Showing posts with label CEO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CEO. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Smoke Rise Residents Reach Out to DeKalb's New Interim CEO on Cell Tower Issue

8/17/13:  Note to Our Readers:  Dr. Johanna Stamper is a research scientist in mathematical biology. She has been trained in cancer research and is very concerned that there would be any possibility of cell towers being placed at schools, especially elementary schools, in our county. She says that once she explains the science, the concerns of the people in her neighborhood became much more elevated.  

If you share the concerns of Dr. Stamper and Get the Cell Out, please take a few moments to email or call, at a minimum, the following people who are critical to this struggle:

  • Director of Public Works, DeKalb County:
  • Director of Planning and Sustainability, DeKalb County:
  • Interim CEO of DeKalb County:
  • Interim Superintendent of DeKalb County Schools:
  • And your county commissioner, school board representatives and state legislators.



8/13/13

Dear Smoke Signal Editors,

Thank you for printing the Letter to the Editor in your August 2013 newspaper edition.  It was from a new Smoke Rise family that recently learned about the former school board's vote to approve cell towers for several schools in DeKalb County, including one at Smoke Rise Elementary School.  We applaud your publication for helping to educate and inform your community on this issue.

Thank you to Robert Stamper and Dr. Johanna Stamper for stepping up to inform your new community of Smoke Rise about what you learned about the dangers of cell towers and encouraging them to contact their elected officials!  We have reprinted a letter to the editor written by Dr. Stamper which was published in the August 2013 edition of the Smoke Signal, a local newsletter for the residents in the Smoke Rise community.

We also thank the Smoke Rise Homeowners' Association for sending Virginia Reece as their representative to the Tucker Parent Council meeting at Brockett Elementary School at the end of the last school year.  We appreciate her comments and efforts to educate the Smoke Rise community and others in DeKalb who heard her dialogue with the Interim Superintendent Thurmond.

We have listed some contact details here in order to assist your efforts.  As Dr. Stamper noted, it is very important for the residents near any of the proposed school cell tower sites to voice their concerns to Commissioner Lee May as he is now the acting CEO of our county.

The county commissioners have all stated they would uphold the codes at the time, but those codes are now in a review process.  Don't let the cell tower companies slip changes past you that could lead to a tower being built without community input.

We hope you will visit our website, www.GETtheCELLoutATL.org, to keep up to date on this issue.  We want to remind your readers that when they email or speak to their local government officials, it is important to mention concern for ALL the schools in DeKalb County and ALL the children.  The safety of the children must come as the highest priority above anything else.  Our leaders need to know that this is one issue that cannot be used to pit communities against one another.  On this topic, we will not be divided.

Thanks Smoke Rise residents for being GOOD NEIGHBORS!

--- Get the Cell Out Atlanta





Please leave respectful comments below:

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

DeKalb CEO Burrell Ellis Charged with 14 Felonies

AJC Photo credit.  CEO Burrell Ellis bonded out of
jail late Tuesday after being indicted on charges of
extortion, theft and conspiracy.
DeKalb CEO Burrell Ellis has been indicted by a DeKalb grand jury today on charges he illegally pressured contractors into giving him campaign contributions.

The 15-count indictment includes 14 felonies. Among them, four counts of extortion, two counts of theft by taking and several conspiracy charges.

DeKalb District Attorney Robert James, in an afternoon news conference, said Ellis is charged with extortion and other felonies for soliciting campaign contributions under threat. Ellis has turned himself into the DeKalb County Jail and has been released, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution has confirmed.


Here are other blogs or letters we have written regarding the cell tower controversy at our schools as we appealed to Mr. Ellis for his help:


Please leave respectful comments below:

Saturday, August 11, 2012

Quality Life For DeKalb - No Cell Tower On School Grounds


Viola Davis (RNwhocares@gmail.com) wanted to share this with you.

Please send CEO Burrell Ellis a message to unify with DeKalb BOC and uphold our local laws and ordinance by denying a permit to construct cell towers on school grounds.

In the Northlake / Tucker area back in Januay, residents protested outside T-mobile's store to show their anger at
the decision to put cell towers at 9 local schools, next to homes and without the input of the community.
Quality Life For DeKalb - No Cell Tower On School Grounds
by RNwhocares

Memo
To:        CEO Burrell Ellis
From:    Viola Davis
CC:       Unhappy Taxpayer & Voter, Get The Cell Out Atlanta, Concerned Citizens of South DeKalb, Citizens for a Healthy and Safe Environment, DeKalb NAACP, No Briarlake Tower.org, Briarcliff Heights Community Action Group, No Cell Tower Fund.com, and all appropriate parties
Date:    4/3/2012
Re:       Quality Life For DeKalb - No Cell Tower On School Grounds

Quality Life For DeKalb – No Cell Tower On School Grounds

One DeKalb Lives ... restore neighborhoods and build hope.  One DeKalb Works ... create jobs and also build hope.  These are the two DeKalb logos on the front page of the county website.  However, One DeKalb has a “new message.”

