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Feb 22 at 5:14 vote accept Allure
Feb 20 at 10:32 answer added Graham timeline score: 2
Feb 20 at 2:37 comment added Allure @Mazura I did a quick Google search for "Lion dance condominum" and here's one of the results I reached: leonefabre.blogspot.com/2009/01/… To quote, "Today - Tuesday January 27 2009 - we had the Lion Dance performance at The Jade Condo where we live". So it looks very possible.
Feb 20 at 2:33 comment added Allure @MonkeyZeus presumably cultural events have more legal protections (since they're an expression of culture, which is a protected characteristic).
Feb 19 at 20:41 comment added Mazura "some condominiums engage a troupe" - that's unlikely to be 'permitted'. One through three is usually a warning. Fourth time the cops show up that night; people start going to jail. But the stuff they have a permit for doing in the middle of the street? Good luck. And this while they're doing that? If the operator just puts you on hold until tomorrow, it's a non-issue. We'll get right on it.
Feb 19 at 19:33 comment added Milwrdfan In some jurisdictions an event can apply for a noise variance permit, which allows the organizer (within specific bounds set out by the permit) to exceed typical legal noise limits, whether by volume or time-of-day.
Feb 19 at 18:13 comment added MonkeyZeus Are noisy non-cultural events a non-issue?
Feb 19 at 15:55 comment added Barmar Noise ordinances generally have time-of-day variations -- you can't be as noisy late at night (when most people are trying to sleep) than during the day or early evening. So unless the party goes on past 11pm, it will likely be OK.
Feb 19 at 11:24 history became hot network question
Feb 19 at 6:44 comment added Lag The "peace" in "breach of the peace" is the absence of disorder, not the absence of noise.
Feb 19 at 5:34 answer added o.m. timeline score: 7
Feb 19 at 3:54 answer added Jen timeline score: 3
Feb 19 at 3:23 history asked Allure CC BY-SA 4.0