Wireless Ordinance
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Overall Comments
| Name |
Date |
Comment |
| Prior Comments |
05-22-2009 |
This Ordinance will be in effect for 20 years(10+10). Many of us
may not be around the next time it is up for discussion!
Since the ordinance has no JUSTIFICATION STUDY for the WIRELESS
applications (the majority of applications) and it is a poorly
written, deficient ordinance, it MUST be revisited NEXT YEAR. In
fact it must be revisited by Feb, 2010 to give residents & city
council time to meet, discuss and revise.
Until this time the Telecom Ordinance must be considered a
PROVISIONAL ORDINANCE!
Freddie Hannan
Date: 5/4/2009 |
|
| Prior Comments |
05-22-2009 |
As a homeowner bordering on the proposed Opportunities Site of
Dunham Alley, I want to register my concern for the inclusion of
such a site in this area. Such a designation and use would bring
down property values and put huge eyesores right smack dab in the
middle of our neighborhood, just a few feet from Orange Grove Blvd.
in currently one of the most lovely neighborhoods in the city.
Property values for the whole neighborhood would plummet, the
skyline of our whole neighborhood would be affected, and our rights
as citizens taken away. The property values and beauty of our
neighborhood must be protected and not maligned and our rights as
citizens to control our destiny must be recognized and ensured.
John and Kathleen Clark
Date: 4/27/2009 |
|
| Prior Comments |
05-22-2009 |
I would like to request that the opportunities map be removed
from the ordinance, and that each application be required to go
through a process of public hearing.
Scott Lightfoot
Date: 4/26/2009 |
|
| Prior Comments |
05-22-2009 |
I just became aware of this ordinance last Thursday through
attendance of the Pasadena Neighborhood Coalition. In the short
time I have had to familiarize myself with the topic, I have become
very concerned in regards to the haphazard way in which it seems to
be formulated. The largest concern is the opportunities map. I am
open to telecommunications operating within the city, but would
like the opportunities map removed from the ordinance and for each
application to be reviewed on a case by case basis with site
location and proposed equipment included and definitely with public
hearing for approval.
Kristi Harrison
Date: 4/26/2009 |
|
| Prior Comments |
05-22-2009 |
In regards to the placement of wireless facilities, local
government's authority has already been severely limited and
citizens most basic fundamental American rights to self-governance,
to protect our property, our health and environment undermined.
Our basic democratic rights should be held higher than the goal of
any single industry and the duty of the City Council and planning
department is to protect citizens. So, why would the City of
Pasadena literally give away to an industry already out of control
what little local authority we have left? Pasadena should be
looking into ways to strengthen local authority, not weaken it
further, which they have done UNNECESSARILY with the proposed
ordinance.
Instead of careful planning to deliver the best system and services
to the public, we have really irresponsible, inefficient,
"dumb growth" rooted in dumb competition. Our
neighborhoods are being turned into corporate battlegrounds as
these companies compete for market share.
In addition, few know that the telecom industry received over 200
billion in tax cuts and rate hikes meant to build a fiber optic
infrastructure (faster, safer, and more stable) but pocketed the
money instead. See: www.teletruth.org Now the industry is using the
atmosphere as a cheap and easy way to deploy the bulk of the
technology when it should be the other way around. "Future
proof" FIBER OPTIC infrastructure to every home would greatly
reduce the need for disposable wireless infrastructure and provide
safer and better services.
Few wireless customers would be willing to give up their rights to
protect their health, safety and property for increased reception
or more wireless options IF given the opportunity to fully
understand the options and what the trade-off is for wireless.
Perhaps a public study session is in order to investigate our
options and to help educate the public at large. If the city
planners are interesting in protecting citizens instead of making
it easier for industry, it would seem the rational thing to do.
Doug Brzescinski
Date: 4/22/2009 |
|
| Prior Comments |
05-22-2009 |
TO: Mayor Bogaard and All Pasadena City Council Members:
Subject: "Opportunity Sites" Wireless and Cable Ordinance
The Telecom Ordinance is worse than having no ordinance, so it
would better to vote against this ordinance.
Sincerely,
Lonee Urtuzuastegui
The Church Street Homeowners Association
Date: 4/22/2009 |
|
| Prior Comments |
05-22-2009 |
The first part of my letter is going to be a copy of one I
received early today and the last part is from an e-mail I sent to
the Council last week but should be viewed by all those who either
live in the City, work in the City, or visit the City as to what
might happen to our City if we do not stop this insideous process
in its tracks.