We are proud to join the basic message of One DeKalb to say that parents and homeowners from North and South DeKalb have sent a unified message that we do not want cell towers on school grounds and request CEO Burrell Ellis deny any applications for construction of cell towers on school grounds.

We are contacting CEO Ellis to move the One DeKalb political logo and slogan into a public issue action plan.  

North and South DeKalb have united to send a clear message that we do not want cell phone towers on school grounds especially within residential neighborhoods.  We have collectively petitioned our elected officials to pass laws to protect our children, protect our neighborhoods, and protect our overall quality of life.

Parents and Homeowners throughout DeKalb County take pride in the following facts:
  • The entire Board of Comm issioners has taken a position on cell towers on DeKalb school properties to not ignore its ordinances unless it has been proven in court.
  • Rep. Karla Drenner introduced HB1128, entitled “Prudent Avoidance,” and received the support of 16 out of 18 signatures from the DeKalb Delegation.

DeKalb County has not seen this level of unity before in the history of any given issue and look forward to our CEO joining this history making venture. 

We request CEO Burrell Ellis join the DeKalb Board of Commissioners to uphold our local zoning law.  We ask CEO Burrell Ellis to prove One DeKalb is more than a political slogan by joining the Board of Commissioners to send a message to T-Mobile that DeKalb deserves a high quality of life and that quality starts and ends with upholding our local laws and ordinances.
  
Time to Take Action:  Please write, email and/or phone CEO Burrell Ellis and request he join the Board of Commissioners and DeKalb Delegation to send T-Mobile a message that “it is the policy of DeKalb County to prohibit cell towers on single-family residentially-zones properties” and “this zoning ordinance was established to ensure the safety of county residents and to protect property values of single-family homes” as quoted from Crossroads Newspaper.

Contact CEO Burrell Ellis:

CEO Burrell Ellis
Chief Executive Officer
DeKalb County Government
330 W. Ponce de Leon Avenue, 6th Floor
Decatur, GA 30030

Copy (Optional) to:
For extra assurance your letter of support
reaches the right people, you may wish to send a copy to:

The Director of Public Works
The Director (or Interim Director) of Planning & Sustainability
The Chief of Staff for the Office of Community Relations.

Phone Numbers:
404-371-2881 Executive Office
404-371-2521 Neighborhood Empowerment
404-371-6301 Scheduling Line


Contact Your County Commissioners
Please send an e-mail/letter thanking the entire Board of Commissioners for their stand and letting them know that we are making our concerns known to Burrell Ellis.

Tell your district representative (or all of them) you are taking the next step to ensure the CEO knows the letter they penned is also backed by the wishes of the people of DeKalb County.

Contact details can be found here: http://web.co.dekalb.ga.us/boc/contact.html.
Attend a BOC Meeting
If you have not already, please take a morning, attend and speak at one of the BOC meetings which occur twice a month. They are held beginning at 9:00 AM on the second and fourth Tuesdays of every month.

This is an important opportunity for you as a citizen in DeKalb County to participate in the county’s operation. These meetings have been extremely educational and experiential for all who have taken the time. 

BOC Meetings are held at the Maloof Auditorium at 1300 Commerce Drive in Decatur.

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.

Monday, April 16, 2012

Sound Familiar? "The principal and the PTA have to give it the OK."



We were debating about whether or not to post this article since it is from February of 2011.  That was until we saw something very interesting about the process as explained by a Real Estate Executive for the Maryland Schools.  In case you are pressed for time, we highlighted and underlined the good parts for you.
********************************************

Residents Upset Over Proposed Cell Tower
From the Gazette.net, Maryland Community News Online
Feb. 23, 2011

Neighbors say T-Mobile tower will lower property values
by Jeanette Der Bedrosian | Staff Writer
(Click headline to read full text)


A T-Mobile cell phone tower proposed for a field behind Sligo Middle School has some neighbors upset that the 130-foot monopole will lower property values, take recreation space away from school children and disturb the Sligo Creek ecosystem.

The proposal for the tower went in front of a Montgomery County hearing examiner earlier this month, who is tasked with determining whether T-Mobile should get the special exception in zoning necessary to use school space for a commercial purpose.

While awaiting a decision, however, nearby neighbors are up in arms that the school system and cell phone company did not properly alert nearby residents of what might be moving in next door.

Standing behind the school Monday morning, several Gridley Lane residents looked at the site of the proposed tower.

