Mayors powerless against airplane noise ahead of 2026 municipal elections

Airplane noise shapes daily life for residents near Paris airports, fueling public health debates but not emerging as a key issue in local municipal campaigns due to mayors' limited authority.

In Goussainville, Val-d’Oise, a town of 30,000 residents located about ten kilometers from Roissy-Charles-de-Gaulle airport, airplane takeoffs mark daily routines. At the Charmeuse market, regulars like Jean, a charcutier who visits twice a week, hear the roar nearly every five minutes. “We hear a lot of planes every day, it raises the noise level of conversations, and some vendors shout to cover the sound of a landing aircraft,” Jean recounts.

In Arnouville, slightly south of the airport facilities, noise exposure is even more pronounced. Jean lives there under a flight corridor, in line with a takeoff runway. “In summer, it’s impossible to eat outside: there’s a plane every two minutes, including at night, but at a less intense pace.”

Airplane noise pollution, impacting public health for nearby residents, does not stand out as a political marker for the 2026 municipal elections. Mayors have limited means to address these disturbances from France’s largest airport.

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