Showing posts with label Base Stations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Base Stations. Show all posts

Sunday, May 5, 2013

Tower Climbers, Especially Subcontractors for ATT, Die at Rate 10 Times Higher than Construction Workers



Will a school in DeKalb be the next location where a
cell tower climber falls to his death or a wrench is dropped from 
100 feet in the air, killing an  innocent person on the ground
below?  Safety concerns are numerous when it comes to
placing cell towers so near the places where we live, work
and play.  Has the school board considered the liability 
that goes along with a faulty decision made TWO boards ago?
Is it even legal for a board to decide something that
isn't intended for action until they are safely out of 
the pubic eye? 
Cell tower climbers are dying in large numbers in order to build better cell service for the public --- a risky, high-pressure job that is necessary to expand America's cellular infrastructure.
Cell tower climbers are dying at ten times the rate of construction workers. PBS Frontline says , “People don’t understand what the danger is to tower climbing,” former climber Robert Hale says in the Frontline film. “One person drops a wrench, it’ll kill somebody.”
Untrained cell tower climbers work at the most dangerous job in the nation, climbing 400-foot high ATT towers that usually involves numerous layers of subcontractors. In a field with under 10,000 tower climbers, about 100 climbers have died with over half working on cell sites. In about five weeks, six cell tower climbers fell to their death --- three were on AT&T towers.
According to ProPublica, between 2003 and 2011, 50 climbers died working on cell sites, more than half of the nearly 100 who were killed on communications towers.
The United States has more active cell phones than people. According to CNN Money, a problem developed when ATT began to develop a reputation for dropped calls, unacceptable once they became the sole carrier for the iPhone.
Subcontractors became the answer for not only ATT, Verizon and numerous tower industries, but also service industries, retail, logistics and health care. Building new towers and installing new antennas by AT&T and other tower subcontractors continues to bring 3G networking to striving U.S. markets. But for better cell service and faster video and online games, tower climbers are losing their lives.
The problem seems to lie with subcontractors often contract out jobs to other subcontractors. Jobs are passed from one company to the next, with less ability to control the workers. Many subcontractors are not approved, but OSHA reports that there is "a pattern whereby ATT had significantly more deaths on towers that they were owning or renting than the other carriers."
Many of the crews he came across weren’t taking the most rudimentary safety precautions. “They didn’t have their hardhats, they didn’t have safety glasses, they didn’t have safety gear,” said Mark Hein, who has worked for several turf vendors as a construction manager. Many of the climbers lacked training certificates.
“Rather than paying this amount to this guy, who’s really qualified and … has a great reputation, they hire this person over here because he’s available right now and he’ll do it for what we want him to do it for,” he said. For the task of installing a remote radio head, the price sheet said, the carrier would pay the turf vendor $187 and the turf vendor would pay the subcontractor $93.
To prepare for the iPhone 3G's introduction, ATT poured millions of dollars in the summer of 2008 for its wireless expenditures. This meant an unprecedented scale of untrained tower climbers. OSHA considers cell tower climbers the most dangerous job in America.
“It was nuts,” said Dan MacRae, a project manager who has worked on cell site projects for several turf vendors. “We were working in the field for 40 hours straight. They had crews in rain, sleet, snow.”
Meanwhile, the building boom is continuously accompanied by one fall after another. On May 25, 2012, Plano, Texas-based Goodman Networks sent out a bulletin notifying workers of a mandatory safety stand down.


Read more: http://digitaljournal.com/article/330821#ixzz2SRAagLO2

Thursday, June 14, 2012

Don't "Cell" Out Our Children! Vote NO to cell towers on July 31!



Many people have asked me about the short speech I gave at the DeKalb Board of Education meeting in November of 2011 during the public comments portion of the meeting.  So, I'm reprinting it here as a reminder to everyone that the school board elections are right around the corner.

If  you do not know whether or not a candidate or incumbant would vote in favor or against a cell tower at your child's school or next to your home, I suggest you find out before deciding whether or not that person should be able to represent you.

My wife and I have been speaking out against cell towers on school grounds since one was proposed for our child's school last year.  After it was removed from consideration, we remained involved because we felt it was not right for these towers to be placed at any school in any part of our county.

Unfortunately, efforts made to ban the towers completely left us with a "non-binding advisory referendum" on the upcoming ballot.  While they call it an "advisory" referendum, you know that means it will likely be used to determine which areas of DeKalb will be the best places for them to try putting up the next round of towers once the first 8 go up. (Smoke Rise, Briarlake, ML King High, Princeton, Narvie J. Harris, Margaret Harris, Jolly, Flat Rock.)

There will be a question on the July 31 ballot about this issue.  It will ask you if the DeKalb School system should "place or operate telecommunications towers" at any public or charter school.  WE hope you will agree that putting children at risk from a health and safety standpoint should never be an option, no atter how deserate the county is for money.  You are urged to vote NO!

Please vote NO to "telecommunications towers" at any public school and warn others aabout the importance of showing up to vote July 31, or your school or neighborhood might be next!

Norcross 2011 cell tower fire (courtesy CBS Atlanta).

*****************************

COMMENT MADE DURING NOVEMBER 2011 BOE PUBLIC MEETING:

I would be cordial and greet you here tonight, but I know you guys don’t want to hear from me, but here it goes again.  It makes me sick that I even have to come up here and talk about cell towers.  As a father, it makes me sick to tell my daughter that her life would be at risk, whether you guys believe it or not.

You guys seem to think that it doesn’t show any risk factors.  But, I’m also a physical therapist and I work in a bone marrow unit and I work with leukemia patients every day.  Come in to my work if you don’t  think something like this exists.  Picture one of your loved ones sitting in that bed.  They can’t do anything, frail and weak.  They didn’t ask for it.  But, for some reason you guys think it is okay to expose children to this? I don’t get it.

I was also a boxer.  I have been in hundreds of fights.  And every time I think of what you guys have done, it feels like someone sucker punched me from behind.  And. I feel that way every day I have to think about this.

I got in my truck the day we found out.  I got in my truck and went to my neighbors with pen and paper and got signatures.  I said, “Did anybody tell you that this was going on?”  Not a single person knew.  Not a single one.  And we came and we told you guys that and you said, “Oh we haven’t seen any factors that we would think it would be dangerous.

