Skip to main content
CityRuleLookup
πŸ”Š Noise Ordinances/Industrial Noise

Industrial Noise: Quincy vs Wellesley

How do industrial noise rules compare between Quincy, MA and Wellesley, MA?

Quincy and Wellesley have similar restriction levels.

Quincy, MA

Norfolk County

Heavy Restrictions

Massachusetts regulates industrial and commercial noise statewide through the Department of Environmental Protection under the Air Pollution Control regulations, prohibiting noise that creates a condition of air pollution.

View full Quincy rules β†’

Wellesley, MA

Norfolk County

Heavy Restrictions

Massachusetts regulates industrial and commercial noise statewide through the Department of Environmental Protection under the Air Pollution Control regulations, prohibiting noise that creates a condition of air pollution.

View full Wellesley rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactQuincyWellesley
Regulation310 CMR 7.10310 CMR 7.10
Threshold10 dBA above ambient10 dBA above ambient
AuthorityMassDEP statewideMassDEP statewide
Max Penalty$25,000 per day$25,000 per day

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Quincy FAQ

Does the MassDEP noise rule apply to all businesses?

Yes, 310 CMR 7.10 applies statewide to all stationary commercial and industrial sources, regardless of whether the local municipality has its own noise ordinance.

How is ambient sound measured under DEP Policy 90-001?

Ambient is the L90 level measured at the property line or nearest inhabited residence with the source off; the source must not exceed ambient by more than 10 dBA.

Can a city set stricter industrial noise rules?

Cities may add stricter rules but cannot override the DEP minimum standard, which applies as a statewide floor for all industrial sources.

Wellesley FAQ

Does the MassDEP noise rule apply to all businesses?

Yes, 310 CMR 7.10 applies statewide to all stationary commercial and industrial sources, regardless of whether the local municipality has its own noise ordinance.

How is ambient sound measured under DEP Policy 90-001?

Ambient is the L90 level measured at the property line or nearest inhabited residence with the source off; the source must not exceed ambient by more than 10 dBA.

Can a city set stricter industrial noise rules?

Cities may add stricter rules but cannot override the DEP minimum standard, which applies as a statewide floor for all industrial sources.

Want to add a third city?

Use our full comparison tool to compare up to three cities.

Open Comparison Tool