 "T-Mobile already has so many towers," said John Polletto, 63. "Why do they need more?"

 "They claim they put it here because of the trees, but the tower will be higher than the trees," said his wife, Kathy Polletto, 59.

 "This park wasn't built for that anyway," added Barbara Jarboe, 70. "That's not what people want to see here."

 The cell tower is proposed for a 30-foot-by-80-foot space behind the tennis courts at Sligo Middle School, according to T-Mobile's application to the county. T-Mobile would also install a 10-foot-wide access path along the side of the tennis courts. The tower will help provide in-building coverage to residential neighborhoods surrounding routes 193 and 97 to reduce the number of dropped calls, the document says.

...  (T-mobile text here) ....

 The residents who gathered behind the school earlier this week said they worry the cell tower will lower property values. It cuts into a well-used play area popular among sledders and families wanting to throw around a football or Frisbee. And as they point out deer tracks, they say the cell tower and associated access path will cut into a wildlife habitat and could possibly require removal of trees that could erode the forest.

 They said they didn't receive notice of opportunities for public comment until December, years after the application process started.

 "I didn't hear anything from T-Mobile, I didn't hear anything from the county, it was a piece of paper from my neighbor that alerted me," said Julia Wisniewski, a resident of nearby Gridley Lane in Silver Spring, referring to a note from a concerned neighbor.

 Neighbors said around Christmas, they were given a notice of the special exception hearing.

The process for getting a cell tower installed on the site involves several steps, according to Mary Pat Wilson, real estate management specialist for Montgomery County Public Schools. First, the applicant expresses interest in the site, the principal and PTA have to give it the OK, plans are drawn up and reviewed by a division of the Department of Park and Planning, the company has to get a special exception for zoning, and the superintendant makes the final decision, Wilson said.


 T-Mobile is currently at the special exception portion of the process, she said. The terms of the lease are currently under negotiation, she said.

 Several of the Gridley Lane residents and other Montgomery County residents testified against granting T-Mobile the special exception, John Polletto said. None of those gathered behind the school said they have T-Mobile as their cell phone provider, but they said even if they did, they still wouldn't want the tower. School land shouldn't be used for commercial purposes, regardless of a possible need for improved cell phone service, they said.

 "We can't lease out our backyard if we're having financial woes, so why can MCPS do that?" asked Andrea Crenich, 41, of Gridley Lane. "The whole point of zoning laws is to protect property values of the homes in an area. ... Would you buy a home that backs up to a 130-foot cell tower with an 8-foot chain-link fence and chopped down trees?"


Memo to CEO Burrell Ellis - New Message for "One DeKalb"

Memo (click to read full text)

To:       CEO Burrell Ellis
From:    Viola Davis
CC:       Unhappy Taxpayer & Voter, Get The Cell Out - Atlanta Chapter, Concerned Citizens of South DeKalb, Citizens for a Healthy and Safe Environment, DeKalb NAACP, NoBriarlakeTower.org, Briarcliff Heights Community Action Group, NoCellTowerFund.com, and all appropriate parties
Date:    4/3/2012
Re:       Quality Life For DeKalb – No Cell Tower On School Grounds

Quality Life For DeKalb – No Cell Tower On School Grounds

Viola Davis
One DeKalb Lives restore neighborhoods and build hope. One DeKalb Works create jobs and also build hope. These are two DeKalb logos on the front page of the county website.  However, One DeKalb has a “new message."

We are proud to join the basic message of One DeKalb to say that parents and homeowners from North and South DeKalb have sent a unified message that we do not want cell towers on school grounds and request CEO Burrell Ellis deny any applications for construction of cell towers on school grounds.

We are contacting CEO Ellis to move the One DeKalb political logo and slogan into a public issue action plan. North and South DeKalb have united to send a clear message that we do not want cell phone towers on school grounds especially within residential neighborhoods. We have collectively petitioned our elected officials to pass laws to protect our children, protect our neighborhoods, and protect our overall quality of life.

Parents and homeowners throughout DeKalb County take pride in the following facts:
·        The entire Board of Commissioners has taken a position on cell towers on DeKalb school properties to not ignore its ordinances unless it has been proven in court.

·        Rep. Karla Drenner introduced HB1128, entitled “Prudent Avoidance”, and received the support of 16 out of 18 signatures from the DeKalb Delegation.  DeKalb County has not seen this level of unity before in the history of any given issue and look forward to our CEO joining this history making venture.  We request CEO Burrell Ellis join the DeKalb Board of Commissioners to uphold our local zoning law. We ask CEO Burrell Ellis to prove One DeKalb is more than a political slogan by joining the Board of Commissioners to send a message to T-Mobile that DeKalb deserves a high quality of life and that quality starts and ends with upholding our local laws and ordinances.  

