Constant fireworks frazzle nerves in U.S. city that never sleeps
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[June 19, 2020]
By Barbara Goldberg
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Complaints are
skyrocketing about thundering fireworks exploding over otherwise quiet
U.S. neighborhoods, fraying nerves already frazzled by COVID-19 lockdown
restrictions.
Even in the city that never sleeps, weary New Yorkers in the first half
of June lodged a one-hundredfold increase in complaints compared to the
year-ago period, of explosions that begin before sundown and rattle
windows into the morning. The city's 311 hotline received 2,492
fireworks complaints from June 1-16, up from just 25 in the same period
in 2019.
The pyrotechnics occur almost nightly across the five boroughs of New
York, once the U.S. epicenter of coronavirus infections, which recently
achieved the nation's lowest rate of virus spread.
"We have been terrorized by the fireworks for weeks now," said Tanya
Bonner, a government policy consultant in her 40s who lives in upper
Manhattan, where Columbia University's athletics complex had been
converted into a COVID-19 field hospital.
"It is very bad up here. This area also has many essential workers - and
they need rest."
Bonner, who suffers from diabetes, high blood pressure and asthma and
must leave her apartment windows open, said she can sleep only by
turning her television volume "way up" even though "the fireworks happen
so close to my window that it is impossible to drown it out."
To get some shuteye, another upper Manhattan resident said she closes
all windows and muffles the blasts by turning on a noisy air
conditioner, a fan, a white noise machine and screwing in some
tight-fitting earplugs.
"Fireworks are illegal in New York City," New York Police Detective
Sophia Mason responded in an email. But neighboring New Jersey legalized
some fireworks in 2017.
From Jan. 1 through June 14, the New York Police Department has seized
fireworks on 26 occasions, made eight arrests, issued 22 criminal court
summonses, and responded to 2 fireworks-related injuries, Mason said.
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Illegal fireworks illuminate the sky over the skyline of the
Brooklyn borough of New York City, New York, U.S., June 18, 2020.
Picture taken June 18, 2020. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson
In Massachusetts, which has the country's strictest prohibitions
against fireworks, police blamed a spike in complaints in Boston and
other municipalities on a stretch of warmer weather after months of
stay-at-home orders.
"It's just been months now of young people being inside, being
bored," said Lieutenant Sean Murtha of the Worcester Police
Department, roughly 47 miles (76 km) west of Boston.
"It's been a stressful time for everybody, an oppressive time," said
Murtha, who noted recent reports of gunshots that turned out to be
fireworks were double the five-year average, totaling 27 in May, the
most recent data available.
In upstate New York, Syracuse residents said they were being pushed
to the brink by the pyrotechnics and more than 530 have signed a
petition demanding Mayor Ben Walsh "crack down on constant
fireworks" that have been booming since May.
"These are not merely a nuisance, but extremely traumatic for
service members with PTSD," Scott Upham Jr., a Syracuse resident who
started the petition, said on Change.org.
Others said the noise was particularly bothersome for people with
autism and family pets and worried that the fireworks create a fire
hazard.
Mayor Walsh did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
(Additional reporting by Aleksandra Michalska; Editing by Richard
Chang)
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