By the way the pictures are from the Honey Baked Ham Store at
Sieera Madre and San Pasqual, right on the edge of our City. Sorry,
but I found out a picture can not be inserted in this e-mail site.
The public does not accept the proposed Wireless and Cable
Ordinance and demands that the City Council deny the entire Cable
and Wireless Ordinance, and does not try to "fix" the
proposed Ordinance. It is unworkable and disadvantages property
owners and will destroy our neighborhoods. The Public will take our
chances with the old zoning codes for the processing of Wireless
and Cable applications, which will provide me with better
notification and more public input.
I Demand that the City Council deny the Opportunities Site Map
Plan. "Easy" money from the Telecom's will destroy
property values and stigmatize homes adjacent to the Opportunities
Sites.
I also demand the City adopt an ordinance in the exact same manner
as San Diego!
Now the letter sent to the Council last week!
Please look closely at the picture and see how close to the
building the tower is placed.
Is this where we are headed? - this the "City of Trees" -
Is this what is meant by going "green"
I know this issue is on the agenda for the Council Meeting and I
have to ask - Is this the direction the City plans on taking in
regards to the placement of cell towers in our City?
What scares me is in my neigborhood we have a large vacant lot with
contaminated soil so that nothing can be built on it, zoned for
Open Space and the City has included this parcel in their site map
as a target area. It seems it is good for some uses and not so good
when something that would benefit our area is proposed.
This is located at the Honey Baked Ham store at San Pasqual and
Sierra Madre Blvd..
What makes it even more hideous is it is situated somewhere between
5 to 10 feet from their FRONT DOOR! Heck, a few more feet and it
would be on the inside of the store.
Would this be approved by our City? Please tell me "NO"
Sincerely,
Fritz Puelicher
P. S. Maybe the folks in the Playhouse District might find this a
viable alternative to those scrawny little trees they seem favor.
By the way, I hope the City now goes back to those same merchants
and demands that they upgrade the frontal facades of their
establishments. A lot of them look absolutely shabby now that their
cover has been blown away.
Fritz Puelicher
Date: 4/22/2009 |
|
| Prior Comments |
05-22-2009 |
Dear Mayor Bogaard, City Manager and City Council Members,
SERIOUS CONCERNS ABOUT THE LEGALITY OF THE OPPORTUNITIES SITE MAP
AND THE DEFICIENCIES OF THE PROPOSED WIRELESS AND CABLE ORDINANCE:
In the February 23, 2009 City Council agenda, Correspondence part
1, is a letter submitted by John J. Flynn III of Nossaman, LLP,
which contests the legality of the Opportunities Site Map.
He states on item 3. Certain Aspects of the City's Proposed
Amendments to Titles 12 and 17 of the Municipal Code are Pre-empted
by Federal and State Law. (a) "Opportunities Map".
"The amendments to the City's Municipal Code Provide for
significant incentives, in the form of expedited processing, for
facilities proposed to be installed at sites identified by the City
on an "Opportunities Map." The only properties identified
in the map are, in the City's own words, City-owned property,
which suggests that the purpose of the program is to increase City
revenues, which is not a recognized zoning criterion. As the City
itself acknowledges, moreover, "there are many factors
involved in finding a location that will address the installation
needs of carriers." If that is the case, on what lawful basis
does the City discriminate as between those providers who are,
because of their network design, able to take advantage of the
benefits of siting at an Opportunities Map location, and those who
are unable to do so? For the reasons already stated above, it is
not possible for the City to defend the discrimination, which
suffers not only from state and federal constitutional infirmities,
but also because it violates the federal Telecommunications Act of
1996, at 47 U.S.C. section 332(c)(7)(B)(i)(l).
Further, to the degree that the pressure exerted by the City to
employ properties identified on the Opportunities Map represents a
facilities-based restriction, such restriction is preempted by the
Federal Communications of 1934."
Link to Attorney Flynn's letter. See Page 9:
http://www.cityofpasadena.net/councilagendas/2009%20agendas/Feb_23_09/6A%20CORRESPONDENCE%20PART%201.pdf
For once, I have to agree with Mr. Flynn's interpretation of
the discriminatory nature of the Opportunity Site Map and of the
"significant incentives" of the application process. The
new concept of the Opportunities Site Map is not legally defensible
and therefore should be removed from the proposed changes to Title
17.
WHAT WAS NOT NOTED IN FLYNN'S LETTER IS A HIDDEN LEGAL POINT
FOR THE CITY. THE OPPORTUNITIES SITE MAP SETS A PRECEDENT FOR ANY
CITY OWNED PROPERTY GIVEN THIS NEW DESIGNATION:
* All wireless applications are given equal access under the
Telecommunications Act of 1996. The City cannot be seen as
discriminating against any one of the Telecom companies.