B.S.   There is a dirty little secret and we are going to uncover it.  You are not going to get away with it.  I promise you that.   Again, it makes me sick that I even have to bring this up.  The fact that we’ve been lied to by our principal.  Let’s just talk about notification.  Our principal said, “We didn’t know anything.  We were just told to put the information in the children’s backpacks…. in my three year old’s backpack, isn’t that pleasant?  That’s a sweet thing in pre-K.

SO…. We go to the principal and she says, “We didn’t know.”  So we go to the PTA and they say “We didn’t know.”  And at first they are all up and arms about it and then they say, “We can’t take a stand on issues like this.”  So we are left in the dark.  So, we have to continue to seek the answers.

Not a single person has told me, not a single person, a positive that is coming out of this.  Except, “Oh, the schools are going get money.”  $25,000 hush money for the PTA?  That’s not acceptable.   The cost of somebody’s bone marrow transplant doesn’t cover the cost of a single payment that we will ever get.  I don’t get it.  

And, God forbid…  (pause)…  I don’t ever want to wish any illness on anybody, but again, come in to my work, step one foot in the bone marrow transplant unit and I guarantee you will rip those cell towers out of there.

(to the board) Bad people...  It’s not nice.

******************************************  end public comment

To watch the video of this and other protesters from the School Board Meeting last Novemer, go to:    http://view.liveindexer.com/ViewIndexSessionSLMQ.aspx?indexSessionSKU=MekWaHPZMrYBy4Wd4iUaZQ==

For more details, go to: www.GETtheCELLoutATL.org.  And, to learn about school board candidates who oppose cell towers on school grounds, you can also "like" us on Facebook.

Read more: CrossRoadsNews - entry Don t 34 Cell 34 Out Our Children Vote NO to Cell Towers on July 31

Thursday, June 7, 2012

Score 1 for the Kids: Public Schools in Montgomery County, MD, Ban Cell Towers From School Grounds

Wednesday, June 6, 2012 (click headline for full story)

From our friends in Montgomery County, Maryland comes this encouraging story:

On November 21, 2011, a Hearing Examiner for the Montgomery County Board of Appeals issued an Opinion in Case No. S-2818.  On page 40 of that Opinion, at Footnote number 19, we learn that MCPS is no longer placing cell phone/telecommunications towers on elementary school playgrounds. 

This change in MCPS standard operating procedure comes too late for Daly Elementary School (shown below), but benefits the the other 130 elementary school sites that were ripe for the picking by cell tower companies.

Daly Elementary School playground /cell tower compound
Since the Board of Education has never taken a public vote to place a cell tower on any public school site, decisions to let a private company build a cell tower transmission facility on public school land have been made behind closed doors with little or no public notice or input. 

From this Opinion, we now know that cell phone companies are no longer free to make behind closed door deals with MCPS to build cell tower facilities on elementary school playgrounds.
 
Score 1 for the little kids that get to keep their playground space!

********************************

Cell tower compounds have already been installed on playgrounds/fields at the following Montgomery County Public Schools:


Northwood HS - Silver Spring (pictured at right)
Blake HS - Silver Spring
Einstein HS - Silver Spring
Kennedy HS - Silver Spring
Wheaton HS - Silver Spring
Springbrook HS - Silver Spring
Blair HS - Silver Spring
Watkins Mill HS - Gaithersburg
*  Daly Elementary School - Germantown
Magruder HS - Rockville
Tilden Middle School - Rockville
Sherwood HS - Sandy Spring

Woodwards Road ES site - Gaithersburg


*  The Daly ES PTA and community said no to this cell tower and Superintendent Jerry Weast signed the lease and placed the tower on the playground anyway.

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

REPRINT of OCT. 2011 Response from CEO Burrell Ellis' Office



(click headline for the full story)


Did you know?
The WHO/International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) has classified radio frequency electromagnetic fields as possibly carcinogenic to humans (Group 2B), the same category that includes exhaust fumes from automobiles. So, why do our schools appear to be concerned about one, and not the other?




Here is a reprint of the response we received on October 18, 2011 to an email sent to CEO Burrell Ellis.  We asked him to please explain the process by which the towers would be approved or denied so that we could participate in the public input portion of the process.

The claims that the school system is exempt are not correct.  We later showed the commissioners a Supreme Court case decision that proved the exemption only applies if the land being leased will be used for educational or public purposes, not proprietary (profit-making).

This is the response we received:

To:  Get the Cell  Out - Atlanta
From:  CEO Burrell Ellis' Office
Sent: Tuesday, October 18, 2011 2:39:30 PM
Subject: RE: cell tower at MLK Jr. H.S.
Dear (Get the Cell Out - Atlanta):

Your email has been forwarded to the Office of CEO Burrell Ellis. Thank you for writing and expressing your concerns. After discussing with Planning staff, we have learned that the school system is exempt from county zoning ordinances, and that the towers are to be located on school system property, of which the CEO or BOC has no oversight or jurisdiction. ...

However, in the event that a permit application is filed, the County performs an inspection of the site, but has no approval authority on the erection of cell towers.*
I hope this information is helpful.

Sincerely,
Special Assistant, DeKalb County Government
330 W. Ponce De Leon, Decatur, GA 30030
office: (404) 371-6304 | fax: (404) 371-6291 |

(* we believe the author meant "on school property" because otherwise this statement would be incorrect They do have the approval authority of all other cell towers. At GTCO-ATL, we believe they should have the same authority for cell towers at schools. Just because the school is exempt should not mean that the business that is building a for-profit structure on leased property should be allowed to 'inherit' that same exemption... should they?)

*************************************************************


Dear Residents and taxpayers in DeKalb County:

If you are like us, it probably does not make you feel very happy or safe to know that cell towers, which are huge structures normally seen only in Industrial locations or along Interstates far away from homes or schools, can be constructed in the middle of a residential community, on public school property that's actively being used for education of children, the group of people most susceptible to possible harm from RF Radiation.

