SHASTRI BOODAN
GML Correspondent
Citizens Against Noise Pollution Trinidad and Tobago (CANPTT) has accused law enforcement authorities of failing to properly enforce the law following widespread reports of illegal fireworks activity on Old Year’s Night.
The group said it received numerous complaints from communities across the country indicating that fireworks were discharged well outside the legally permitted times, with little or no intervention by authorities. It also reported that loud music continued into the early hours, further distressing residents.
CANPTT vice president of public relations Tamara Chatar said the breaches were widespread and prolonged.
“What we witnessed was a total disregard for the law, compounded by negligence on the part of those responsible for enforcement,” Chatar said. “The legislation exists, but without consistent fines and action, it becomes meaningless.”
According to CANPTT, reports came from areas including Diego Martin, Couva, Chaguanas, St Helena, Arima, Arouca and Marabella, among other residential districts.
Chatar said compliance collapsed in the absence of visible enforcement.
The organisation acknowledged the Government’s recent introduction of fireworks legislation and the renewed national focus on the issue, saying it signalled recognition that unregulated fireworks can cause injury, trauma and public harm.
“Placing attention on fireworks is an important step, and we support genuine efforts to improve public safety,” Chatar said. “But attention without enforcement does not protect citizens.”
She said the failure to control fireworks highlighted a deeper, long-standing problem with noise regulation in Trinidad and Tobago. Despite existing noise-related laws, enforcement has remained weak and fragmented, with residents often unclear whether responsibility lies with the Environmental Management Authority or the Trinidad and Tobago Police Service.
“For years, citizens have been bounced between agencies while communities continue to suffer,” Chatar said. “This is not resistance to the law — it is a crisis of confidence in enforcement.”
CANPTT also reported receiving serious complaints of panic attacks, anxiety, sleep deprivation and psychological distress, particularly among infants, the elderly and people with mental health or sensory conditions.
“This is no longer a minor inconvenience,” Chatar said. “It is a public health concern affecting multiple communities at the same time.”
While fireworks are seasonal, the group warned that noise pollution is a year-round issue affecting residential areas nationwide and cautioned against allowing the focus on fireworks to overshadow broader enforcement failures.
“Fireworks in the hands of the general public, without meaningful oversight, has failed,” Chatar said. “More importantly, the wider system of noise regulation has failed.”
CANPTT is calling for urgent and comprehensive noise pollution reform, including clear enforcement authority, accountability mechanisms and meaningful consequences for breaches.
“Until these issues are addressed,” Chatar said, “communities will continue to wait — and suffer — while laws remain largely symbolic.”
