It’s impossible to hear yourself talk,” she said.
On sunny weekends, resident Don McGee notices as many as 20 planes that
seem intent on destroying his peace of mind.
McGee lives in the Huntington Shorecliff Mobile Home Park on the 20700
block of Beach Boulevard.”I’m a little befuddled as to just how many is
too many and how much is too much,” he said. “And is anyone at this point
going to do anything to put a screeching halt to this insanity?”
City officials look up at the sky with their hands tied.
“We complain about it also,” said Steve Seim, the city’s chief lifeguard.
As long as the planes comply with Federal Aviation Administration
regulations, there’s nothing that can be done, Huntington Beach Police
Lt. Chuck Thomas said.
The city has no proof the planes are breaking the rules, wrote Mayor Dave
Garofalo in a letter to Melson dated March 20.
When they pass over the ocean, planes can’t fly below 500 feet, FAA
spokeswoman Kirsti Dunn said. When they circle back over the beach and
nearby homes for another pass, they have to stay 2,000 feet above ground
and 1,000 feet above the tallest building, she said.
As far as how many can be out there and how many times they can fly over
a specific area, there are no limits, she said. Neither the city nor the
FAA keep records of flight frequency.
The owner of an aerial advertising company says he will continue to fly
with his banners despite the complaints.
“Our intention is not to bother people,” said Robert Scott, owner of
Compton-based Sky Ads. “It’s to get the messages out.”
His business has covered the coast from Los Angeles to San Diego for the
past 10 years, he said. During the summer, the busiest time because of
the warm weather and beach events, as many as 40 ads are flown daily
across the city’s coastline, Scott said, and not all by his company. How
many times each ad passes beachgoers depends on what the customer wants,
he said.
Melson respects Scott’s right to do business over the water but wonders
why the planes have to circle back over land.
“Just go up and down the beach,” she said. “Then they’re going to see
you.”
But Scott points out that turning around over land lets beach goers see
the sign in both directions. If he switched back over the ocean, the
banner would be hidden half the time, he said.
McGee said he’s tired of protesting. He simply wants the “flying leaf
blowers” to go away.
“In my dictionary under inconsiderate, it says, ‘See evil,”’ he said.
“And under evil, it says, ‘See noise.’ And under noise, you guessed it,
it says, ‘See aerial advertising.”’
If people have complaints, they can call the FAA’s local office in Long
Beach at (562) 420-1755.
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