These dangerous towers that emit radiation and contain HAZMAT materials at the bottom are normally expected to meet the approval of the county commissioners and pass the zoning and permitting authorities which involves public notice and comment. But, at least here in DeKalb County, the cell companies can avoid all the red tape including paying property taxes as long as they go up on school property. They do not have to follow any criteria that has been set forth to protect the public and maintain property values.

They only need approval from a school board that's willing to lease its property to them. And, this, too, can be accomplished without notification to the public. The people being affected by the decisions - the children who attend the schools and the people who pay the taxes to support the school - are completely left out of the process by which the decision is made.

*************************************************************

If you are not satisfied with a government that is leaving you out of the equation, we suggest you try to voice your concern at the next Community Council Meeting for your district.

Community Councils are advisory groups of DeKalb County citizens that review applications for land use map amendments and zoning applications such as special land use permits, rezones, and amendments to the text of the zoning ordinance. There are five Community Councils, one for each Board of Commissioners district.

The Councils meet every other month if there are zoning or land use map amendment applications for property within their district. Meetings are held at neighborhood libraries or other County facilities, and are facilitated by DeKalb County staff.

At the Community Council meetings, the public has an opportunity to discuss zoning or land use map amendment applications that will eventually be decided upon by the Board of Commissioners. After the Community Council meetings, the public has opportunities to comment on applications at public hearings that are held by the Planning Commission and by the Board of Commissioners.

For details about when the next meeting will be held for your zone, click here:
http://www.co.dekalb.ga.us/planning/pdf/calendars/ccSchedule.pdf
We suggest you try to talk to them now BEFORE a cell tower shows up next door to your home or at your child's school. Let's get some answers and try to make our system work the way it was supposed to work - to protect the citizens, especially those who are too young to have a voice to speak up for themselves.

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

TUCKER PATCH: Superintendent to Give "State of the District" Talk

(click to read more)  Reprinted in part, with permission, from The Tucker Patch.

The public is invited to attend the Tucker Parent Council's final meeting for the 2011-2012 school year on Monday, April 23.

The meeting will be held at Livsey Elementary School at 7 p.m.

Dr. Cheryl Atkinson, Superintendent of DeKalb County School District, is scheduled to attend and will present a talk titled "State of the District."

There will be a question and answer session after the presentation.

GTCO-ATL plans to be on hand to inquire about any known plans for cell tower construction or other surprises in store for parents over the Summer.  And, what emergency numbers can community members use if they haven't heard about the cell towers and they see them start to go up ... and they want answers?  (Just so we can be prepared with how to respond in case they contact us.)  For more about this story, refer to The Tucker Patch, http://tucker.patch.com/articles/tucker-parent-council-meeting-monday-april-23

We will add the date to our events page as a reminder!

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Cell Towers on School Grounds Can (and Do) Fall Over!

(click headline for details and video)

Cell phone tower collapses in Wellesley
By Elana Zak/GateHouse News Service   GateHouse News Service   Posted Jan 24, 2009 @ 12:32 AM
WELLESLEY — (Mass.)
A cell phone tower collapsed right off Route 9 eastbound early this afternoon, after a fire started underneath the tower while welders were working on it.

The fire burned for about 20 to 25 minutes, said Wellesley Police Sgt. Glen Gerrans. The tower collapsed before firefighters, who were waiting for power to be cut, could begin putting out the fire. No one was hurt, according to Gerrans.

“Underneath [the base of the tower] are electronic boxes that contain switching equipment and so forth,” Gerrans said, pointing to the still smoking tower, “and the workmen were working on that part underneath the actual cell phone tower itself using welding equipment and that’s what started the fire.”


Read more: http://www.metrowestdailynews.com/news/x1278516165/Cell-phone-tower-collapses-in-Wellesley#ixzz1qMYMX6Pe





Cell phone tower fire burns itself out

Published: Tuesday, July 24, 2007, 10:56 AM     Updated: Wednesday, July 25, 2007, 7:50 AM   By Steve Pepple

A cell phone tower on the property of the Howell High School complex on Highlander Way in Howell caught fire and forced the evacuation of several buildings and closure of the middle school because firefighters feared it would fall.

 Howell Fire dispatcher Barb Souchick said the fire, which started at about 9 a.m., burned iself out by about 10 a.m. She said firefighters had to let the fire burn because the tower was too tall to hit with water from hoses.

Howell Fire Chief James Reed said he believes a contractor working with a torch at the base of the tower may have set it on fire, and that the entire interior of the tower burned.

He said the tower served AT&T, Sprint, and carried the Internet connections for five Howell schools, but did not know which schools were affected.

Read more here:  http://blog.mlive.com/annarbornews/2007/07/updated_cell_phone_tower_fire.html



Saturday, March 17, 2012

Dear Commissioner Elaine Boyer,

(click headline to read full text of this letter)

Original email dated Sept. 14, 2011

Dear Commissioner Boyer,

I am contacting you on behalf of a group of concerned citizens, parents, homeowners, taxpayers, residents, association members and business owners.  Our group covers every demographic category and the full span of this county, from the South, Central andd North Regions.  We have assisted with lobbying the school board to remove three schools prior to their vote on cell towers on school grounds back in July.  At that time, we were all told that the other schools would have an opportunity to address the zoning issues during the public comment portion of their Special Land Use permitting hearing.  We have now been told the school board is claiming exemption to this entire process, but no one has cited any case law to back up their claim.

(Get the Cell Out, by the way, has cited case law to various members of the commission that shows that the school exemption does NOT apply when the property being leased will be used for proprietary purposes.)

We are very concerned about the recent actions of the School Board, which they took while the Interim Superintendent was in place, and without following their own rules of conduct which require them to hold a public forum and consider the input of their communities before voting.  This has not happened and their own vice-chair Paul Womack has admitted that the notice was not sufficient during a meeting at Briarlake Elementary.

A partial transcript of that meeting is available on the DeKalb School Watch Blog.  Mr. Womack's comments are very shocking as he bluntly tells the parents that the school board did not put up signs, and they did not knock on the doors of the residents immediately surronding the school's property.  He claims they used other media outlets, but this is a misleading statement.  The AJC article being referenced was not published until after all the meetings had already been held, except the three schools that were scheduled for the last day of meetings.  WSB-TV has found no record of anything airing on their station except for a story the night prior to the July vote, but that story was initiated by us and was not an announcement of any meetings.  It was a story about our efforts to get the word out ourselves because the school board had not done it themselves.

