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FOOD- THE DISH- Sound bites: Have Belmont fooderies gotten too noisy?


Published June 14, 2007 in issue 0624 of the Hook
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La Taza owner Melissa Easter says that neighbors complaining about the music at her Belmont restaurant are "getting worked up over something that really isn't a big deal."
PHOTO BY WILL WALKER

Recently, Dish caught wind of a spat brewing over the live music from La Taza and Saxx Jazz Club that has been riding the wind in downtown Belmont. 

 

Apparently, some neighbors have complained that outdoor music from the two venues has been disturbing their once-tranquil precincts. Already on edge over the Pavilion noise, which the neighborhood has been complaining about ever since the white sails were unfurled across the Belmont bridge, the Belmonters have a new reason to be riled as the neighborhood's success at attracting eateries is causing some growing pains.  

While neighbors says they hope to resolve the issue among themselves, City Councilors Kevin Lynch, Dave Norris, and Julian Taliaferro have already weighed in, promising to help resolve the issue if it should become a problem. In fact, Lynch informed neighbors that he believes the City noise ordinance could be changed if necessary.

"I don't think Downtown Belmont is a good place for a raucous band or crowd," says Lynch. 

If La Taza cannot work things out with the neighbors, Lynch suggests there could be a separate designation within the noise ordinance for a Downtown Belmont district, just like there is for the Downtown business district, but warns that such legislative solutions tend not to satisfy everyone.

"I believe it would be much easier for all concerned for La Taza to simply act more neighborly," says Lynch. On the other hand, some folks in the neighborhood say the residents should be held to the same standard.    

"All of this is just a chain of events that started with the revamping of the Pavilion and the types of noisy bands they now are bringing in," says Belmont resident Allison Ruffner, who worries Belmont is becoming a "party hood." Ruffner says "juke joints" like Saxx belong "out in fields down by the river."

"Places like La Taza just wanted to jump onto the bandwagon, literally," says Ruffner. "This has raised the noise levels considerably."

While La Taza owner Melissa Easter admits that several shows may have been too loud ("I would have been annoyed, too," she says), she thinks that the complainers may be exaggerating the problem.

"I think they're getting worked up over something that really isn't a big deal," she says, pointing out that there's no music on week days, and that music ends at 9:30pm on weekends. In addition, she says she really doesn't have a lot of music lined up, and of the acts she has scheduled, people in the neighborhood have by and large "enjoyed the music from their front porches." Still, she says she'll be writing a letter to the neighbors to address their concerns. 

Belmont resident and realtor John Sweet says that Easter has shown "nothing but good faith in this discussion," and expects La Taza, Saxx, and the neighborhood to work things out peaceably.

One Belmont resident pointed out that although the buildings may be commercial, their conversion to music venues for outdoor concerts is painfully novel.

"The real problem is the sort of environment you create when you start bringing in amplified bands, and having live concerts and night clubs abutting old residential neighborhoods," says Ruffner. "Do you really think someone wants a concert in their backyard every weekend, as well as the loud voices, screeching cars, and other associated noise? Because that's what is starting to go on increasingly."

While Sweet welcomes the spirited discussion over the music at La Taza and Saxx, he says the real noise problem is still coming from the Pavilion. In fact, Sweet says the neighborhood feels the noise problem is even worse than it was last year, when they were told the completed Transit Center would help solve the problem. 

"They put us off last year forever promising that the Transit Center would make the noise better," he says, "but it just bounces it around. I love the Pavilion, but I wouldn't live on the 600 block of Hinton avenue if you gave me the house for free."

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Comments

                     
John Trippel6/17/2007 3:37:27 PM

Nothing wrong with a little livelyness, especially if it ends early and it only happens once in a while in an ares of town that could use a little more livelyness. I live down the street from Belmont, the sound of the live band didn't carry that far. The one worrysome item seemed to me to be the parking for the extra car traffic.

Moped H8R6/20/2007 12:03:11 AM

Ban the mopeds and junk cars!

Keep the music.

Get all the unlicensed drivers off the road. Just sit there at the stop sign near MAS/La Taza and pop 'em all for running the stop sign.

Summarily conduct full body cavity searches on all the hoodlums that speed through, and confiscate their weed.

