[Index] [Search] [Download] [Related Items] [Help]
NOISE CONTROL REGULATIONS (NO. 18 OF 1988)
AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL TERRITORY
NOISE
CONTROL REGULATIONS
EXPLANATORY STATEMENT
No.
18 of 1988
Section 50 of the Noise Control Ordinance 1988 (“the
Ordinance”) provides that the Minister may make Regulations, not
inconsistent with the Ordinance, prescribing all matters required or permitted
by the Ordinance to be prescribed or necessary or convenient to be prescribed
for carrying out or giving effect to the Ordinance. In particular, the Minister
may make Regulations relating to the provision of hearing protectors by
employers.
The Noise Control Regulations (“the
Regulations”) prescribe the levels of noise that can be emitted from
premises at certain times for the purpose of determining whether any emission is
“excessive” under the Ordinance. The Regulations also prescribe
certain articles, the permissible noise levels those articles can emit and the
kind of labels that must be attached to them for the purposes of restricting
their sale under the Ordinance. In addition, the Regulations prescribe
conditions for the type of hearing protectors that are to be used in industry,
the content of the information that employers are obliged to give employees, and
the records that employers must keep.
Regulation 1 provides that
the Regulations may be cited as the Noise Control
Regulations.
Regulation 2 deals with
interpretation.
Regulation 3 prescribes what is “excessive
noise” in respect of premises for the purposes of the definition of
excessive noise in the Ordinance. Between 7 am and 10 pm, people may make
5 decibels more noise than the amount of noise that is already reaching their
property. (This is approximately equivalent to twice the amount of noise that
is reaching their property). Between 10 pm and 7 am they may make noise
equivalent to the background noise.
Regulation 4 and Schedule 1
prescribe 75 decibels as the threshold level for lawnmowers for the purpose of
the definition of “excessive noise” in subsection 5 (1) of the
Ordinance.
Regulations 5 and 6 and Schedules 1 and 2 prescribe
lawnmowers with motors of 8.5 kilowatt power or less for the purposes of
prohibiting their sale, under section 9 of the Ordinance, if they emit noise in
excess of 75 decibels.
Regulation 5 and Schedule 1 also prescribe
lawnmowers, air conditioners, pavement breakers and mobile air compressors as
articles which cannot be sold without a prescribed label under section 10 of the
Ordinance.
However, Schedule 1 makes these prescribed conditions for
articles effective after 1 December 1988. This gives manufacturers a
transitional period so they have sufficient time to make any necessary changes
to the manufacture of these articles.
Regulation 7 and Schedule 2
prescribe the information to be specified on labels for the purpose of section
10 of the Ordinance. All labels must specify the sound level of the article and
, for pavement breakers and mobile air compressors, the size of the label is
prescribed. This regulation also provides that all labels shall be of metal and
securely attached.
Regulation 8 prescribes requirements for
hearing protectors for the purposes of section 36 of the Ordinance. Hearing
protectors are to be supplied free of charge to each employee. A hearing
protector must fit the employee correctly and be designed so that wearing it is
not prejudicial to the wearer’s health. A hearing protector designed for
use outside the ear cannot be worn after use by another person unless it has
been disinfected. An employer must make provision for a system of communication
if the wearing of hearing protectors impedes communication to such an extent
that the safety of employees is at risk.
Regulation 9 prescribes
that the information which must be given to employees under section 39 of the
Ordinance is information relating to the effects and symptoms of noise exposure,
the means of reducing noise exposure, the use and maintenance of hearing
protectors, and the obligations of employees under the Ordinance and the
Regulations.
Regulation 10 prescribes the sign numbered A4.3 in
table A4 in Australian Standard 1319-1983, for the purposes of section 39 of the
Ordinance.
Regulation 11 prescribes the records which must be kept
and the period of their retention for the purposes of section 41 of the
Ordinance. When a noise level is determined, the employer must record the name,
address and qualifications of the person who made the determination, the time,
date and place of the test and the noise level determined. The records must be
retained for 10 years after the determination is made. The same information
must be recorded when an audiometric test is carried out together with the
result and diagnosis of the test, and these records must be retained for 10
years after the employment of the employee has been
terminated.
Issued by Authority of the Minister of State
for the Arts and Territories