Time to Take Action:  Please write, email and/or phone CEO Burrell Ellis and request he join the Board of Commissioners and DeKalb Delegation to send T-Mobile a message that “it is the policy of DeKalb County to prohibit cell towers on single-family residentially-zones properties” and “this zoning ordinance was established to ensure the safety of county residents and to protect property values of single-family homes” as quoted from Crossroads Newspaper.

Contact CEO Burrell Ellis:
·       CEO Burrell Ellis
Chief Executive Officer
DeKalb County Government
330 W. Ponce de Leon Avenue, 6th Floor
Decatur, GA 30030
·        Email: schedulingceoellis@dekalbcountyga.gov
·        Or ceo@dekalbcountyga.gov

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Open Records Request: April 15, 2012

(click headline to read full text)

4/14/2012 
Walter Woods
Dekalb County School System

Dear Mr. Woods or to whom it may concern:

Pursuant to the Georgia Open Records Law (O.C.G.A § 50-18-70 et seq.) (the “Law”), you are hereby requested to make available for review and copying all files, records and other documents in your possessions as requested below:

1.)  Attendance records for the 12 school meetings that were held in May, 2011, at the schools involved in the cell tower proposal submitted by T-mobile.  These records were recently submitted to Crossroads reporter Jennifer Ffrench Parker.  (see picture at right.)

We are interested in the exact names of attendees, not just the number present.  As these records were made public for purpose of examination by Crossroads Newspaper, we believe they should be made public for examination by the parents and community members as well.

2.)  Attendance records AND meeting minutes for the August 2010 meeting of the Budget, Audit and Finance Committee.  We are interested in audience attendees, not just the committee members.

3.)  “The plans” as referenced in the T-mobile contract with each of the 7 schools that have signed contracts.  The plans were supposedly approved by the board and contain estimated construction timelines, according to the signed contracts dated December 2011, signed by Superintendent Atkinson and Chairman Bowen.  (see below.)


4.)  The signed contracts on or about December 2011 for leasing of school property by T-mobile as approved at the July 2011 board meeting for Lakeside High School and Narvie J. Harris Elementary School.  (These were not present in our initial open records request.)

5.)  The memo, contract or any other written or electronic communication that was signed or authorized by Interim Superintendent Ramona Tyson for the leasing of property to T-Mobile (or a subcontractor thereof) on or about July 12, 2011, as was indicated at the July 11, 2011, board meeting.

If this request is denied in whole or in part, we ask that you cite in writing the specific statutory exemption upon which you have relied, as required by law. We also ask that you release all separate portions of otherwise exempt material. Please waive any costs associated with this request, or first inform me of such costs as required by Georgia law. 

As you know, the Law requires a response by you within three business days of your receipt of this letter and provides sanctions for non-compliance.

Should you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact me at (sayno2celltowers@yahoo.com).

Sincerely,
www.GETtheCELLoutATL.org

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Q: Where is the WORST Place to Put a "Telecommunications Tower" ?


A:  ... On the July 2012 Primary Election Ballot! 

(we would alternately accept the answers:  on the Nov. 2012 Presidential Ballot or on any Ballot in the state of Georgia)

(click headline to read why)

Not sure why anyone would debate why one school is “worse” as far as a location than another, but perhaps from an eyesore or danger standpoint, every single school has taxpaying citizens who live nearby and have been wronged by this decision. And there are plenty more who do not know.

If Get the Cell Out – Atlanta did not form in order to warn everyone about what had taken place and what to expect, every school on the list would have very likely been blindsided – learning about the tower only when they wake up early in the a.m. to the sound of construction, walking to the tower site to ask what is being built and learning about the new environmental hazard the school system has approved and railroaded through the zoning process without a second thought about local ordiances or zoning laws.

And, the new anti-picketing law in Ga. was designed to make it a felony if those people here were to do any of the typical things that people in this same exact situation do – stand in front of the entrance to the job site to try to stop the construction workers from getting through while they desparately send other neighbors home to call police or attorneys or get in touch with someone at the school to find out what is going on. These people would be fined $1,000 a day for exercising their right to protest in their own neighborhood, a right guaranteed by the U.S. constitution.

As for Briarlake, are they making a mistake by letting their PTA run their opposition?  At other schools, the PTA has been identified as being part of the reason the initial reports of the cell tower plans were kept so quiet.  Recently, they warned residents to set their "No cell tower" signs back 10' from the road and into their own yards.  This advice is not an innocent warning.

