Verizon Drops Small Cell Wireless Applications in Face of Annual Recertification Fees

Rich Hosford, Oct 23, 2018 | Original article here.


  • View Oct 22, 2018 Burlington, MA Close Proximity Microwave Radiation Antenna (CPMRA) Ordinance here.
  • View withdrawn Verizon CPMRA submissions here

A proposed [CPMRA] project that had drawn some tough questions was pulled last night.

Verizon Wireless representative Attorney Daniel Klasnick said his client would rather pull the applications for seven so-called small cells planned for telephone poles around town than face a fee that was a condition being discussed by members of the Board of Selectmen.

As reported on BNEWS, the proposal from Verizon was brought up in a public hearing back in August. Klasnick of Duval, Klasnick & Thompson LLC, said the small cells are necessary to cover gaps in wireless coverage that develop as more people and businesses use the system. The devices are placed on telephone poles, street lamps and similar structures.

At the time members raised a number of concerns about the project.

  • They asked if the small cells were really necessary, since Verizon’s coverage map did not show any gaps of coverage.
  • They also asked about the chance that in the future Verizon would seek to put more small cells up in town or that other companies would seek to put others up.

The number of unanswered questions prompted a special meeting in September to discuss the issue in further detail. During that meeting it was decided there were enough unanswered questions to require the committee. The committee was formed and tasked with examining the need for small cells, coming up with a policy for new applicants and studying possible aesthetic and health effects of the technology.

This week Selectman Jim Tigges, the board’s representative on the Small Cells Committee, said the group had come up with a new policy for small cell applications. The policy contains a number of provisions while filing an application, including setting installation fees, listing the town department that must receive a copy for review and setting up the timeline for approval.

The Verizon application, however, would not be subject to the policy because it was submitted before its adoption. However, Tigges and the committee did have a number of conditions for the project it recommended to the board. They included:

  • An agreement to annual recertification

  • Poles must meet ADA standards.

  • Equipment shall be located on top of the poles, colored similarly to the poles so as to blend in.

  • Equipment shall not interfere with other equipment on the pole, nor obstruct or interfere with access to or operation of street lights or traffic controls devices on the pole.

Klasnick said some of those conditions could be met, at least in part. His biggest concern was the annual recertification which came with a fee, or what he called a “tax.” He said that was not acceptable to Verizon Wireless as it could set up a precedent for other communities and he questioned its legality under federal law.

“I’m not authorized by my client to move forward if that is part of this board’s approval. We don’t feel it is consistent with state law as this is authorized by federal law.”

Klasnick also questioned the need for recertification.

“I don’t understand what needs to be recertified, we are going to install the antennae and they will work for their lifetime,” he said. “We can agree to remove them after. They are no different than a transformer or a cable box. It seems to us that wireless service is being treated differently than other services.”

Still, members of the board said they were leaning towards requiring the recertification and associated fee as a condition of approval. Before they could take that vote Klasnick intervened.

“My client respectfully requests to withdraw the petition rather than have a fee.”

Board members agreed to the withdrawal and the matter was closed for the time being.

Pennsylvania Small Cell Deployment Act Dies On the Vine

By Jim Fryer, Oct 22, 2018 | Original Inside Towers here

The Small Wireless Facilities Deployment Act (House Bill 2564), which was proposed to help with 5G infrastructure, ran out of time and no companion bill was introduced to the Pennsylvania Senate, reported The Philadelphia Inquirer. The sponsor of the bill, State Rep. Frank Farry, told Inside Towers in an interview, he put the blame on a crusading lawyer bent on derailing the legislation as the reason for its demise. The proposed legislation would have made it easier to put thousands of small cell antennas on utility poles, buildings, traffic lights, or other public property for 5G services.

While 20 state legislatures have passed a similar bill, Pennsylvania has met a roadblock, just like in California, Washington and New York. Farry says that roadblock in Pennsylvania was Dan Cohen, an independent attorney from Pittsburgh who has acted on behalf of 150 municipalities to thwart the legislation.

Continue reading “Pennsylvania Small Cell Deployment Act Dies On the Vine”

Washington DC is Ground Zero for the Race to Extremely Dense 4G and 5G Infrastructure

. . . but is the American Public Fully Informed?

By Devra Lee Davis, PhD, MPH, October 19, 2018 | Original article here.

Dr. Devra Davis is the Founder & President of Environmental Health Trust & Visiting Professor of Medicine The Hebrew University

For both reporters and scientists, frank and candid discussions of telecommunications science has become a third rail — touch it and you perish. Last month J.C. Dvorak highlighted important gaps in understanding of new technology, in an opinion piece, “The Problem with 5G.” 5G is the highly touted system that will connect the internet of things allowing your coffee pot, refrigerator, and garage door to talk to your cell phone.