We are counting on you to get this information into the right hands so that the county can consider it and take appropriate action.  Please do not let these cell towers go up if you are not certain the decision has been made following the letter of the law.  T-mobile has been known to start construction without required permits and will build towers that are not up to code.  Specifically, the base of these towers is not planned to be up to the Rev-G standard the is necessary to ensure stability in high wind conditions.  This should be of particular concern when you think about the fact that they want to put the towers with "fall zones" that include schools and homes. 

They have not proven that their towers will comply with the regulations necessary for respect of airspace since they will be near the DeKalb-Peachtree airport.  They have not shown anyone that they will respect the necessary setback requirements and they have not given anyone their plans for the cabinet or building structures that will be at the base of the towers or the fencing planned that will have to be sufficient to deter children from getting into the restricted area and trying to climb the towers.  Please remember, many elementary school children do not read or are just learning to read.  Typcial warnings on cell towers will not have any meaning to them and we have heard no plans for how they will be training anyone on staff at the school about what to do in an emergency or what to tell the children to ensure they understand the dangers. 

During the meeting at Brairlake, Mr. Womack even admitted that he did not carefully read the contract.  Did anyone?  How can we allow HAZMAT materials and a dangerous, tall industrial structure to violate the very essense of our zoning codes without questioning whether these leases are even legal and the structures will be sound?  And, if there is truly nothing to worry about, then why isn't anyone coming forward to tell us that? 

We are not involved in this issue because it is interesting to us.  We are involved because we feel we are being compelled to do so because of the lack of knowledge, accountability, interest or even minimal response we are so far getting from anyone and everyone we would expect should be wanting to protect us, the taxpayers, the ones who have elected all of you for the specific purpose of representing us. 

We don't know anyone who wants these towers.  So, who exactly is being represented and what do we need to do to show you that there are a lot more people on our side than they have on theirs?

Sincerely,

Get the Cell Out - Atlanta

Please visit our Facebook page, www.facebook.com/Get.the.Cell.Out.ATL, currently at 10,184 page views for this month alone, up 167% from this time last month.

NOTE:  The RF Emissions Report submitted by T-mobile to the school board is dated 2009 and is certified by someone in Colorado, not Gerogia.  The pole document is from Fulton County and the mount evaluation does not meet current safety codes.  We are not experts, but these were all errors that were easy for us to spot.  If you are looking at an application, we are sure you will see many more issues that concern you as well.

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Lesson Learned: In Politics, It is Not a Good Idea to “Be the Ball”


(click headline for full text of this article)

Prelude to today’s article:
Please note that this is a blog. Therefore the commentary you are about to read is considered an “opinion.” We are a real grass-roots group in many regards, including our limited understanding about how the political process works.  
 
We are fortunate to have solid educational backgrounds and a lot of friends.  As the individual neighborhoods affected are putting forth their best efforts to protect themselves, we are also helping them find common ground through our group which is intended to be a countywide movement. 

We hope to unite all residents in DeKalb County on this issue.  We find it unlikely that anyone who lives here would want to see their tax dollars wasted or our communities torn apart by poor decision-making that benefits only a few at the expense of our most valuable resource - our children.  Today was an odd day.  There was a lot of back and forth and politics influencing decisions and votes that we realized that if there were a pin-pong game going on right now, we would not be winning or losing - we would be the ball! 

Subtitle for Article 1, Subsection to the Previously Amended Paragraph 2A Dated 2012, 06 March… (That’s How They Really Talk at the Capitol Building!)


We attended the public hearing at the Coverdale Legislative Building yesterday to support the bill proposed by Rep. Karla Drenner that would ban cell towers on school grounds. We were optimistic that we would receive good news about the chances of the local-only bill being passed on to the House for a vote since it received a large majority of delegates who signed on to it last week.

Unfortunately, the hearing was full of bad news.  At least that is how it seemed from our perspective, but please feel free to write into our comments section if you felt differently!

#1) Local Bill  Drenner’s bill, the local one, is being held up by the committee chairman for undisclosed reasons. He doesn’t even live in DeKalb County, but apparently is “stalling.” The committee is called the House Intergovernmental Coordination Committee. We have no idea what they do.

We were told about the various ways we could contact the chairman Chuck Sims, a Republican from Ambrose, GA ( chuck.sims@house.ga.gov ).

And we were told how to reach the two DeKalb representatives who did not vote in favor of the “Prudent Avoidance” cell tower Bill 1197 in case we want to explain our position. These folks are pretty important - Stacey Abrams - the Minority Leader and Resident of DeKalb County ( StaceyAbrams@gmail.com ). Abrams is a Democrat from Atlanta. And Howard Mosby, the Chairman of the DeKalb County Delegation, who is also a Democrat from Atlanta, howard.mosby@house.ga.gov.

We have uploaded the document that was handed out at this hearing. It has all the contact information if you would like to read it over and help this legislation make it out of committee and onto the House floor. http://www.scribd.com/doc/84122214/One-Page-for-Cell-Tower-Lobbying-Rev-1

#2) Senate Bill  In addition to the news about the stalled committee and the little notes, we were informed that the bill introduced by Sen. Jason Carter was already killed and it might come up again as an amendment to a current bill already in progress. We are assuming that someone figured out the same thing we did which is the fact that we already have laws on the books that have been contested all the way to the Supreme Court of Georgia and that ruling states clearly that the exemption does not apply when the use of the property in question is for a “proprietary” or for-profit business, like T-mobile.

And, for that reason, we started to realize that maybe this legislation idea is not going to help us after all. We are not giving up on it. We still support it. But, we are losing confidence that it is going to help any of us in the short-term if we want to stay focused on stopping the cell towers that are approved and on their way.