With school board member Paul Womack living right there in the same neighborhood, those signs, when placed 10′ away from the curb and into one’s own yard, will constitute a formal “picket” and every individual is at risk of being fined $1,000, maybe more if they have not submitted a request for a sign permit and have it affixed to the back of the sign.  Or, as a group, the No Tower Briarlake, LLC, could be fined $10,000 a day for those signs so there goes any money in the legal fund!

And, if a tower application is filed, the organizers of the protest, protected under their “LLC,” will have only 15 days to file any legal action from the date the application is submitted.   That's half the time an individual would have.  As a group, it may be required that they are represented by an attorney.  But, any individual can appeal an application up to 30 days from the date it is submitted.

If brought within the timeframe (15 days for a group or 30 for an informal group of individuals or a single person), the attorney fees will likely be refunded at the end of the court proceedings, regardless of outcome, because it is guaranteed as a right under the FCC Telecommunications Act of 1996. The Act attempts to deal with all “obstacles to smooth entry” into an area, so they give this incentive to encourage anyone who wants to bring legal action to do so, but within the relatively short timeframe.

Those I-pads will be all the justification that T-mobile will need to show that the new 4G technology tower really was needed for educational purposes all along – and then it will be exempt from zoning regulation. The county citizens need to work together rather than listening to different perspectives that will lead to different results.

To compare one’s school to another when you consider the fact that the biggest concern at the heart of this matter is the fear that long-term exposure to RF radiation may cause cancer and children are the most vulnerable  (followed by unborn children, the elderly, then those with compromised mmune systems, then women and finally men).  Everyone exposed to the unknown effects of being near a cell tower for many hours a day is taking part in the largest human experient in the history of mankind.

Think what you want, but this is not an issue that we can debate – the science of this issue must work itself out and will take time – probably 15 to 30 years, about the length of the contracts. To subject any human being to this type of research, but especially to do this to children, against their will and without the consent or input of their parents will be a tragedy we hope our county is strong enough and wise enough to avoid.

Please, don’t let your school board do what it always does to all of you – don’t let them divide you into bickering little factions where you start to blame each other and then find ways to ask for favors behind each other's backs.  That is the grease of politics, but we must leave that for the politicians and the lobbyists. We must be loyal to the humanity inside of all of us that says, “I wouldn’t want this in my yard. Why would I be okay with it in anyone’s yard?"

There must be a better way – tell T-mobile to take their money back to the drawing board because we do not want to impose this great of a risk on any human being and we do not wish to punish these 9 schools, their communities or anyone else with an eyesore and a burden that they should be legally protected from.

If handled correctly, THIS ISSUE could actually HELP DeKalb bring new homebuyers to our county if word gets out that we decided to put the health of our children and residents first.  We don't need an outright ban (such as the one denied by the state legislature even with support of 16 of 18 of our delegates) to know that we, collectively, do not approve of the practice of cell towers on school grounds.

You may have heard Tom Bowen, former school board chairman, in the press flippantly stating that this is "common" because it has already taken place in Fulton and Gwinnett.  So what?  Good for them.  The big difference is that they made their "deal with the devil" before the World Health Organization legitimized the concerns about the health risks and confirmed that brain cancer has increased in multiple studie that looked at exposure to RF radiation for more than 10 years. 

If we say no where other counties have said yes, that will only make DeKalb more attractive and improve ALL of our home values even more. And, the entire country will be learning from us about how to be good neighbors, good citizens and good parents.

We Need Your Help!

EMAIL OR WRITE:   The CEO Mr. Burrell Ellis, to back up the fact that we are counting on him to follow the advice of the county commissioners since they are well trained and experienced in these matters: 
Mr. W. Burrell Ellis, Jr.
Chief Executive Officer
(can approve a Special Administrative Permit)
(Can influence all permits)

c/o DeKalb County Government
Executive Office --     (404) 371 - 2881
330 W. Ponce de Leon Avenue, 6th Floor
Decatur, GA  30030


His recent speaking tour was entitled, "DeKalb County - Making Your Priorities Our Priorities."  So, let's put that slogan to the test!  If it is true and his office really does want to make our priorities the priorities that count, Mr. Ellis might have a better chance at re-election that many may have expected. 


DeKalb County Director of Public Works
(can approve a Special Administrative Permit - usually for tempoary structures)
Director’s Office –             (404) 371-4778     
http://www.co.dekalb.ga.us/publicwrks/pw_who.html

The Zoning Board of Appeals
(can approve a Special Exception Permit) 
The Director (or Interim Director) of Planning & Sustainability
Director’s Office –             404-371-2155     
email: planDev@dekalbcountyga.gov

The Director of Planning & Sustainability
(can approve a Special Land Use Permit)
(which would then go to the commissioners for sign-off).


