Following a flood of noise and livability complaints from residents who live near Crown Park’s shared-use tennis-pickleball courts, Camas city officials and parks commissioners are rethinking how they might accommodate pickleball, one of the nation’s fastest growing sports.
Dozens of Crown Park neighbors have come to Camas Parks and Recreation Commission and Camas City Council meetings to voice concerns about the tennis-pickleball courts at Crown Park, which they say regularly produce noise that is, as one speaker told Camas Council members during their Sept. 3 workshop, as loud as a garbage truck backing up.
“It is really loud,” one Crown Park neighbor told Camas Council members in September. “My home is about 75 feet away from the new sports court (being built at Crown Park) … I love the park, love the playground, but this is something that is on an entirely different level.”
Many of the speakers concerned about the noise produced by the solid pickleball racquets — which are similar to oversized paddle-ball racquets — also said they don’t want to see the sport disappear in Camas, and have appealed to city leaders to consider moving the courts to areas of the city that are not so close to residential housing.
“We’ve heard some concerns from residents that pickleball can be pretty noisy. “It is one of the fastest growing sports — and it is a Washington-born sport — so we are looking at noise mitigation,” Camas Communications Director Bryan Rachal told The Post-Record last week.