Date: Fri 27-Dec-1996
Date: Fri 27-Dec-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
Sprint-Rock-Ridge-cell-tower
Full Text:
Sprint Seeks Approval For Rock Ridge Cell Tower
B Y A NDREW G OROSKO
Sprint Spectrum, a Wallingford limited partnership, is seeking Zoning Board of
Appeals (ZBA) approval to build a 180-foot-tall cellular communications tower
off Rock Ridge Road.
In its application, Sprint seeks two variances to the town zoning regulations
to build the tower. The variances would allow an additional use of a
residential property and would allow the structure to be higher than the
town's height limit for structures.
Sprint wants to build the tower on the wooded southeast corner of a 6.7-acre
residential property at 30 Rock Ridge Road owned by Jeffrey and Maureen
Helgren. The property, which is in an R-2 zone, is on the east side of Rock
Ridge Road about halfway between Robin Hill Road and Birch Hill Road. The
proposed tower would be similar to the cellular tower near Interchange-11 of
Interstate-84 in Sandy Hook.
Sprint wants ZBA permission to build, operate and maintain a 180-foot-tall
freestanding, monopole-style tower which would hold arrays of cellular
communications antennas. The tower would be topped by a 7.5-foot tall
lightning rod, bringing the structure's overall height to 187.5 feet.
The Helgren property has 11 adjoining properties. All 11 property owners are
to be notified of the application and a of public hearing on it scheduled for
January 7 at 8 pm at Town Hall South.
In its application, Sprint states operating a cellular communications tower
will have little or no impact on the residential use of the area. A literal
enforcement of the zoning regulations, which would prevent tower construction,
would create a hardship because it would prevent the owners of the property
from using the property for a communications antenna system that would have
little or no impact on the residential area, according to Sprint.
The local topography and site conditions encourage using the land for an
antenna tower, Sprint states. The site is near Route 302, which is the focal
point for cellular communications in that area.
The Helgren site "is one of the few sites which has an elevation and
surrounding topography which would permit the proposed use and which is in
close proximity to Route 302," according to Sprint.
Due to steep slopes on the site, it's impractical if not impossible, to make
full use of the site for any other permitted land use, Sprint states, adding
the presence of a tower is necessary to establish its Personal Communications
Services (PCS) wireless network under the terms of the Federal
Telecommunications Act.
The tower site would have a dimension of 50 feet by 50 feet. Equipment
cabinets would be positioned near the tower. Evergreen trees would be placed
at the site for landscaping. A chain-link fence topped with barbed wire would
provide site security. The site would be periodically visited by technicians
for routine maintenance work.
Lucent Technologies and Bechtel Alliance would build the tower and antenna
system for Sprint.
Sprint would install a set of antenna racks atop the proposed tower for its
PCS system. A second set on antennas eventually might be positioned further
down the tower for future use.
Other Tower Challenged
The ZBA's November decision to allow Sprint to build a 150-foot-tall tower for
cellular communications near the Newtown-Monroe border has been challenged in
court.
In the lawsuit filed in Danbury Superior Court, property owner Deborah
Schneider of Fairfield, who owns 350 South Main Street, sued over Sprint's
plans to build a freestanding, monopole-style tower on land the company has
leased on industrially-zoned land at 352 South Main Street.
In the lawsuit, Ms Schneider claims that in granting Sprint a variance to the
zoning regulations and a special permit it requested, the ZBA acted illegally,
arbitrarily and in abuse of the discretion vested in it. The suit alleges the
ZBA granted Sprint a zoning variance without Sprint having offered any
evidence of a hardship or without the ZBA making any findings of a hardship.
Ms Schneider claims that the communications tower planned by Sprint would
seriously hurt her use, enjoyment and value of her residential property.
According to the company, building a tower and antenna array there won't
damage adjoining property values, won't cause radio or television
interference, and won't damage the public's health or safety. That system
would provide communications for individuals, businesses and emergency
services located along Routes 6, 34, 25 and 302.
Sprint wants to build that tower in an M-5 Industrial zone on the west side of
South Main Street, south of Bear Hills Road, just north of the Monroe border.
PCS is a communications network used for voice phones, pagers, answering
machines, faxes, modems, call waiting, caller ID, voice mail, and text
messaging.
According to Sprint, its PCS network operates at higher radio frequencies and
lower radiated power outputs than previous cellular communications systems.
The installation of a tower and antenna array is especially intended to
improve the performance of hand-held wireless telephones.
In recent years, public concerns have been expressed over whether people
living near radio transmitters face health risks.
In its application for the South Main Street tower, Sprint stated "The
proposed operation of the antenna on the site will have no impact on the
health, safety and welfare of the surrounding area or the community as a
whole," according to a Sprint study on the topic titled "Human Exposure to
Radio-Frequency Emissions."
