Quiet hours in St. Clair Shores, MI β also called the noise ordinance, nighttime noise rules, or residential quiet time β define the hours during which excessive noise is prohibited.
Macomb County, MI does not set residential quiet hours. Under the Michigan Zoning Enabling Act (MCL 125.3101 et seq.) and Michigan's home rule structure, noise regulation is delegated to the 27 cities, villages, and townships in Macomb County. The state criminal fallback is MCL 750.170 (disturbing the peace), a 90-day misdemeanor. Sterling Heights City Code Chapter 22 typically prohibits unreasonable noise from 10:00 p.m. to 7:00 a.m., and Warren City Code Chapter 26 sets similar quiet hours. Industrial sound is regulated by EGLE under Part 18 of NREPA. Call your city or township police non-emergency line - not the County - for residential noise complaints.
Macomb County operates under a county executive form of government but does not adopt residential nuisance ordinances. Under the Michigan Zoning Enabling Act (MCL 125.3101 et seq.), zoning and nuisance authority is delegated to cities, villages, and townships - not counties. The Macomb County Sheriff's Office (586-469-5151) supports local police on county roads and unincorporated areas, but the County's 27 municipalities (Sterling Heights, Warren, Clinton Township, Macomb Township, Shelby Township, Chesterfield Township, Roseville, St. Clair Shores, Eastpointe, Fraser, Mount Clemens, Utica, New Baltimore, Romeo, Armada, Richmond, Memphis, Center Line, Harrison Township, Ray Township, Washington Township, Bruce Township, Lenox Township, Ray Township, etc.) each set their own noise rules. The statewide criminal fallback is MCL 750.170 (Michigan Penal Code), which makes 'disturbing the public peace and quiet' a misdemeanor punishable by up to 90 days and a $100 fine. Sterling Heights Code of Ordinances Chapter 22 (Noise) prohibits loud, raucous, or unreasonable noise that disturbs persons of ordinary sensibilities, with explicit quiet hours typically running 10 p.m. to 7 a.m. Warren City Code Chapter 26 sets a substantively similar standard. Industrial and commercial stationary sources are regulated by EGLE (Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy) under Part 18 of the Natural Resources and Environmental Protection Act (NREPA). Construction noise, leaf blowers, barking dogs, and motor vehicle noise are addressed in each municipality's separate ordinances or in Michigan Vehicle Code MCL 257.707c (motor vehicle noise limits).
Violations of MCL 750.170 (disturbing the peace) are misdemeanors prosecuted in the local district court, with up to 90 days in jail and a $100 fine. Local noise ordinance violations are civil infractions or misdemeanors set by each city or township; Sterling Heights and Warren both authorize fines under their charter and the Home Rule City Act (MCL 117.4i), with typical first-offense penalties of $100-$500 and escalating fines for repeat violations. Industrial sources cited under EGLE Part 18 of NREPA can face administrative penalties and abatement orders. Residential complaints go to the Sterling Heights Police (586-446-2800) or Warren Police (586-574-4800), not to Macomb County.
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