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Pickleball Players Peeve New Jersey Neighborhood With Noisy Nuisance

Pickleball Players Peeve New Jersey Neighborhood With Noisy Nuisance
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Noise complaints prompt closures at pickleball courts

Noise complaints prompt closures at pickleball courts Some residents of Ridgewood, New Jersey, have complained about the noise from pickleball courts. RIDGEWOOD, N.J. - A popping sound echoing through the morning stillness has pitted a troop of senior-citizen athletes against some small but motivated number of noise-conscious neighbors, placing the village s mayor and council in the position notice we spared you from reading us call this a pickle of peacemaker. Pickleball players vs. neighbors, Ridgewood Mayor Susan Knudsen said. Responding to repeated noise complaints, Knudsen padlocked the Bergen County village s four brand-new pickleball courts for three months from December through February, during the pandemic winter.

Ridgewood NJ pickleball hours limited through October

RIDGEWOOD Pickleballers will remain on limited play hours through Oct. 17, the Village Council voted Wednesday. The 60-day experiment approved in March restricted hours for the paddle sport at Glen School and Bellair tennis courts, where neighbors had complained about noise. It was due to expire Aug. 7. Pickleball play will continue to be limited to 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday, and from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday. No pickleball will be allowed Monday and Friday. Tennis play can continue from 8 a.m. to dark Sunday through Saturday. The ordinance calls the continuation of limited hours a compromise for the competing interest of both the pickleball players and the neighbors.

Anti-Asian-hate rally in Ridgewood NJ draws supporters, hecklers

RIDGEWOOD  A rally against anti-Asian racism attracted hundreds of supporters on Saturday but turned tense when a protester challenged the right of the village s white mayor to speak.  The Ridgewood Chinese American Association organized the gathering at Van Neste Square Memorial Park after a series of violent attacks against Asian Americans across the U.S. in recent months. The group wanted to show the world that hate has no place in our community, according to its Facebook page.   The first Asian Americans came 250 years ago, and 250 years later, many of us have succeeded; however, we still suffer from racism, aggression, xenophobia and hate every single day, co-organizer Julia Ding told the crowd. There is no more time to wait, not even weeks to waste. Minding our own business is simply no longer acceptable.  

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