New Westminster British Columbia - As a longtime resident in New West, here is my take about train
noise.
Several freight railways operate in New West, the Canadian National (CN), the Canadian Pacific (CP), the Burlington
Northern and Santa Fe (BNSF), the Southern Railway of British Columbia (SR), the Southern Railway of Vancouver Island
(SRY) and the Englewood Railway (ER).
According to the city, New West is committed to achieve city-wide cessation at all public train rail crossings, 22 of
them, of which 12 are on the mainland, and 10 in Queensborough, through negotiations with the rail companies, various
government agencies, and Transport Canada, subject to certain required upgrades, which take time and more negotiations
while still train blasting sounds awaken residents in the early morning hours.
Air, road, and railway traffic are the three major sources of traffic noise during day, nighttime, and early a.m.
sleeping hours.
In particular, long freight trains passing through public railway train crossings sounding their horns for 15 to 25
seconds in a pattern of two long sounds, one short and one long blast, delivering a loud sound noise between
96-120 decibels (loudness of sound is measured in dB when 85 db of a sound can cause hearing damage).
This noise, during a.m. hours, when people are in light or deep stage sleep, can cause not only annoyance but also
distress and adverse health and physiological reactions in large parts of the population, according to environmental
noise research scientists.
Furthermore, poor quality sleep over a long period of time is linked with high blood pressure, heart disease, weight
gain, type 2 diabetes, and certain types of cancer.
The World Health Organization (WHO) has guidelines for the regulation on the effects of environmental noise on sleep
as it is critical to our health to get sufficient undisturbed sleep, and is important to feel good and perform well in
our personal, business, and public activities.
As a recent commenter asked, really, is all that blasting horn sound at 03:00 necessary?
"Isn't there a more modern way to deal with this? A more quiet way? A silent way?"
Indeed, there is a quiet way, and a way also to establish certain public train crossing quiet zones.
How about replacing the blasting sound of the train horn with a "bell," which can serve the same purpose as
it is used by the locomotive engines in West Vancouver when passing through Dundarave and Ambleside
neighbourhoods.
Until New West resolves the train noise for its residents while negotiating with the rail companies, government
agencies, and Canada Transport before a large part of the New West population is impaired with adverse health and
physiological chronic disabilities?
Christos Theodorakakis.
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provisions in Section 29 of the
Canadian Copyright Modernization Act.