That list includes just 7 schools at the moment:
    Briarlake Elementary School, Decatur
    Margaret Harris Comprehensive School, Atlanta
    Smoke Rise Elementary School, Stone Mountain
    Jolly Elementary School, Clarkston
    MLK High School, Lithonia
    Flat Rock Elementary School, Lithonia
    Princeton Elementary School, Lithonia
#3) State Bill  And rounding out the news of the day, yesterday, we briefly heard about the state version of Drenner’s bill HB1198. She didn’t sound very hopeful that it would gain support from the rural counties in Georgia because they need the money and would be happy to get any financial support they can. Rep. Drenner announced that she will be running for another term in her office and, if elected, she will continue to make this issue a top priority.

We will be sending email inquiries, as suggested, to the people on the list provided by Rep. Drenner. We urge you to do the same. As we mentioned in a previous article, please send any responses you receive to sayno2celltowers@yahoo.com and we will share them on our website without publishing your identity.

We have received a couple of these emails already from our previous request for information from the county commissioners or CEO’s office. We will be posting them later today.


Here Comes the Entourage…


You didn’t think that would be the end of it, did you? Of course not! Politicians have a way of making time go really fast or really slow, depending on which suits them best. As we prepared to embark on our mission to save the Drenner local bill, we received an update via email.

Remember that committee we thought was stalling? Well, apparently, they changed their minds and decided to move ahead very quickly. And they wanted all of us to jump through hoops, too.

A committee meeting is apparently going on right now (11 a.m., March 6, in Room 515).  We have several representatives attending who will report back to us with any news or updates.  It was extremely short notice and requires people to take time away from work, yet again, which is not always easy to do.

In attendance will be a representative from the school board and several lobbyists from the cellular industry. We assume they will try to convince the committee to do what we were already told they are doing - stall.

We started to post an urgent message for everyone to attend this meeting, but that’s when it hit us… back to the title of this article… something just doesn‘t feel right. We started getting those feelings of being bounced around and used in some sort of game.

And no one likes being the ball when it means you just keep getting hit from both sides of the table. It is possible that we could get so dizzy from all this back and forth with the legislature that we forget the other urgent matters going on right now:



#1)  the primary election, and
#2)  the possible permit applications being submitted by T-mobile to the Office of Planning and Sustainability and under the Direction of CEO Burrell Ellis’s office.

The residents of DeKalb County have been speaking out, writing, emailing, calling, protesting and basically banging their heads against podiums everywhere trying to tell our elected officials in every level of government how we feel about this issue. If they have not received that message loud and clear by now, they clearly are not listening.

Rep. Drenner is an excellent advocate for the wishes of the people and she is an expert on the effects of radiation and the studies that have been conducted to date that show evidence of biological changes that can result with long-term exposure to even the lowest levels of non-ionizing radiation from cellphone towers.

We will post an update here as soon as we have any information to share.

In the meantime, with regard to the OTHER two urgent issues listed above:

You are urged to email the DeKalb County CEO Burrell Ellis
and ask that he DENY the permits being sought by T-mobile or that he require them to follow the correct process of Special Land Use Permit, not Administrative Permit, so that public notification and comment will be a part of this process.
Here is an easy form to get your message to him right now: http://www.burrellellis.com/index.php?option=com_facileforms&Itemid=129
If you are a registered voter and can vote in the primary election today, we hope you will do so.


Thanks for reading our blog. Remember to stay focused, work together and don’t let anyone use you as the ping-pong ball in their game. What we are doing is right and we already have the laws on our side! Keep up the great work!h

Thursday, March 1, 2012

DeKalb County, GA, Code of Ordinances - Sec. 27 - 779 Telecommunications Towers and Antennas

(Click headline for full story)

We were honored to have the opportunity to speak at the Feb. 21 public hearing held by Rep. Karla Drenner regarding cellphone towers on school grounds.  

Upon the conclusion of that meeting, another DeKalb resident who was there to state opposition to the cell towers asked us about the DeKalb County zoning codes and whether we had seen the long list of precautions and guidelines already in place. 

In fact, we were very familiar with these guidelines as we originally thought that we would have an opportunity to address the areas where we thought T-mobile might be in violation of them, based on the information that was submitted to the DeKalb County School Board last summer and posted for public review. 

However, as we began asking questions about this process in an effort to assist the schools wishing to protest, we learned something that we had not expected to hear... the DeKalb County Office of Planning and Sustainability which reports directly to CEO Burrell Ellis was claiming that it actually had zero oversight of the DeKalb County Schools.  Read the response we received back in June 2011.

We have summarized our thoughts and the information we have uncovered regarding the issue of permits for telecommunications towers and the zoning laws in Dekalb County.  Remember, these are the specifications already on the books regarding the placement of cell phone towers in a reasonable manner to protect the health and best interests of the citizens of our county. 

Sen. Jason Carter is working on new legislation to clairfy when and how these rules apply, but first let's acknowledge that our county is actually several steps ahead others when it comes to protecting its citizens from cell towers.  Many local municipalities do not realize they have a need for these type of regulations until it is too late.  Here in DeKalb, it would seem, we are all ready for the cell companies to come knocking because the laws are in place to establish and maintain our communities.  Or are they??

At the bottom of this article, we have copied the applicable zoning laws and included the link in case you want to check out the original for yourself.  If T-mobile were required to apply for a Special Land Use Permit, these are the guidelines they would be expected to follow.  We would like to think these are the same rules that would apply even if T-mobile were to be allowed a Special Administrative Permit. 

Sadly, we fear that the Administrative (or closed door) route is being taken here in an effort to AVOID following the rules.  Hopefully, this is the loophole that Sen. Jason Carter is attempting to close for us so that future schools will not face the same legal battles that our current cell tower schools are being forced to consider.
Richard Marion (above), a representatives from
No Tower Briarlake, LLC, along with others from
Unhappy Taxpayer and Voter and the Briarcliff Heights
Neighborhood Action Group appealed to the DeKalb County
Commissioners on Feb. 28, 2012. 

These citizens argued to the commissioners that a
moratorium on cell tower construction is needed. 
They urged the officials to protect
the rights of the citizens and children of our county.

They stated a countywide sentiment that we do not
want cell towers to be built at 9 public school campuses,
especially without due process and notification under
our county's own zoning laws and regulations.

Click the video at the bottom to view these public comments.

But, let's just consider the current zoing laws and the towers that are on their way to our schools right now.  Clearly, many of the towers planned for school grounds would be in serious violation of these requirements.  But, according to the DeKalb County Commissioners we've contacted (and their responses are printed on this website), they believe that the school system deserves a special exemption from this normal application process, but why? 