Dvorak revealed that 5G is still on the drawing boards but will employ both the current wireless frequencies of 3G and 4G and add in higher millimeter wave frequencies which can uniquely penetrate the eyes and skin. Moreover, these millimeter wave frequencies have the distinction of having been field tested as a military weapon for crowd control — the active denial system. Soon after his report appeared both Dvorak and his article were summarily removed and replaced with “What is 5G“ — an article boasting of growing markets for 2019 — and Dvorak was fired.

Stunned by his experience, Dvorak warned readers “to be a little more than cautious when believing anything." As his suppressed article had also indicated, “many systems calling themselves 5G are currently 4G using 5G as a marketing tool” whereas “true 5G . . . needs all these mini-towers all over the place” which “leaves plenty more time for the public to get a clue and be freaked out.”

Continue reading “Washington DC is Ground Zero for the Race to Extremely Dense 4G and 5G Infrastructure”

The Wet Blanket of 4G and 5G Wireless Densification

The Wet Blanket of 4G and 5G Wireless Densification

By CRISTIANO LIMA, Oct 15 2018; Original Politco article here.

Mayor Paul Tenhaken
City of Sioux Falls
224 W. Ninth St.
Sioux Falls, SD 57104
605-367-8085 LM
605-367-8800

TJ Nelson tnelson@siouxfalls.org
Communications Director

Jill Franken JillFranken@siouxfalls.org
https://www.siouxfalls.org/council

https://www.facebook.com/TenHakenForMayor/videos/vb.1954505561455608/312118226246434/?type=2&theater

He mentions Senate Commerce Field hearing at around 1 min 30 secs in the video.

During Senate Commerce’s Friday, October 12 field hearing in South Dakota on 5G wireless technology, Sioux Falls Mayor Paul TenHaken raised what he called “the wet blanket” of the coming wide-scale deployment:

TenHaken told Senate Commerce Chairman John Thune (R-SD):

"I feel we also need to address . . . what health impacts micro millimeter waves have because it’s so new. I’m going to get asked this 20 times yet this evening about the health ramifications of 5G . . . I’m hearing this more and more.”

Continue reading “The Wet Blanket of 4G and 5G Wireless Densification”

ISPs Sue California to Stop CA Net Neutrality Law

by Jon Brodkin, Oct 3, 2018; Original ARS Technica here

Top broadband lobby groups sue California; Claim Net Neutrality Law is Illegal

Four lobby groups representing the broadband industry today sued California to stop the state's new net neutrality law. The lawsuit was filed in US District Court for the Eastern District of California by the following parties:

  1. Mobile industry lobby CTIA
  2. Cable industry lobby NCTA
  3. Telco lobby USTelecom
  4. American Cable Association, which represents small and mid-size cable companies.

Continue reading “ISPs Sue California to Stop CA Net Neutrality Law”

Fairfax to Study Fiber-Optic Broadband Instead of 5G

By Adrian Rodriguez | arodriguez@marinij.com | Oct 4, 2018 | Original Marin Independent Journal article here.

Amid a countywide public outcry, Fairfax officials have vowed to explore broadband options that do not include the installation of “small cell” antennas, which protesters say are a health and safety hazard. On Wednesday, the Town Council unanimously appointed an ad-hoc committee to study the viability of a town-wide fiber-optic cable network as an alternative to 5G antennas. The move comes a week after the council voted 5-0 at a special meeting to adopt an urgency ordinance that

  1. prohibits small cell antennas in residential zones and
  2. requires 1,500 feet of separation between the devices.

Mayor Peter Lacques said:

Most residents feel that they are being poorly served by the cable and DSL service that is available now. And yes, many are concerned about the health and other risks associated with 5G. Fiber optic is far superior. It’s much faster, much more reliable. So if we can get fiber optic in as an alternative, we can avoid that impact on health.

Large groups of people also have turned out recently at the county Board of Supervisors' meetings and City Council meetings in San Rafael, Mill Valley and San Anselmo to call for stricter regulation of the new technology. Opponents of 5G say there are adverse health and environmental effects that are caused by exposure to microwave radiation emitted by the 4G and 5G infrastructure.

Continue reading “Fairfax to Study Fiber-Optic Broadband Instead of 5G”

Cities Sue FCC to Stop $2 Billion Gift to Wireless Carriers

After FCC vote, cities try to restore local control over 5G fees and equipment.

By Jon Brodkin, Oct 3, 2018 | Original ARS Technica article here.

Cities are already suing the Federal Communications Commission over its decision to preempt local rules on deployment of 5G wireless equipment.

Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan and City Attorney Pete Holmes yesterday said their city intends to appeal the FCC order in federal court. Seattle will be coordinating with other cities on a lawsuit, they said in a press release:

In coordination with the overwhelming majority of local jurisdictions that oppose this unprecedented federal intrusion by the FCC, we will be appealing this order, challenging the FCC's authority and its misguided interpretations of federal law.

The FCC says its order will save carriers $2 billion, less than one percent of the estimated $275 billion it will take to deploy 5G across the country.

UPDATE: Portland filed a lawsuit against the FCC.

 

The Ruling [Third Report and Order and Declaratory Ruling, In the Matter of Accelerating Wireless Broadband Deployment By Removing Barriers to Infrastructure Investment, FCC 18-111, WT Docket No. 17-79] exceeds the FCC’s statutory authority; is arbitrary and capricious and an abuse of discretion; and is otherwise contrary to law, including the Constitution of the United States. The City respectfully requests that this Court hold unlawful, vacate, enjoin, and set aside the Declaratory Ruling; and grant such
other relief as it may deem appropriate.

Respectfully submitted,, Joseph Van Eaton, Best Best & Krieger LLP

Continue reading “Cities Sue FCC to Stop $2 Billion Gift to Wireless Carriers”

5G is Wireline to Wireless Bait and Switch

. . . Because It Makes The Telcos More Money

by Bruce Kushnick, Oct 2, 2018; Original Medium article here.

What AT&T & Verizon Tell Investors But Are Hiding from the Public.

Introduction

Let's be very clear. Verizon and AT&T have one goal:

Goal: To make more profits for their investors by removing all regulations and public utility obligations.

Continue reading “5G is Wireline to Wireless Bait and Switch”

How Big Wireless Convinced Us Cell Phones and Wi-Fi are Safe

By Project Censored, October 2, 2018 | Original article here.

A Kaiser Permanente study (published December 2017 in Scientific Reports) conducted controlled research testing on hundreds of pregnant women in the San Francisco Bay area and found that those who had been exposed to magnetic field (MF) non-ionizing radiation associated with cell phones and wireless devices had 2.72 times more risk of miscarriage than those with lower MF exposure. Furthermore, the study reported that the association was “much stronger” when MF was measured “on a typical day of participants’ pregnancies.”

According to lead investigator De-Kun Li, the possible effects of MF exposure have been controversial because, “from a public health point of view, everybody is exposed. If there is any health effect, the potential impact is huge.” [For previous Project Censored coverage of this topic, see Julian Klein and Casey Lewis, with Kenn Burrows and Peter Phillips, “Accumulating Evidence of Ongoing Wireless Technology Health Hazards,” in Censored 2015: Inspiring We the People.]

A March 2018 investigation for The Nation by Mark Hertsgaard and Mark Dowie showed how the scope of this public health issue has been inadequately reported by the press and underappreciated by the public. Hertsgaard and Dowie reported that the Telecom industry has employed public relations tactics, first pioneered by Big Tobacco in the 1960s and developed by fossil-fuel companies in the 1980s, to influence both the public’s understanding of wireless technologies and regulatory debates.

The wireless industry has “war-gamed” science by playing offense as well as defense, actively sponsoring studies that result in published findings supportive of the industry while aiming to discredit competing research that raises questions about the safety of cellular devices and other wireless technologies. [On “war-gaming,” see, for example, a 1994 Motorola memo, now published online.] When studies have linked wireless radiation to cancer or genetic damage, industry spokespeople have pointed out that the findings are disputed by other researchers. This strategy has proven effective, Hertsgaard and Dowie reported, because “the apparent lack of certainty helps to reassure customers, even as it fends off government regulations and lawsuits that might pinch profits,” as Hertsgaard and Dowie concluded.

Continue reading “How Big Wireless Convinced Us Cell Phones and Wi-Fi are Safe”

Your Town’s Role in 4G/5G Expansion

by Robbie McBeath Round-Up for the Week of September 17-21, 2018; Original post here.

The September 26, 2018 FCC vote to approve WT Dockets 17-79 and 17-84 means local governments need to start planning immediately on zoning, application processing cost recovery, antenna design, location and spacing, additional pole and equipment aesthetic requirements, and other issues.

On September 26, 2018 at the Federal Communications Commission’s open meeting, commissioners voted through an order that will limit the roles of local policymakers in the desnsified deployment of 4G and 5G wireless infrastructure. So one might ask, why doesn’t my town get a say in this?

In a fact sheet introducing the order, the FCC promises it will:

Continue reading “Your Town’s Role in 4G/5G Expansion”