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Mysterious Nighttime Hum Haunts Communities in New Jersey, Ohio, and Connecticut

Mysterious Nighttime Hum Haunts Communities in New Jersey, Ohio, and Connecticut

Residents report vibrating homes, sleepless nights, and unhappy children and pets.

Residents in several U.S. states have reported a strange humming sound that shakes their homes and keeps them awake at night.

One report comes from Vineland, New Jersey, where a massive Microsoft AI data center is now under construction.

The problem, locals in Vineland claim, is the construction site emits an eerie humming sound that’s vibrating across their farmland and keeping them lying awake at all hours of the night, nj.com reported.

…[T]he Cumberland County Department of Health is taking the complaints seriously.

In a pubic statement, the health department said they were investigating the issue and working to confirm the source of the mysterious sounds.

“We understand that ongoing noise can be frustrating for residents, and we take these concerns seriously. … We have responded to many concerns and have made several visits to the area in question to measure sound levels,” the agency said.

“While complainants have shared where they believe the noise is coming from, our staff are working to confirm the exact source of the noise.”

A mysterious hum has reportedly been plaguing residents of Cincinnati, Ohio, communities since December.

Residents of the Northside, Clifton and Camp Washington neighborhoods have been reporting the disturbances since December. The noises are said to be louder and more noticeable at night.

“We were hearing this siren-like quality noise — whirring, oscillating, going up and down,” said Clifton resident Shaun Herold, who contacted local news outlet WKRC about the noises.

…Herold said he spent one entire night tracking how many times he heard the noise going on and off. The duration of the noises can vary from a few seconds to several minutes.

“I feel like it’s definitely like a foreign sound,” Northside’s Brendan Marcum told the news outlet. “Some nights it would be a little louder, some nights it would be a little quieter.”

Reports of a mysterious were made in West Haven, Connecticut, in January and February.

The low-frequency noise, which has drawn comparisons to a kitchen range downdraft or a Shop-Vac, has prompted more than 200 complaints from residents of West Haven, Conn., who have struggled to identify the cause.

…Last month, the City Council voted to spend $16,000 to hire an acoustics expert to place noise-monitoring equipment at several locations to try to solve the mystery.

Most of the complaints have been clustered in a part of the city known as West Shore, where a food ingredient plant known for making edible sparkles is drawing renewed scrutiny despite its past sound-dampening efforts.

The West Haven residents brought a petition to their city government to address this problem.

The issue came to a head at a recent city council meeting, where neighbors shared emotional testimonies about the overnight disturbance. WTIC reported that local resident Kimberly Nunes, who started a petition urging action, told council members, “It’s affecting my mental health, my sleep, my well-being. As well as my children’s. I’ve noticed that my pets tend to pace and stare.” The petition, signed by over 140 people, describes the hum as an ongoing problem that disrupts sleep, concentration, and enjoyment of home life. It also raises alarm about potential long-term health consequences.

Many believe local industry could be responsible, but the source remains unconfirmed. John Carrano, the city’s commissioner of human resources, has used sound meters for months near his home, which is among the loudest locations. Despite hundreds of readings, he told the New Haven Register that the noise levels fall below legal thresholds—West Haven allows up to 70 decibels in industrial zones and 51 in residential areas at night. “It’s a constant noise. Even though it’s under the decibel levels of loud, it’s kind of at the intersection of sound and vibration,” Carrano explained.

Hopefully, these strange sound sources will soon be identified and addressed. Everyone deserves a good night’s rest without the intrusion of unexplained industrial hums rattling their windows and nerves. I know I need my beauty sleep.

One would think that, in our high-tech era, we should also be able to locate and mitigate something as basic as a persistent vibration at night. Let’s hope this doesn’t become a new, unsettling soundtrack to modern life.

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Comments

Start looking for ChiCom owned “farms” and secret labs. Were drones involved? Did anyone check for tunnel digging Hamasholes? Leftists screaming into their pillows at the thought of DJT International Airport?

As an aside, near my neighborhood, a nearby solar “farm,” which you would expect to be silent, has cooling fans for inverters/transformers that whine loudly, to the detriment of some locals.

I hate to see this stuff become national news because the imagination really does wander. I’ve worked on hundreds of miles of oil pipeline construction projects and pressure testing a line causes disturbances like this almost every time, and yes even in urban areas. This is likely the failure of a nearby construction project to proactively communicate with local governments when they’re performing activities that could disturb the public.

Any solar panel farms nearby?

1) It’s aliens.
2) More likely, it’s the molemen.
3) Is Elon sending his Boring Machines these places?
3a) Maybe he’s in league with the molemen.

At least someone sounds like they’re trying to gather data rather than impressions/feelings. (I would also ask when these issues started; that might be an important bit of data.)

Conspiracy theory trigger….Chinese tunnel boring machines creating invasion tunnels, as conventional landing of troops via marine operations is no longer viable.

    And Biden knew.
    It’s why he was talking about a train to the far side of the Pacific. He knew the Chinese are building the tunnels, and he was going to put a choo-choo in them.

    It all comes together now!

Sound travels dozens of miles at night, owing to cold air near the ground and warmer air higher up. That refracts upward-bound sound back to the ground, where it travels bouncing in a sort of duct, never escaping upwards. The result is 1/r falloff in intensity instead of much faster normal 1/r^2.

In the daytime, hot air near the ground refracts everything upwards and you can’t even hear the highway a block away, the opposite effect.

    Spoilsport. Bringing math and science into a perfectly good conspiracy discussion.

    BLSinSC in reply to rhhardin. | April 1, 2026 at 10:27 am

    I’m nearly 74. When I was 15 and had an old 54 Chevy two door (love to have it back) with an AM radio! At night we could pick up WLS out of Chicago. We would hear “And in Duluth, it’s 54 degrees” – in JULY! During the day we couldn’t even pick up a radio station 35 miles away! Sound does travel a LOT better at hight so maybe what they are hearing is not “local sounds”, but something from a lot farther away. Didn’t notice anyone stating it was like a lot of vibrators in action – are those areas home to a large contingent of “same sex” marriages?

It’s a bit extreme but a wholesale power failure in different areas would show approximately where the source might be. No power, no noise until it’s restored substation-by-substation.
.

It’s most likely something industrial in most places. There are very few “unexplained” hums, the Taos hum being one of them.

Tunnel boring may be why SC has experienced a rash of earthquakes in the past 18 months. I would not be surprised at all…Asians have 1000 years of digging experience.

    Well, really, all they would have to do is let a reactor meltdown. I don’t know if the resulting hole would come up near Fonda’s house, or not.

    (Yes, that’s a movie reference.)

    WindyHill in reply to scooterjay. | April 1, 2026 at 8:51 am

    I have lived in SC for 24 years, and these small earthquakes in the center of the state are nothing new.

destroycommunism | March 31, 2026 at 11:01 am

…and its a sin to kill a mockingbird

Try taking Jimmy Kimmel off the air again. I suspect his reality-distortion field is finally beginning to interfere with the fabric of the rational universe.

The Gentle Grizzly | April 1, 2026 at 1:33 am

It’s just a bad filter capacitor.

“Sonic booms scare minority groups in Sector B, and there’s hamburger all over the highway in Mystic, Connecticut.”