The exemption has been clarified by the Supreme Court of Georgia to apply ONLY when the use of the property is for governmental purposes and NOT when the use is for proprietary purposes (such as a private company like T-mobile seeking to make a commercial profit from the operation of a cell tower).  See summary:  http://www.lawskills.com/case/ ga/id/274/39/index.html

So, why is Burrell Ellis's office planning to issue "Special Administrative Permits" to T-mobile that will allow them to ignore our county's zoning codes and will not allow public input or comment?  We have attempted to contact the CEO, but have not had any luck since that initial email reply we received that stated his office had no control over the school board.  Read the text here.   We asked  him about this subject in a public meeting, but he defered to the commissioners who promised to get back with us.  They didn't.

Is this an issue of the school board claiming to be exempt?  Then, why doesn't the CEO tell them that the exemption does not apply? 

Is it a question of T-mobile claiming to be able to utilize the exemption that is normally offered to the school board for building educational builidings?  Then why doesn't the CEO correct that assumption and set the record straight? 

If you write or call your own county commissioner, or if you get an answer to any of these questions from CEO Burrell Ellis, please email us and let us know.  We would like to print any responses you receive on our website so that we can all stop spinning our wheels and understand this process together.  Your identity will not be revealed. 

Email your responses to sayno2celltowers@yahoo.com.


We are not accussing anyone of doing anything wrong.  But, this is a government that is supposed to be "for the people," right?  So, why is it so difficult for "the people" to get an explanation that makes sense?

Dekalb.county.telecommunications


Get Microsoft Silverlight

If you have questions, like we do, please direct them to these individuals at the county level:

Send your emails to:
DeKalb County Planning and Sustainability - grants permit

And also send emails to:

NOTE:  THIS IS A NEW INTERIM PLANNING DIRECTOR

If you have already attempted to contact this department, please try again
and ask for Gary Cornell.  Perhaps we will have better luck with him than we did
with the former Interim Director, Andrew Baker.

Suite 400, 1300 Commerce Drive
Decatur, GA 30030-3221
Phone: (404) 371-2607

CC: your emails to the following: 
Elaine Boyer 404-371-2844 ecboyer@dekalbcountyga.gov
Jeff Rader 404-371-2863 jrader@dekalbcountyga.gov
Larry Johnson 404-371-2425 larryjohnson@dekalbcountyga.gov
Sharon Barnes Sutton 404-371-4907 sbsutton@dekalbcountyga.gov
Lee May 404-371-4745 lmay@dekalbcountyga.gov
Kathie Gannon 404-371-4909 kgannon@dekalbcountyga.gov
Stan Watson 404-371-3681 stanwatson@dekalbcountyga.gov

BCC: your emails to us at:  sayno2celltowers@yahoo.com 
if you would like us to help keep track
of how many people have asked the same questions
and received the same responses (or no responses).

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Drenner Legislation May Stop Cell Towers at Schools in DeKalb County

Drenner (D) -
DeKalb County
State Representative
(click headline for full story)

A hearing was held yesterday, 2/21/12, by Representative Karla Drenner (D) - Avondales Estates - to gauge the public support or opposition to proposed legislation that would limit or ban cellphone towers from being constructed near schools and daycares in DeKalb County and statewide.  Drenner stated she planned to introduce both a local and state bill next week, but she will need her fellow legislators to approve the placement of the issue onto the agenda for this term.  Of the 60 or more people in attendance, all were in favor of the idea of legislation on the issue.  There were only two people who were in attendance to represent the viewpoint of the telecommunications industry and their statements were not really geared toward the specific issues being faced in DeKalb County.

A good play-by-play of this hearing was logged live by Jonathan Cribbs from the Briarcliff-Druid Hills Patch.  You can read it here:  http://northdruidhills.patch.com/articles/live-cell-phone-towers-hearing-in-atlanta.  You can practice the art of patience while you wait for a brief video commercial before the article is displayed.
A packed house at the Coverdale Legislative Building where
DeKalb residents showed up in strong unity to support
Rep. Drenner's proposed legislation that will directly
impact the placement of cell towers, keeping them away
from schools and daycare centers.

The issues discussed at the hearing are nothing new for those who have been involved in this controversy, thanks to the decision made 10 months ago by the DeKalb School Board while in the midst of interviewing canidates for the Superintendent position.  In fact, the issues being discussed are not really new anywhere.  See this article from a county in Baltimore that was going through the exact same thing.  Only difference?  This article is from FOUR YEARS AGO! 

But there was something new for DeKalb County that came out of this meeting - unity.  Perhaps more important than what was said was the convening of all these groups of concerned residents into one room. 

Be Proud, One DeKalb!
If you took the time to look around and see who was represented, you would be proud to be a resident of DeKalb County.  There were quality citizens present from every community and every neighborhood affected by this issue.  Every school, every age group, every socio- or economic group came out to attend this hearing.  And it was clear that every child who might be affected by the unwelcomed and unannounced intrusion by T-mobile at his/her school was represented in some way by at least one adult in that room.  And every single person sounded sincere and ready to take action in order to stand up for his or her rights, the rights of the children and the rights of each other.  In a county that may be often divided in its politics and is known as being the most diverse county in the state of Gerogia, there was a common and united bond that could be heard through the words that were spoken, and witnessed by the silent nods of approval for one another, the polite and supportive "golfers" claps for the speakers and the actions of those in the room.  If one were able to contain the feelings of outrage and betrayal and make them somehow civilized and well-mannered, that is what you would use to describe the feeling in the room at the Coverdale Legislative Building.

Perhaps the silver lining to this issue will be the combining of forces within our county to achieve a common goal.  As each person got up to speak, every other person in the room listened and understood.  We all recognized that we are on the same path.  We all recognized that we share the same concerns.  And we validated these concerns for one another.  Many of those who spoke did so with compassion and intelligence and everyone sensed the fact that the interests of all involved were being considered by Rep. Drenner.

