Wednesday, November 30, 2011

AT&T Merger With T-Mobile Faces Setbacks

From the New York Times:

WASHINGTON — AT&T and T-Mobile USA edged closer to scrapping their proposed merger, saying on Thursday that they had withdrawn their application to the Federal Communications Commission to join their cellular phone operations.

Read the full article here.

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

A Message from Jefferson Smith, Mayoral Candidate:

I appreciate this question from the neighborhods listed, as well as the other neighborhoods allied in support of further oversight for cell tower siting. I share your doubts about the safety of cell towers in residential neighborhoods and near schools. I also support the precautionary principle in general. Concerns about decreased property values and aesthetics provide further cause for better regulation. I know that the City has expressed that their hands are tied by both federal law and by lack of resources. But, clearly, for over two years now, residents have come together to demonstrate that Portland's neighborhoods want more restrictive policies regarding cell tower siting.

As Mayor, I would be open to what other jurisdictions have done, working within the federal legal structure to make it harder to erect cell towers in residential neighborhoods. I'd start by championing a stronger resolution against Section 704 of the Telecommunications Act of 1996, as Los Angeles, Santa Fe, and many other jurisdictions have done. I would also consider how Portland can promote the use of fiber optic broadband over wireless. Although I understand that resources are limited, it strikes me that the checklist you have shared serves almost no purpose without enforcement.

As a state representative, I championed increasing broadband access in our rural areas and served on the State Broadband Task Force. I have expertise on the issue and have relationships that can help move us toward a solution.


I hope that you and your allies on this issue will get together with either me or my staff as soon as possible, in order for us to be brought (and kept) up to date. We're listening - and we're open to your ideas.

Cheers,

JS

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Residents Force T-Mobile to Back Down in Glendale, CA

RESIDENTS WIN
ON FEB 5th, T-MOBILE OFFICIALS met with NorthWest Glendale residents and announced that they are withdrawing plans to build a 34' cell tower on Cumberland Road in Glendale.

OUTSIDE AFTER THE MEETING, residents who worked tirelessly to stop the tower construction exchange hugs, high-fives and felt elated at the victory, which residents called a 'dogfight' with multi-national T-Mobile.

THEIR STORY BEGAN IN NOVEMBER OF 2008, when several residents discovered that Glendale Public Works, in conjunction with T-Mobile, was planning to erect a 3-story tower five feet in front of a home on Cumberland Road in NW Glendale. The contruction came with little or no notice, but residents quickly formed a community activist group called GO ACT (Glendale Organized Against Cell Towers). The group approached Glendale City Council and gained a 'stop work order' on the project.

Over the intervening 3 months, GO ACT quickly gained the attention of the community and Council through a media blitz that included t-shirts, 5 different lawn signs, appearances on KFI Radio, ABC 7 TV, NBC 4 TV, and the Glendale News Press.

In January, the Mayor allowed the group to present at City Council for 35 minutes, during which the organizers, dressed in business suits and flanked by supporters clad in white and red GO ACT T-shirts, crowded city hall, forcing chairs to be set up downstairs. The group presented a powerpoint exhibit, complete with dozens of exhibits maligning T-Mobile for its poor corporate citizenship and detailing legal cases that supported a new city ordinance.

With a 5-0 vote, Council approved a city-wide moritorium, during which Glendale would write a new wireless ordiance.

But GO ACT continued to press the issue during this time-off period, getting new signs up, appearing on Cable Access and coverig the Pasadena Weekly. On February 5th, T-Mobile officials decided it had enough and met with residents, getting feedback about how things could have evolved differently in a civil, constructive meeting at a local hotel in Glendale.

http://www.getthecelloutofhere.com/

ENACT Supports CLOUT

CLOUT:  Coalition for Local Oversight of Utility Technologies
This group is sponsoring a petition to change the Telecommunications Act of 1996 to give local municipalities more control over determining their own cell tower plans.  Please check out their website and sign the petition.