[¶ 1] Kari Carter appeals from a judgment entered in the District Court (Bridg-ton, Powers, J.) in favor of the Town of Baldwin, concluding that Carter violated the Town’s Barking Dog Ordinance. Carter contends that the ordinance is unconstitutionally vague because it fails to provide sufficient notice to dog owners about the degree of barking that constitutes a violation. We are unpersuaded by Carter’s contention and affirm the judgment.
[¶ 2] The facts are not in dispute. The Town enacted its Barking Dog Ordinance in 1997, which provides as follows:
No owner or keeper of any dog kept within the legal limits of the Town of Baldwin shall allow such dog to unnecessarily annoy or disturb any person by continued or repeated barking, howling, or other loud or unusual noises anytime day or night.
*65 Baldwin, Me., Barking Dog Ordinance 1 (Mar. 8,1997). 1
[¶ 3] Carter held a valid license from the Town to operate a kennel and had sixteen dogs on her property. The dogs were kept in an outdoor caged kennel as well as an interior space. The Town received several complaints about Carter’s dogs and sent Carter a notice of complaint by certified letter in July of 2000 stating that the Town would take action if the continual barking was not corrected within ten days. Neighbors, who resided 300 to 800 feet away from Carter’s home, made additional complaints against Carter for continual dog barking in violation of the ordinance in September and October of 2000. One neighbor submitted a thirty minute long video tape on which dog noises coming from Carter’s kennel about 800 feet away could be heard inside the neighbor’s house.
[¶ 4] After receiving a telephone call from a neighbor complaining about Carter’s barking dogs, whose barking he could hear over the telephone, the Town’s animal control officer investigated and concluded that a violation had occurred. The Town brought a complaint pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 80H alleging that Carter violated the Barking Dog Ordinance.
[¶ 5] At her trial, Carter argued that she did not have proper notice of the charges against her because the ordinance is unconstitutionally vague. The court rejected her contention and held that the ordinance “places an owner sufficiently on notice that significant, ongoing noise may be a violation of the statute if it is unnecessary noise and further disturbs or annoys someone at any time.” The court concluded that intermittent or short term dog noises do not constitute violations of the ordinance and the plain meaning of “continued or repeated” is understandable by a dog owner of reasonable intelligence. The court further reasoned that the use of the word “unnecessary” sufficiently limited the ordinance to situations where the barking was not necessary, such as “a natural response to a particular stimulus, or for instance, a warning to occupants of a burning building.”
[¶ 6] After deciding that the ordinance was not vague, the court found that “the barking went on for a period of minutes to a period of hours” on various occasions. It concluded that Carter kept dogs which barked and howled unnecessarily for continual and repeated durations, and disturbed and annoyed neighbors on numerous occasions after Carter had been given written notice to cease the unlawful barking. The court fined her $50 and awarded the Town $3,524.33 in attorney fees. This appeal by Carter followed.
[¶7] Carter challenges the constitutionality of the Town’s Barking Dog Ordinance on the grounds of vagueness. Although she does not assert that the ordinance is unconstitutionally vague as applied to her, she contends that the ordinance is impermissibly vague on its face because there are no objective standards for determining whether a dog’s barking is *66 “unnecessary” or “continued or repeated” or “annoys or disturbs” a person. 2
[¶ 8] A facial challenge in this context means that Carter is claiming that the ordinance is “invalid in toto — and therefore incapable of any valid application.”
Steffel v. Thompson,
[¶ 9] “A statute is presumed to be constitutional and the person challenging the constitutionality has the burden of establishing its infirmity.”
Kenny v. Dep’t of Human Servs.,
[¶ 10] Concepts of due process flowing from both the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution and Article I, § 6-A, of the Maine Constitution, require that those subject to sanction by law be given “fair notice of the standard of conduct to which they can be held accountable.”
Weeks,
¶ 7,
[¶ 11] We find persuasive the reasoning of the Court of Appeals of Arizona in
State v. Singer,
*68
[¶ 12] As in
Singer,
the Town’s ordinance in this case can be construed to be constitutional by importing a reasonable person standard into its language.
See State v. Davenport,
[¶ 13] “Reasonableness” is a well defined concept under the common law.
Tri-State Rubbish, Inc.,
[¶ 14] Moreover, the ordinance contains three other restrictions which add clarity to its meaning and set forth an ascertainable standard of guilt. The phrase “continued or repeated” means something more than incidental barking.
5
Intermittent or short term dog noises do not constitute violations of the ordinance. The barking has to occur over a sustained duration, or over and over again for a sustained period of time.
See City of Lebanon v. Wergowske,
[¶ 15] “[T]he familiar language employed in the [Town’s Barking Dog Ordinance] conveys a sufficiently accurate concept of what is forbidden.” Id. at 409. The ordinance is not unconstitutionally vague. 6
The entry is:
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
. The ordinance further provides that:
Upon written complaint by the person disturbed, ... any ... duly qualified ... person acting in that capacity of the Town of Baldwin may investigate and may give written notice to the owner or keeper of such dog that such annoyance or disturbance must cease.... Thereafter, upon continuance of such annoyance or disturbance, such owner shall be guilty of a civil violation and upon conviction thereof shall be punished by a fine of $50 for the first offense .... All fines so assessed and attorney fees shall be recovered for the use of the Town of Baldwin through District Court.
Baldwin, Me., Barking Dog Ordinance 1 (Mar. 8, 1997).
. In support of her claim, Carter refers to the ordinance challenged in
People v. Frie,
Objective quantification, mathematical certainty, and absolute precision are not required by either the United States Constitution or Maine Constitution.
Davis v. Sec’y of State, 577
A.2d 338, 341 (Me.1990). Although it is preferable that a legislative body "speak in precise and pellucid language, failure to meet that Olympian standard does not make its enactments void for vagueness.”
Maine Milk Producers, Inc. v. Comm'r of Agric.,
. Because Carter asserts "that the law is im-permissibly vague in all of its applications,” she has standing to make this challenge.
Village of Hoffman Estates,
. Carter relies on
City of Edina v. Dreher,
. In general the word "continued” means “an act or event that is uninterrupted ... enduring.” BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY 316 (7th ed.1999). Repeated means "renewed or recurring again and again.” WEBSTER’S THIRD NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY 1924 (1981).
. Because Carter only asserts that the ordinance is facially vague, we do not need to determine whether the ordinance was properly applied to her. Nonetheless, it was not unreasonable of Carter’s neighbors to be annoyed by the continued and unnecessary barking of her dogs. Carter housed sixteen dogs whose barking could be heard by neighbors 800 feet away uninterrupted for hours at a time. An investigator could even hear the barking over the telephone while speaking with a complainant. This clearly is enough to offend the sensibilities of a reasonable person.
