Can You Hear It? Sonic Devices Play High-Pitched
Noises To Repel Teens
Michaela Winberg
A sonic device is seen (at top
right) at Barrett Playground in Philadelphia. Thirty parks in the city have the
devices, which emit a constant, high-pitched noise that only teenagers and
young adults can hear.
Kimberly Paynter/WHYY
In Philadelphia, 30 parks and
recreation centers are outfitted with a small speaker called the Mosquito. It blares a constant,
high-pitched ringing noise all night long — but one that only teenagers and
young adults can hear.
Anyone over age 25 is supposed
to be immune because, basically, their ear cells have started to
die off.
Can you hear it? Listen here (30 seconds in) https://www.npr.org/2019/07/10/739908153/can-you-hear-it-sonic-devices-play-high-pitched-noises-to-repel-teens
Philadelphia parks officials
have been installing the device since 2014, reported WHYY's Billy
Penn, intending to shoo rowdy youths from the premises.
And it's not the only U.S.
city to do so. Mosquito's Vancouver-based manufacturer Moving Sound Technologies works with roughly 20 parks
departments around the country to implement the youth-repellent devices, says
president Michael Gibson.
It's intended to prevent loitering and
vandalism by teens and young adults at public facilities. But some say this
age-based targeting is a form of prejudice.
Philadelphia City Council
member Helen Gym refers to the devices as "sonic weapons" — and she's
working to get them removed.
"In a city that is trying
to address gun violence and safe spaces for young people," Gym said,
"how dare we come up with ideas that are funded by taxpayer dollars to
turn young people away from the very places that were created for them?"
It makes us feel like animals.
Not all teens are bad, just because we want to go outside for a breath of fresh
air at night.
Lamar Reed
"It does feel a little
[discriminatory] against teens," agreed 17-year-old Philadelphia resident
Lamar Reed. "It makes us feel like animals. Not all teens are bad, just
because we want to go outside for a breath of fresh air at night."
Despite the intended
13-to-25-year-old target range, 27-year-old Mary Kate Riecks said she can hear
the Mosquito installed a few blocks from her Fishtown home. It gives her
headaches when she strolls the neighborhood, she said.
"It almost is more like a
feeling than a sound. It's kind of in the back of your head," Riecks said.
"At least for me, it gives me a headache if I'm near it for too long. So I
usually skip around this block or walk very quickly down it."
Riecks has been nearing her
breaking point — she and her housemates have been brainstorming a door-knocking
plan to organize the neighborhood against the device and work to get it
removed.
There's precedent for banning
the Mosquito. Localities all over the world have already rejected the device.
Washington, D.C., officials
installed the anti-kid noisemakers at the Gallery Place Metro station in 2010.
The National Youth Rights Association took issue with the effort almost
immediately, and members filed a complaint alleging age
discrimination. The city eventually asked the manufacturer to remove the devices.
"By calling attention to
it, we were able to make it into a big deal," said NYRA President Brian
Conner, 20. "We were able to make it clear that they'd be in a lot of
trouble if they kept using this device."
In 2008, the United Nations
Committee on the Rights of the Child implored the United Kingdom to
"reconsider ... the Mosquito devices insofar as they may violate the
rights of children." Since then, several counties in
England have followed suit and banned the device from certain public spaces.
But in Philadelphia, Parks
& Recreation defends its use of the Mosquito, saying the devices are
operational from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. only, and they're just one part of an
overall anti-vandalism strategy that includes fences and gates, security
cameras and night watch staff.
For now, the city is moving
forward with installation. Despite the backlash, two new Mosquito devices are
being installed at other city playgrounds as part of major renovation projects.
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