Aircraft operations and noise in Rhode Island are governed almost exclusively by the Federal Aviation Administration. The Rhode Island Airport Corporation operates state airports but cannot regulate flight paths, altitudes, or in-air noise emissions, which fall under exclusive federal jurisdiction.
Under the federal Airline Deregulation Act and FAA authority over navigable airspace, neither Rhode Island nor its municipalities may regulate aircraft noise while planes are airborne. The Rhode Island Airport Corporation (RIAC), a quasi-public state entity created in 1992, operates T.F. Green International and general aviation airports. RIAC manages voluntary noise abatement programs, FAA-approved Part 150 noise compatibility plans, sound insulation, and land-use buffers. Local noise ordinances cannot apply to overflights. Ground-based airport activity may be subject to limited state and federal review, but in-flight noise complaints are routed to the FAA and RIAC for monitoring and voluntary mitigation only.
Local aircraft noise ordinances are unenforceable against airborne flights. Complaints submitted to RIAC trigger monitoring and outreach but cannot result in fines against pilots or operators.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
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