Evidence Of The Widespread Contempt For Others
30,000 complaints signal an end to suburban tolerance
'Whatever happened to considerate neighbours?' by Jessica Lawrence
The Sunday Mail, April 18, 2004
We are fast becoming a nation of inconsiderate neighbours. Raging parties, drunken youths, barking dogs and noisy air conditioners are raising the hackles of Queensland residents.
So if you've suspected your neighbours are becoming a little less considerate, you'd be right.
Experts say residents are becoming so rude that our neighbourhoods are at risk of turning into war zones.
The Sunday Mail can reveal fed-up residents made almost 30,000 complaints about their neighbours to Brisbane City Council from January, 2002 to December, 2003.
Noisy and wandering animals, loud stereos, pool pumps and noisy air conditioners make up the bulk of complaints.
Residential construction work also featured.
Etiquette-and-manners expert June Dally-Watkins said humans were becoming more "animalistic".
"We're not as considerate as we used to be," Ms Dally Watkins said. "Once upon a time, we were brought up to be considerate neighbours — but we have since become the 'me generation'.
"Being a bad neighbour creates tension and this sort of behaviour, in the big picture, starts wars. Today, we risk having neighbourhoods at war."
Leigh Park, a spokeswoman for a community group in Brisbane, the Walter Taylor South Action Group, said renovation noise was a "big problem" in the suburbs.
"Some residents are having to put up with seven houses being renovated in their street at the one time," Ms Park said. "It's something which our members are complaining about all the time. It's becoming a huge issue."
The Sunday Mail has collected a litany of neighbourhood complaints from angry
residents across many Brisbane-area suburbs.
They include:
- A forty-something couple at Albany Creek with kids of 10 and eight, who took to walking around naked, forcing their neighbours to keep their curtains closed;
- A man at Paddington who regularly parades on his deck wearing nothing but his underwear in the full view of his neighbours who are usually hosting dinner parties at the time;
- A Springwood family living next to an unofficial childcare centre who had pieces of food regularly thrown into their family swimming pool;
- Another Brisbane family suffered months of loud music, beer bottles thrown in their yard, late night/early morning nuisance phone calls, hysterical screaming, "mooning", stones over the fence into their pool, eggs thrown at their letterbox and cigarette butts over the fence;
- A resident in Brisbane's southern suburbs who decided to start renovating with a nail gun and compressor at 7am on Easter Sunday last year;
- A group of drunken young men arrived at their Paddington home at 3am to begin three hours of screaming obscenities, loud banging with planks of wood and general drunken behaviour, all in their front yard and under the windows of their immediate neighbours;
- A Paddington family had their frog pond poisoned and native frogs killed by neighbours annoyed by the croaking noise the frogs sometimes made;
- A Bardon family was forced to have security cameras put up in the yard after neighbours started throwing broken glass into their pool. Their neighbours also slashed the tyres of friends' cars parked outside their house while they were having a dinner party;
- A Brisbane woman was forced to hose away vomit after her neighbours decided to embark on a drunken rampage on the footpath;
- And a resident on the Sunshine Coast decided to play Destiny Child's Say My Name 34 times from 9pm until llpm on a Tuesday.
A spokeswoman for Brisbane City Council urged residents to be considerate and discuss issues with their neighbours before reaching for the phone to lodge a formal complaint.
"Council ,officers are able to issue on-the-spot fines of $150 for noise infringements. In the case of noise complaints, officers may also conduct noise monitoring from the complainant's residence."