Thank you for reading this far into this article.  We wish we could keep comments brief, but this issue is complex and very important. Please tell everyone you know about it so that we can keep it in the forefront of everyone’s minds when they go to the ballot boxes and with any luck they will understand the importance of voting responsibly this year.

A single cell tower at a single school sets a dangerous precedent. If it happens here the way it has happened elsewhere, the money will go for a slush fund for prinicpals and top administrators. It will not do any good for any child or any school. Look what it has done already to the credibility of the PTA.

Womack knows that Lakeside will not get a tower. They do not even have a signed lease right now. He tried to do this same thing in the late 1990s (from what we have been told from several sources) and the community stopped it. Lakeside doesn’t care about the towers – they need the money to finish their construction because SPLOST III funds ran out.

This is where the money will go and the big winners will be AT&T because they will likely be the owners of T-mobile’s towers and making tons in the subleasing to other providers alone and the avoidance of property taxes. This was a bad deal from the beginning and we should not let it rub off on us – rise above it. Do the right thing for the COUNTY, not just your school. Do the right thing for all the children. If the roles were reversed, I bet the children would choose to do the right thing for you.

DISCLAIMER:  THIS IS A BLOG:  a Web site that contains an online personal journal with reflections, comments, and often hyperlinks provided by the writer; also: the contents of such a site.  (as defined by Merrim-Webster) 

COMMENT:  Yes, we know that sometimes we might be speculating or ruffling a few feathers, but that's what we are here for.  We are just trying to get to the truth.  And when your governement and school board shuts you out of the meetings where you may have learned what they were doing or why, you are left with nothing but pure speculation.  And often, when one fact is uncovered, it leads down the path to another lie which must be exposed if we will ever be sucessful.

Everything we have stated is based in fact or complete reprints of what answers we received.  It is our intention to help the public by providing the transparency we all seek, yet are often denied.  When we do not know the answers, we say so.  When we are trying to figure things out, we share our thoughts.  We are all in this together and no one really knows how this battle will turn out.  Except perhpaps T-mobile or ATT... they have done this many, many times before and they have already moved on in other parts of the U.S. to public parks and other grounds that are willing to provide them locations for their towers, tax breaks and access to areas that are closer and closer to our homes. 

4G technology isn't all it is cracked up to be when you realize the loss of your own privacy that might come along with it.  We hope you do not give up this fight to get to the truth.  Our children and our future is worth every bit of effort you are willing to put into it.  And it is our combined efforts that will, we hope, lead to the success of this movement to keep our children safe and place the focus on education - where it should be.  We hope our county and our country will be able to rise above those who wish to keep us at odds with one another.  We hope more people will learn how important it is that they register to vote, learn the issues, make informed choices and get out there and VOTE! 

If you will not be here for the election at the end of July, please request an away-ballot NOW so you can still have your voice counted!

Commissioners Story Makes Front Page News AND School Board Meeting Recap from April 9

Click headline to view this full story which includes short rundown on some items from the
April 9 School Board meeting. 

Click the caption link to view the interactive version of the CrossRoads print edition. 

http://www.crossroadsnews.com/view/full_story/18055161/article-Commissioners-give-thumbs-down-to-cell-towers-at-school


Update regarding the April 9, 2012, school board meeting. 

FIRST:  There was discussion regarding the building of iPad study labs at two of the county's lowest performing schools using Race to the Top dollars provided by the federal governement.  The total cost = $439,458 paid to Apple Computers, a single source vendor (no competitive bids).  Great questions were posed about the reasoning behind using technology to improve school performance rather than other concepts like lower student / teacher ratios.  In the end, thought, the items went to a vote and was approved.  It did sound like there was a demand for follow-up and reporting on performance before and after the labs start up to look for any correlation between the use of the technology and the performance of the students. 

The Superintendent said that if teachers were hired then they would likely have to be only on staff for the length of time of the grant.  That's a pretty bold statement to make since she was speaking about cutting them, even if they had been effective.  Makes you wonder why the iPad technology isn't considered in the same light... if it can't contribute to the learning, then why keep it?  Or, even more to consider, if the federal grant is the only way the school can afford the iPads and later they become outdated, then who will pay to replace them?  Or, even more urgently, who will pay if one or more of these items which are, duh, wireless, happens to walk off?  Nancy Jester made a great comment that went something like this:

"We have a habit in this distrcit of saying that we are self-insured when we're not.  Self-insured only means we are responsible for our own debt if something is lost or stolen.  And if we haven't budgeted anything in case that happens, we're really just saying we're not insured at all."

