We received an email full of bracing information. Thank you, Mr. Simanton, for writing to Friendship Alliance. We appreciate your time, and we are grateful for your insights. In full:
Wed, Feb 14, 2018 at 4:06 PM
I was at the Dripping Springs City Council meeting last night [February 13, 2018] to support your efforts to control the development of a large wedding venue in your neighborhood. I had planned to speak if needed, but it seems you had quite a few folks wanting to speak.
But, you may ask, who am I and why do I want to support you and speak out on your behalf? I do not live anywhere near your neighborhood, nor do I really know anyone in your neighborhood other than the nice folks I met at the council meeting.
I want to support your cause because I have painful, first-hand knowledge of what happens when a wedding venue moves into your neighborhood. Two wedding venues opened up near my land. One is next door to my land, the other is a little over half a mile away. So I have experience with both very close and nearby wedding venues. I don’t want others to suffer the way my neighbors and I have.
Here is what you can expect:
1. Noise. Remember those quiet weekend nights where you can sit on the porch and look at the stars, listen to the breeze in the trees, hear the sounds of nature? I say “remember” because you will no longer get to enjoy those nights. Even if the venue close to me is not having an event, the one further away is still so loud we can hear music, yelling, hooting, hollering, traffic, car alarms, arguments in the parking lot, buses backing up, loud bass noise bumping through your bones…I could go on. Again, that place is half a mile from me, over a hill, and it is STILL loud.
Even after we sued the venues to keep all their music INSIDE (the suit is still ongoing) and they have mostly complied, you still get the bass noise, which travels for miles. And of course you get the yelling, the hooting, hollering and general idiocy of drunk city folks out in the country. How many cars will there be? Each one will give you the “beep-beep” or “honk” whenever someone locks or unlocks the vehicle. Buses and trucks will beeep-beeep-beeep when backing up, and some back up for a loooong time. I recorded one that had the backup alarm going for over 5 minutes.
A side note on noise: Like most venues, Mark Black has promised to keep it “under 85 decibels” Why is this? Because 85 decibels is a criminal statute. They THINK that they can legally do anything up to 85 decibels with no repercussions. But noise at 50 decibels 200 feet from our house can easily be heard inside our house, quite loudly. 85 decibels is like someone running a chainsaw 10 feet from your head. It is LOUD. Call them out on this when they mention the 85 db number.
2. Drunks. What do people do at weddings? They drink. A LOT. They get loud. They yell. They hoot. They argue. They fight. They break bottles on the road. And they drive, while drunk, on your roads.
3. Traffic. Buses LOVE to block roads. For some reason, bus drivers think it is perfectly acceptable to load, unload or even park right in the middle of a road. Sometimes they pull a little off to the side so you can get around them, where you cannot see oncoming traffic. Sometimes they park in front of your mailboxes, or your driveway. Or they turn around and run over plants and things on your property…but if you aren’t there to see it and take pictures, you have no proof.
Then there are the hundreds of cars. They tend to drive and park where they please. They love to rev their engines, especially the city kids with 4WD trucks when they encounter any kind of hill. And they are often piloted by people who have been drinking. Don’t let your children go anywhere near the roads on weekends. Don’t jog or walk your dogs along the roads on weekends. And hope your animals don’t ever get out of the fence.
4. Strangers. I think this actually bothers me the most. What good is a neighborhood and knowing your neighbors when HUNDREDS of complete strangers are allowed to invade your neighborhood each week? They don’t care about your neighborhood. They litter, make noise, destroy property and then have the audacity to yell at you to be quiet when you try to mow your lawn on a Saturday or Sunday afternoon.
And they trespass. We have good fences, signs and gates, yet we still have “adventurous” wedding guests come on our land and even try to get in our house. Maybe they do just want to “pet the donkeys”, but in my experience, city folks have little respect for rural property. Sheds and cabins on our property seem to be a magnet for bored wedding guests, often of the teenage type. (Admittedly, I was probably like this when I was a teen boy, so I know how they are.)I could probably come up with even more reasons to fight a venue nearby, but I think this is enough. Note that these are only 150 person (next door) and 250 person (1/2 mile away, over a hill) venues. I cannot imagine how disturbing a 600 person venue would be. You have my sympathy, and you have my help if needed. …Please share this email with the Friendship Alliance, you may post it on your web site if you wish. If possible, have someone read at least an excerpt from the list above to help convince the council to delay the permit until Mark Black et al has addressed all of these issues. I’m convinced that there are probably good wedding venues that do respect their neighbors, but my experience is not proof of that.
You can never get your peace back once it is gone.
I wish you the best.
Regards,
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Dripping Springs, TX 78620