It was almost like a support group meeting, or perhaps just a group of citizens who realized for a moment that we are all more alike than we are different.  And we can all spin our wheels letting the system work us over and spit us out.  Or, we can join forces and take back the rights that belong to the people in the first place.  If we can work together, we can stop these cell towers.  If we can work together, we can stop other cell towers from going up in other neighborhoods, or perhaps even set a precedent in our state.  We can work together to put the welfare of children first and show our leaders that we do not want them to place their quest for funding above all other needs.  As the members of the group CHASE were there to represent, we all have rights to live and raise our children in an environment that is both safe and healthy. 

We noted the following groups represented at the hearing: 
  • Get the Cell Out - Atlanta (countywide opposition group started by parents from Brockett),
  • Briarcliff Heights Community Action Group (started by residents of the community near Margaret Harris Center),
  • Briarlake Elementary School (ties to Lakeside High),
  • Jolly Elementary School, Medlock Elementary School, 
  • Concerned Citizens of South DeKalb (Narvie J. Harris, MLK High School, Flat Rock Elemenary),
  • NAACP (including ties to Princeton and Smoke Rise),
  • Unhappy Taxpayer and Voter (ties to Jolly and Smoke Rise),
  • Martin Luther King High School,
  • Citizens for a Safe and Healthy Environment (CHASE) (ties to Morehouse College,
  • The Georgia Green Party (on behalf of all schools and neighborhoods),
  • Private Citizens Also in the Medical Community, Education / Instruction Community and the Legal Community,
  • The Champion press,
  • The Braircliff-Druid Hills Patch, The Tucker Patch, The Stone Mountain Patch, The East Metro Patch,
  • WSB-TV and Radio,
  • The AJC,
  • DeKalb School Watch,
  • The Georgia Telecommunications Group and
  • T-Mobile. 
Notably absent from the hearings were any official representatives from the school PTAs or except for Brairlake Elementary School, any representatives from the DCSS or the DeKalb County Commissioners.

Reasonable People.  Reasonable Requests.
No one was anti-technology or even anti-cellular communication.  Everyone was in favor of setting reasonable limits to protect our investment in our homes and the health of our residents and children. 

The idea that an urban location, such as Atlanta and any of its suburbs, can claim that towers are needed is a distortion of the truth.  In all urban communities today, there are ample towers to provide access to cellular services.  There is no part of the law that states that every carrier must have 100% coverage in all areas or that they must be allowed to expand based on the load or demand that is placed upon their particular network at various times of the day. 

They are not obligated to sell to every person who wants to buy from them.  Just like a restaurant is not obligated to serve a meal to every person who shows up at their door when they are already seated at maximum capacity.  The towers that are in place right now in our county provide adequate coverage for voice communications and data transmissions, like texting and basic Internet access.  Of the five major providers, all have the ability to use the existing towers and provide continous availability of the basic service to their customers without interruption.

In fact, all school locations being considered already have at least 20 towers in the near vicinity.  Some have far more towers, such as the Margaret Harris School which has nearly 155 in a four mile radius already!

The problem is not about "need" for towers.  The issue is about the desire and greed of the telecommunications industry to provide customers with the ability to do more with their wireless devices so they can charge higher rates for their services, regardless of whether the features they are adding are anything the customers have asked for or even considered.  It is the large data demand they are consciously placing on their own networks that is leading to the consumption of space the towers can accomodate, such as streaming of live video or ability to watch a movie wirelessly on a mobile device in high definition. 

In short, the new towers T-mobile wants are 4G wireless technology towers that we are not even using currently.  There is no "need" or demand on the consumer side of the equation.  These towers are not about making phone calls.  And, if they were subjected to the standard process for permitting of cell towers, they would likely not be allowed as they are non-compliant on many issues that the zoning committee would typically oversee, such as setback requirements of 200 ft. from any home or building.

The claim that the towers are needed for 911 service is completely inaccurate as all cell towers are required by law to be 911 cell towers.  The 911 service is set up to operate on a totally different frequency that regular cellular transmissions, something that resulted from the tragedy of Sept. 11 when police and fire crews had difficulty using their communication devices due to the demand placed on the cellular networks due to family and friends trying to place calls into and out of New York City. 

The claim that the schools need the towers to operate their wireless devices is also untrue.  The way many people have wireless service in their homes can also be set up in schools.  The data connection is secured through a standard phone line or cable connection and then a wireless router deploys the signal inside the building.  Cell towers are not only not needed for this type of wireless setup, but they are also less secure and therefore not the top choice when looking at an IT solution to allow the use of wireless devices inside an office building or school.  Of course, the only "safe" way to transfer data in a school is through a wired solution, something we have urged the board to consider.

Chance for a Temporary Moritorim (Halt) on All Cell Tower Construction?
If Drenner is successful at getting her proposed legislation on the agenda for consideration, Attorney Lauren Staley, who lives near the Margaret Harris School in Atlanta, stated that she believed there would be grounds to call for a moritorium on all cell tower construction while the issue is being decided by the legislature. 

That could be enough relief for the current schools to halt the plans of the DeKalb County School Board to have construction begin as early as next month.  Staley and her husband Joe Staley are leading their neighborhood opposition and speaking up for the children who attend their local school which is specifically for the county's most severely disabled children, both mentally and physically.  Many of these children have coclear implants, hearing devices that can be damaged permanently from the radiofrequency waves emitted by cell towers.

While in the hearing, a member of the audience read information from an email, presumably from the county permit department, that indicated April would be more likely of an expected timeframe for the permits to be approved.  That means we could see the start of construction sometime in April, or more likely in May, after school is out for the Summer.  It will be a full year since the first cell tower public meetings.  As of today, no permit applications have been made public and the county commissioners are unilaterally denying that this issue falls into their jurisdiction to approve.

So, if the the county is not reviewing the cell tower plans, then who is?  These structures are very complicated and dangerous, especially when placed so close to homes and schools.  GTCO-ATL has uncovered evidence that the plans submitted by T-mobile to not meet current industry standards for the base plate and pole mount evaluations, making them more suspectible to falling over in high winds.  Who will monitor the towers after they are built?  Who will ensure they do not exceed the FCC recommendations for safe emissions to protect human life as well as animal and plant life in the areas near them? 

