Anonymous wrote:You are a knucklehead it is most likely Cars and Coffee. They are organized and have permission from owner. They usually move around. We had them in Potomac shopping center for awhile Sunday morning at 8 am.
The owner liked it as everyone met had coffee and breakfast and broke up around 10am before a lot of customers came.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Boxes of carpet tacks all over the road.
This is OP - that's exactly what I thought as well!
Anonymous wrote:Boxes of carpet tacks all over the road.
Anonymous wrote:My neighborhood, which is largely residential and generally quiet, has a small shopping center with an oversized parking lot on its edge. On the weekends, large groups of cars (maybe 60) have started to meet in this parking lot (usually empty after 8pm), rev their engines, blast music and basically hold the neighborhood hostage to noise. The shopping center owner has been notified but can't seem to do anything about it. The police are called every weekend and they eventually show up but do nothing (not even giving out citations for the noise).
I live several blocks away and I can hear the cars inside my house with the tv on. I can't imagine what it's like for the folks who live on the street near the shopping center.
If the owner and the policy won't or can't do anything, is there any other recourse?
(I'm really looking for concrete strategies, please.)
Anonymous wrote:Research the noise laws in your jurisdiction (don't rely on people here telling you what they say; they vary and you need to read the law itself). A property owner can be liable for excessive noise from their property. Write to the shopping center owner at every opportunity, and if the law supports you, threaten legal action. The owner could, for instance, set up blockades at the entrances to the lot, so saying that the owner is powerless is false. If a group of random people showed up on your lawn and started having loud parties there every weekend, you could do something about it, and so can the shopping center owner.