SECOND:  There was talk about an eavesment needed by Georgia Power for the Atlanta International School on Briarcliff at North Druid Hills Road.  Those wishing to legally oppose the cell towers should find out about any public hearings that will be helf for the construction of this eavesment as it is likely to be tied into the additinal power and access roads needed to service the cell towers.  If the county approves these eavesments then that is a good indication that they plan to approve the cell towers, no matter what it says in the newspaper and no matter what they said in their letter.

Just because it appears that some people have stepped up to do the right thing, we cannot count on them to follow-through.  The cell companies have more money than God and are willing to throw it around to get what they want out of our communities.  They can be very influential and can stretch the truth to suit their own needs. 

If you have not done so already, please voice your concerns to your Board of Education member, you elected Board of Commissioners member and your school principal, whether or not your school is currently under consideration for a cell tower.  We need to be pro-acive so that these issues cannot "slip by" anyone ever again.

GTCO-ATL will submitting another Open Records Request in the next day or two in order to gain more insight into whether or not the T-mobile meetings qualify as the pubic's chance to provide input into the decision.  We will post any new information,  or copies of our letters on this website.

THIRD:  Whether or not we are able to help the citizens of DeKalb County stop the cell towers on our school grounds, we hope we have at least provided some attention to the way the school board members can get lazy at their primary job of education our children.  When they are all caught up in their big-time construction projects and satisfying major business goals for their friends, they lose sight of why they are there in the first place. 

It was great to hear Jesse Cunningham speaking up for MLK and the fact that they have been overlooked so many times with the SPLOST dollars and he didn't want to see that happen again.  It was great to her the Superintendent reassure Sarah Copeland-Woods that ALL the students are important and that a committee should not have to have every district represented on it by way of a board member or community member who severs, but that every committee member should be doing their job to ensure a quality education for children at all levels and in every school.

Eugene Walker and Paul Womack were quietly giving the evil eye to each other which is typical.  Walker even said "thank you, Mr. Womack, for that most unwelcomed input" when Womack spoke out of turn. Pam Speaks should learn to speak up more often because when she does, she usually has very valid concerns and good questions.  She just approaches her comments from an apologetic standpoint right off the bat which erodes the confidence she might gain if she were willing to be more direct.  She DID ask about other ways that community members could speak up if they were opposed to the cell towers and had just not been informed (like we were telling htem was the case).  Unfortunately, Womack and Steve Donahue led that question astray as they pretended to understand the process and what T-mobile would do next.  What happened, in reality, was that there was no other way to speak up .  The July meeting sealed the deal and the board does not want to look back. 

However, they did  discuss OTHER forms of technology not dependent on iPADs and therefore not reliant on cell towers!  That was good!  Perhaps it means that they are less than optimistic about the county approving the cell tower appplications!  We can only hope!   Well, that and we can keep asking the questions until we get some answers.  Our focus right now is about how our hopes for a bill to ban cell towers has morphed into a survey question designed to trick people into saying yes so they can give the CEO the thumbs up to approve the cell towers, um, we mean.... telecommunications towers.  We're asking the Governor to VETO this ridiculous referendum for its faulty wording and it's abiliy to undercut the power of our commissioners to speak on behalf of theit own districts.

And Nancy Jester was on fire!  It was obvious that she is getting tired of asking for information and answers and not getting anywhere.  It was obvious that others, like Mr. Cunningham, are tired of the staff being humiliated when they come before the board and don't have the answers.  The overstaffed administrative office of this school board should be nervous.  There are a lot of angry parents and taxpayers out there who want someone to blame.  While the school board is the most visible, they also rely upon a lot of their information from the staff.  If the staff isn't pulling its weight AND  they are overpaid AND they have duplication of responsibilities AND they are providing no answers or outright misinformation - then we have a BIG problem with more waste of our money. 

The closer we get to the July election, the more people need to get ready to pack their things and go.  We need new perspective and people who are not tied to the "friends and family" network.  Start thinking about whom you can encourage to run for the job of school board representative now so that they will have time to step up and toss their hat in the ring whenever that time comes!


Friday, April 6, 2012

Call Upon CEO Burrell Ellis to Deny T-Mobile Cell Phone Towers at Schools

(click headline to read full text of press release) 

...  and GTCO-ATL Issues a Call Upon Gov. Nathan Deal to Veto the Cell Tower Referendum.  We do not need state interference in our local issue. 

The general public is not adequately informed to provide input into
this issue.  Placing this topic on a primary ballot (in July) or a Presidential ballot (in Nov.) will not provide any useful data as the question has been poorly worded and actually attempts to ask multiple questions at one time.  It also does not allow for a
"unknown" or "not aware" response which is likely the best way to describee most of the residents countywide.

Click for press release and more details.
Ceo.and.Gov.deal.Plea.gtco Atl.pr.04.06

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Election Year: Who Is Taking Telecom $?