And, the vote that took place in July by the school board was preceeded by discussion of the fact that other communities might be unaware of the issue.  It was discussed that those folks would have an opportunity to voice concerns at the public zoning meetings, but those meetings never took  place.  Instead, the county is stating that the school board is exempt from county zoning laws and they have no oversight or control.  It is the opinion of GTCO-ATL that the exemption does not apply when the school is leasing its property for commercial activity.
The FCC standards for cell towers are sorely out of date.  The FCC Telecommunications Act of 1996 is the standard by which today's technology is being judged, but there are vital issues we face today that were not taken into account 15 years ago.  Cumulative effects of radiation are not accounted for in this Act when judging the necessity or safety of a proposed tower.  Just because the tower itself gains approval for emissions under the regulated standards (which are still far higher than in other countries, esp. those that subsidize their own healthcare systems), does not mean that a person or child at ground level is not being exposed to levels above FCC standards. 

Pres. Bill Clinton signed the FCC Act of 1996
on Feb. 8. as VP Al Gore watches.
If there are multiple towers with overlapping zones of coverage (which is necessary for the towers to work correctly without dropping calls) or if there are multiple towers competing for the same coverage area, then there are likely to be many different sources of radiation that are falling upon the ground simultaneoulsy.  Add to that the emissions of our devices themselves, like GPS, tablets, wireless routers or modems, laptops, etc. and it is very easy to encounter "hot spots" that create danger zones for human exposure, especially the most vulernable populations.  Rep. Drenner stated that we would not consider standing right next to a microwave oven all day, every day.  So, why would it be okay to stand next to a cell tower?

Seeking Republican Support
In an interesting bill also being considered in Georgia, state Representative John Albers (R) - Roswell, wants to allow Georgia to have authority to exempt itself from some federal laws.  Perhaps if Albers is looking for constituent support with his action, there might be a way that Drenner can work with him to ensure passing of both the exemption bill and the cell tower bill.  Then Georgia could potentially claim to be exempt from the fereral law on cell tower placements.

Most suspectible to effects of RF radiation are children as their bodies are still growng.  In children, their DNA is still developing and changing as they grow.  Rep. Drenner stated her extensive background in the area of radiation science and explained her concerns were largely due to her own knowledge about how radiation can interfere with healthy growth of cells and lead to gene mutations.  Eventually, such mutations are what can become cancerous growths or childhood leukemia, a cancer of the blood.  This form of cancer has been seen in many of the schools and neighborhoods that are currently involved in lawsuits against the telecommunications industry right now. 

Due to the large bankroll of the cellphone companies, these cases are likely to be dragged out for several years before the outcome is made public.  Or, if the families bringing the lawsuits forward do not have an endless financial fund by which to continue their fight, a settlement will likely occur that prohibits the familes from going public with their claims. 

It may be many more years before the truth of the dangers is actually common knowledge.  If you have a child at one of these 9 schools in DeKalb County, then you likely agree that, given a choice, no parents would knowingly, intentionally take a chance with their own child's life by exposing them to a known or possible human carcinigen. 

A school system that is paid for by taxpayers for the express purpose of educating the young and ensuring the future of a community, has no business accepting financial support from a business that clearly has only one purpose in its bid to use our land - to increase profit for its shareholders.  The cellphone industry is not trying to be our "partner in education" as some corporatations have done successfully.  They simply want to build the cheapest equipment possible to expand their infrastructure.  They want to pay as little in tax and make as much in profit from our citizens.  The fact that what they do and how they do it could possibly harm children or the envirnoment is not a deterrant for them.  And a school system that will waste time considering an offer for an insignifacnt amount of money without regard to the impact on the school, the children and the community, is a school system that is very far off track from focusing on its primary goal of education.

The risks are many.  The benefits are few.  The results will be long-lasting as 30-year agreements are at stake here.  What is decided will not only affect us and our children, but many of our unborn children and even unborn grandchildren.  Who is going to be the voice for these children?  Who can insist that their lives be put at risk simply because we choose to ignore the results of research that has prompted other countries, like Canada, the U.K. and Germany, to take action?

Please contact YOUR state legislators and let them know this issue is important to you.  Tell them you want to see it on the earliest agenda possible and you hope they will help turn it into a law that will help protect our children.  Please spread the word however you can to as many people as you can.  Cell towers do not belong in residentially zoned neighborhoods.  They do not have a place on o
our school grounds. 

Practice "prudent avoidance"  We should all heed the advice of Representative Drenner and practice "prudent avoidance" of the areas we know will expose us and our children to RF radiation until safe, practical methods for cell service are developed and deployed in the U.S., as has been taking place in other countries. 

A DAS, distributed antenna system, is a good alternative that has been suggested in areas where cellular service is needed but cell towers are not desired.  We suggest that T-mobile representatives start coming up with alternatives to our schools is they wish to improve the service they provide. 

The T-mobile representative at the hearing suggested that Drenner include something in her legislatin that would include suggesting of alternate locations if the school is determined to be a poor fit.  GTCO-ATL is hopeful that Drenner does not include any such language.  Just like it is not the business of the school system to solve the problems of the cellular industry, it also is not the job of the county's government officials or citizens to solve these issues for them.  We are not aware of the specifications by which they determine the exact need for more towers, nor do we wish to learn how to do their jobs for them. 

 In the meantime, we suggest that customers of T-mobile consider other carriers (such as Verizon which works fine at Lakeside) rather than forcing industrial structures into parts of the county that are not zoned for such dangerous structures.

Any proposal that is intentionally held back from the public instead of explained with a rational pro/con approach is suspect.  The "public information sessions" are actually in violation of the Georgia Open Meetings Laws that require advance and proper notice for meetings where public input is sought.  T-mobile had an opportunity to tell the public the benefits, but they chose the coward's way out. 

They decided to host low attndance meetings and urge our school board to sneak their vote past us over the Summer.  They thought the people of DeKalb County would either not be smart enough to realize what happened or would not care enough to do anything about it. Clearly, they were wrong! 

Legal action is currently being considered by individual communities as well as by some groups working for multiple locations involved in this matter.  If you are interested in helping this effort or joining up with one of these groups, we can get you in touch with the right people.  Just send an email to us at :  sayno2celltowers@yahoo.com.