Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you can get the whole neighborhood together, you can arrange to boycott the businesses until they get their landlord to close the lot and night
This is probably the right answer. They need to close the lot
Neighborhoods got together and successfully fought off the loud hot rod car “cruising” up and down Van Nuys Blvd in LA in the 1980s. It wasn’t illegal until the city with police enforcement made it so. That may be the case here as well, ie, revving engines and making noise, driving in “donuts” and screeching tires in a parking lot or in residential streets is not necessarily illegal. It’s up to the neighborhoods to work with the county to prohibit that activity. P ok ice enforcement comes next.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you can get the whole neighborhood together, you can arrange to boycott the businesses until they get their landlord to close the lot and night
This is probably the right answer. They need to close the lot
Anonymous wrote:Is there still a "7 on your side" type segment on the news? Your town should have noise ordinances, I don't know why it would not be enforced.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you can get the whole neighborhood together, you can arrange to boycott the businesses until they get their landlord to close the lot and night
This is probably the right answer. They need to close the lot
Neighborhoods got together and successfully fought off the loud hot rod car “cruising” up and down Van Nuys Blvd in LA in the 1980s. It wasn’t illegal until the city with police enforcement made it so. That may be the case here as well, ie, revving engines and making noise, driving in “donuts” and screeching tires in a parking lot or in residential streets is not necessarily illegal. It’s up to the neighborhoods to work with the county to prohibit that activity. P ok ice enforcement comes next.
Anonymous wrote:Boxes of carpet tacks all over the road.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you can get the whole neighborhood together, you can arrange to boycott the businesses until they get their landlord to close the lot and night
This is probably the right answer. They need to close the lot
Anonymous wrote:If you can get the whole neighborhood together, you can arrange to boycott the businesses until they get their landlord to close the lot and night