Wow what a bunch of snoozer neighbors can't handle music at 9:00 PM on a Saturday. Move to Forest Lakes or Westminster Canterbury, where "It's fun to eat at 4:30 PM" [sing to tune of YMCA]

Odyssey 19987/9/2007 9:32:25 AM

Saxx Club has become out of control over the noise as they now play loud till 2:30 am (their closure is supposed to be 1:30 am.) Snoozy neighbors..yes at that time. When they have venues now as 7/7/07 with the battle of the bands, young people parked on Douglas Ave and continued going back to their cars drinking..becoming noisy until a fight broke out in the street@2 am taking the fight into resident's yards. This has become typical for customers of Saxx. Even a contest of gospel music had arguments starting on Douglas over who won. Mixing this type of venue with residential and it will fail. Respect residents? Far from it.

de6/3/2008 9:36:53 PM

RESPECT IS SOMETHING THAT CHARLOTTESAVILLE IS SHORT ON. THE PLANNING COMISSION AND THE CITY COUNCIL SHOLD HAVE HAD THE INSIGHT TO SEE THIS CONGESTION COMING. IT IS TRUE THAT THE NOISE IN A RESIDENTIAL AREA IS UNCALLED FOR BUT THE CITY IS ONLY LOOKING THE DOLLARS SIGNS. WITH THE COST OF LIVING AS HIGH AS IT IS HERE, NO TAX PAYING RESIDENT SHOULD HAVE TO BE DISTURBED IN THE MIDDLE OF THE NIGHT FOR ANY REASON. UNTIL THE RESIDENTS OF BELMONT PULL TOGETHER OR UNTIL SOMEONE GOES THE LEGAL ROUTE NOTHING WILL EVER BE RESLOVED.NO ONE SHOULD HAVE TO RUSH HOME FROM WORK TO FIND A PARKING PLACE IN FRONT OF THEIR HOME HOW INCONSIDERATE AND IT'S ONLY GOING TO GET WORSE. RESPECT WENT OUT THE WINDOW IN THE 80'S AND THAT'S A FACT. WITH ALL THE BRILLIANT MINDS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA CITY COUNCIL HAD TO CALL IN PEOPLE FOR OUT OF STATE AND TO VISIT EUROPE IN ORDER TO DEVELOPE A WHITE ELEPHANT FOR AN OUT DOOR THEATER. DOES THIS MAKE SENSE? WHY CAN'T THESE RESTAURANTS/LOUNGE BE RELOCATED TO AN ISOLATED PLACE THAT IS SUITABLE FOR WHAT THEIR BUSINESS IS WHERE THEY CAN SCREEM AND YELL AND FIGH AND GUN THEIR ENGINES AND IT WON'T BOTHER ANYONE THAT IS TRYING TO SLEEP OR HAVE A RELAXING EVENING AT HOME WITH THEIR FAMILY OR DOES THIS MAKE TOO MUCH SENSE FOR TODAY'S WORLD?

6/5/2008 9:38:20 PM

IT IS NOT THESE RESTAURANTS/LOUNGE TO COMPLAIN ABOUT IT IS OUR CITY COUNCIL, PLANNING COMMISSION, AND THE WASTE OF THE TAX PAYER'S MONEY. WHEN WILL THE RESIDENTS WAKE UP TO REALITY AND BE ABLE TO SEE THAT CHARLOTTESVILLE IS NOT THE TOWN THAT IT USE TO BE ? WE USE TO HAVE AN ADORABLE LITTLE TOWN WITH WONDERFUL PLACES TO SHOP SUCH AS TOWN AND COUNTRY, WILLEY'S, C.H. WILLIAMS, THE COLANADE, THE STYLE SHOP, BROWNS GIFTS, KELLER AND GEORGE, KELLER SHOE STORE,I. WALTERS, LEGGETTS, SEARS, TIMBERLAKE'S DRUG, FITCH'S DRUG, REXAL DRUG , SEAFOOD GRILL, CANDY KITCHEN,BIBB'S FISH MARKET AND THIS IS JUST A FEW THAT WERE ALL DOWN TOWN.WE DIDN'T NEED OUTSIDERS MESSING IN OUR AFFAIRS THEN AND WE DON'T KNOW. WE WELCOME CONSTRUCTIVE INCOURAGEMENT BUT NOT WHAT CHARLOTTESVILLE IS HAVING TO CONTEND WITH AT PRESENT TIME. THAT'S NOT FAIR FOR THE TAX PAYER.THEREFORE, ALL THIS NOISE IN THE MIDDLE OF THE NIGHT AND RUNNING TO GET YOUR OWN PARKING PLACE AND FIGHTS CAN BE STOPPED IF ENFORCED. MY SUGGESTION IS TO WRITE YOUR CONGRESSMAN, AND SOMEONE IN RICHMOND WILL SOON LISTEN AS OUR TOWN IS BEING DESTROYED. DE

Belmonter7/19/2008 1:58:20 PM

I love the part that says: "I don't think Downtown Belmont is a good place for a raucous band or crowd," says Lynch."

Hell, I thought thats what Belmont was founded on?? I have a feeling the people that are complaining are not the original Belmonters but the damn yuppies who decided in the past 10 years that Belmont was "the place to be" Yeah if I was selling my house that would be great but since I rent and my rent keeps going up as more and more people want to live here, not so great!

But hey as long as we're at it could someone do something about all those noisy kids playing baseball over at Quarry park??? They really get on my nerves when i try and sleep in on the weekends! LOL


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