Great information has been brought to our attention from Briarcliff Heights Community Action Group (the blindsided neighborhood in Atlanta that only learned in November that a cell tower is planned for the middle of their quiet community, destroying their dog park and backyard views). 

Here's a list they provided of the canidates this year who are coming into the race using telcom dollars to back them:  http://www.briarcliffheights.org/2012/04/02/election-year-whos-taking-telecom/

Hidden agendas are likely when you know that telecoms invented things like the public notification scam that actually intends to attract no one to their meetings and the "stealth" cell towers, which, by definition, means "sneaky" (as opposed to disguised which would imply "hidden."). 

And, back in 1996, when no one in the general public was even thinking about whether or not a cell phone might someday be able to transfer digial video images, the telecoms had a hand in writing a little thing called the Telecommunications Act, which was intended to help wireless companies start-up new businesses and increase competition to keep prices affordable for all Americans.  Instead, it has been used to buy-up any start-ups or smaller competitors and run over local governments and intimidate them into backing down from enforcing their own laws and ordinances.  And, they convinced Congress to put a little line into that Act that states a local government cannot deny a wireless transmission tower permit solely on the grounds of environmental factors as long as it complys with FCC standards. 

Through the court system, they have since convinced us that "envirnomental" also means "health" even though no other Act or Bill has even been interpreted that way.  And, they've convinced some local governments that they are not even allowed to discuss the possible health effects.  And they've convinced some school boards that they can use that same language to convince parents that there is nothing they are also barred from discussing this topic. 

So, doesn't it make you wonder... if no one was talking about the health or environmental effects of cell phones in 1996 or even considering using that as a reason to deny a tower...  and no one had even been faced with the issue of whether or not a cell tower would be safe to put in someone's backyard or at a child's playground ...  then how did that language make its way into the Telecommunications Act of 1996? 

Obviously, the answer is that someone did know.  And, they expected us to be upset about it.  And they knew they would have a fight on their hands that they would likely lose, if we were allowed to talk about the environmental and health effects of radiofrequency (RF) radiation, also known as microwave radiation.  If they told us they wanted us to put a small microwave up to our ear and hold it against our heads for hours at a time, we would likely tell them to get lost.  If they told us that we would have to pay them hundreds of dollars a month for the privedledge of doing this, we would use stronger language.  If they said they were going to do this to our children against their will, we would have them arrested and thrown in jail. 

But, all these things are true.  And look where we are today.  We hold miniture, low frequency devices that emit microwave radiation up to our ears or in our hands or place them in our pockets.  We are forced to send children to schools that have this form of radiation being emitted from a tower over their heads all day every day.  We want our government to deny permits based on concerns about the health effects, but we are told not to talk about it.  We look at the FCC guidelines and they contain nothing about the cumulative effects of multiple towers and multiple devices all working together to increase the background levels of radiation we are exposed to every day without our consent.

We want to protest, but a new state law tell us we cannot do that either. 

We want a bill to ban these towers from our schools.  Instead we are left with a non-binding question that is poorly worded that will go on a ballot in the middle of the Summer, the same time that they snuck their deal through last year with our school board.

And politicians are handed money from lobbyists with corporate goals in mind.

And we are being taxed until we can no longer afford to live in our own homes.  We can't afford the gas to put in our cars to get to work.  And they even want to tax us to use the very roadways we need to take us to our jobs.  Or, to get our kids to the "better" schools that we know are not in our neighborhood, but we think might be out there somewhere.  We just have to drive far enough to find them, right? 

There is nothing wrong with a debate over the issues and politicians who are willing to take a side and defend their reasons for it.  But when a debate becomes a one-sided campaign to drown out the citizens who are seen as nothing more than a mere obstacle in the way of corporate profit margins, then it's time to do something more than what we are doing now.

But, what?  Relocate?  Hide?  Live in fear?  Or VOTE!  I will opt to VOTE this election.  And I will encourage everyone I know to do the same.  VOTE!  Do the homework and learn the issues.  If you are taking a vacation in July, make sure you get an absentee ballot.  If you are not registered, please REGISTER TO VOTE NOW! 

And if you vote in the school board election, with or without children of your own, just remember:  ALL INCUMBANTS MUST GO!  It's as easy as that.  And, yet, it's so difficult if we do not join forces and do the right thing.  The citizens of DeKalb County have the power, the money and the numbers to set our county straight.  Let's do something about the problems this year.  Let's remind every elected official who they work for and what we demand they do for us in exchange for the comfortable office and the cushy jobs they enjoy. 

VOTE!  And, if you value your life, make a resolution to reduce your use of wireless services and don't hold  your phone to your head, ever!

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).