A red "Noise Free Zone" sign is attached to a utility pole on 43rd Place in Sea Isle. (Photo courtesy of Brivity.com)
By DONALD WITTKOWSKI
Anne Organ says she was the last member of Town Watch/Town Pride.
Long before drones became common, Sea Isle’s Town Watch/Town Pride group would keep an eye on things around town. Members would drive around looking for suspicious activity, calling police when they would spot open windows or doors in someone’s home during the off-season months.
Organ believes the group started in the 1990s, around the time Sea Isle was dealing with its former “bar town” reputation.
“In the ’90s, it was a bar town. Young people just came to drink. I was on 39th Street, in the heart of the bar zone,” she said of her house.
Starting in the 1990s, members of the Town Watch/Town Pride group began urging city officials to crack down on the loud “animal houses” by creating Noise Free Zones throughout town, Organ said.
“They got the city to make different streets quiet zones,” she recalled.
Organ said one of the first Noise Free Zones was established on 39th Street near her home.
“I had an animal house beside me,” she said.
Violators of the Noise Free Zones risked getting hauled into court and slapped with fines. Organ said members of Town Watch/Town Pride would go to court to monitor the cases involving excessive noise.
The Noise Free Zones still exist in Sea Isle. Town Watch/Town Pride has partnered with the police department over the years to see that the noise laws were enforced, Organ said.
“We were always connected to the police, and they always helped us with the noise,” she said.
Through her community involvement, Organ has become a well-known Sea Isle resident. Her family has had a home in Sea Isle since 1949.
Organ stays on top of local government affairs by regularly attending City Council meetings, often asking questions or making comments about city business.
For her, old habits die hard. Although the Town Watch/Town Pride group has been disbanded, Organ still keeps an eye out for anything she considers unusual or suspicious.
“I still do that when I’m walking around, if I see something that doesn’t look right,” she said.