Baby boomer parents cause the ice cream truck 'problem'

By Tom Long
Copyright 1998 Detroit News
July 27, 1998




Here in the summer of 1998, the big concerns are apparently global warming, nuclear proliferation and ice cream trucks.

What with all the global warming you might think the ice cream truck crisis concerns a lack of enough drivers intent on going out and cooling off the people of the world. Not so.

While driving into work the other day I heard a National Public Radio report on yet another small town (this one in Massachusetts) that is debating a ban on ice cream trucks.

A woman interviewed said the noise from the trucks was driving her crazy. "Dee-dee-dee-dee-dee," she sang into the microphone with no discernible melody.

I immediately thought of my 9-year-old son, who would probably give up video games for a week if an ice cream truck would drive by our place. We live at the end of a horse-shoe road and this summer has been conspicuously silent.

I also remembered when I was a kid, during the Paleolithic Era, when the sound of an ice cream truck was like magic floating through the air.

But over the past few years, communities across America have decided that magic has a dark side. From California to New Jersey, Texas to upstate New York, towns have been struggling to deal with the ice cream truck problem.

What, you might ask, exactly is the ice cream truck problem?

Well, there's a safety issue here that can't be denied. The ice cream truck comes toodling into the neighborhood and kids can run blindly into the street and get hit by a passing car.

This isn't the ice cream truck's fault, really, since Mom and Dad should have taught little Johnny to stay out of the street and drivers should be watching where they're going. But the ice cream truck is involved nonetheless.

Some towns have had ice cream trucks add stop signs, like school buses. Some have just denied them access to busy streets. The clear lesson: Don't go running after an ice cream truck on the freeway.

Far more absurd and irritating are the other two common complaints against these joymobiles -- they make too much noise and they may be driven by pedophiles.

If we're going to start outlawing any possible contact between kids and pedophiles we're going to have to get rid of all rec centers, the Boy Scouts and most major religions. I don't think that's going to happen.

The most alarming contention, though, is the commonly heard cry that the music from ice cream trucks is polluting neighborhoods and driving parents crazy. I suspect many of these parents loved hearing an ice cream truck when they were young but would now deny their kids the same pleasure because it dares intrude on their insular lives.

This may be one of the ugliest manifestations of the progression of baby boomers from kids to rebels to fashionably hip parents to outright fuddy-duddies. In a world ever more regulated and sanitized, where a sense of community can too easily give way to staring suspiciously at people walking down your street, a classic piece of Americana like an ice cream truck shouldn't be reviled, it should be revered.

Obviously there is something very wrong when it is easier to ban an ice cream truck than an assault rifle. Give me a Drumstick any day.

Tom Long's column appears in Accent on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. He can be reached by phone at (313) 222-8879, or by e-mail at tlong@detnews.com

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