* Once this designation is placed on a given site, the wireless
applications will always have an EXPEDITED AND INCENTIVIZED
APPLICATION PROCESS IN PERPETUITY. The legal precedent will be set.
* If the City wants to change or remove the designation at a later
time, the City will not have the power to change back to a
conventional and non-expedited and non-incentivized system of
processing these applications for a site that already has an
Opportunity Site designation and a built installation. This could
be true for all the 189 Opportunity Sites.
THESE SITES DON'T NEED THIS SPECIAL DESIGNATION AND INCENTIVE
PROGRAM IN ORDER TO ATTRACT WIRELESS AND CABLE DEVELOPMENT:
* The City Staff has advertised that the Opportunity Sites will
remove wireless and cable equipment from our residential areas and
from the public right of way. This is still true without the
Opportunity Site designation.
The Telecom laws require the "least intrusive means" for
siting cell antennas, so the City owned sites would still be
available for cell antenna siting.
* The City owned properties that don't have this designation
will still be leased and developed by the wireless and cable
industry by means of a non-expedited application process with
public input instead of no public input.
WE NEED TO INSURE THAT THE NEW CONCEPT OF AN OPPORTUNITY SITE IS
LEGALLY DEFENSIBLE, BEFORE THE CITY CREATES A LAND USE DESIGNATION
THAT CAN NEVER BE CHANGED BACK OR LEGALLY UNDONE BECAUSE OF THE
TELECOMMUNICATIONS ACT OF 1996:
* I request that the experimental and optional Opportunities Site
Map be removed and eliminated from the proposed Wireless and Cable
Ordinance.
* If the Staff is insistent on retaining the Opportunity Site Map
it can be examined and added at a later time as an amendment
change. This is also true for the Cable portion of the proposed
Ordinance.
* The City of Pasadena as a property owner will be held to a higher
standard than a private property owner.
* The City is creating the codes and wireless regulations that will
be perceived as a conflict of interest and in conflict with the
Telecom laws as noted in Mr. Flynn's letter.
THE 189 OPPORTUNITY SITES WILL DECREASE PROPERTY VALUES:
* Homeowners adjacent to an Opportunity Site would have a negative
impact to the value of their home.
* If one pending cell application is a real estate disclosure when
a homeowner sells his home, then what would be the negative impacts
of an unlimited number of potential and pending cell and cable site
applications?
* The Opportunity Site designation would stigmatize these homes.
The City should find a better way to create revenue.
LACK OF PUBLIC NOTIFICATION FOR THE OPPORTUNITIES SITE MAP:
* I have done my own public notification and I have communicated
with numerous Neighborhood Associations and residents. All of them
had concerns that their residential zoning would become more
commercial at the 189 Opportunity Sites then the sites original
zoning, especially in Residential zones.
* The Neighborhood Associations that responded to my notification
disapproved of the new concept of the Opportunities Site Map, which
is a land use designation change and essentially acts as a zoning
change for those sites.
TO MAKE THE PROPOSED ORDINANCE LEGALLY MORE DEFENSIBLE:
1.) DEFINITIONS: Wireless and Cable telecommunications Facilities
should be defined and coded separately. In the proposed Pasadena
zoning codes, "Telecommunications" will be defined as
both Wireless and Cable/Video facilities.
* They are defined separately by the California Public Utilities
Code.
2.) REQUIRE JUSTIFICATION STUDIES FOR ALL WIRELESS APPLICATIONS:
All Wireless Applications should require a justification study,
otherwise the City of Pasadena will have no legal reason to deny a
wireless application.
* If you cannot deny an application then you have to accept it.
* If there is no justification study, then how does the City keep
track of the Telecom's coverage needs or if there is
unnecessary redundancy?
* Coverage maps are automatically generated by the Telecoms to
determine their own coverage needs and it no extra effort by the
company to submit a two page copy of their coverage maps.
* Justification Studies should also include studies for alternative
sites to which the City is legally entitled.
* The Telecom laws require equal access for all cell companies.
This could set a precedent at this site for NO JUSTIFICATION
STUDIES IN PERPETUITY with no public notification and no public
input.
3.) 10 + 10 YEAR LEASES: 10 +10 year lease with no secondary public
hearing does not allow for public input for 20 years and a
generation of living next to an equipment junkyard.
IN CONCLUSION:
THE PRIORITY AT THIS TIME IS ONLY THE WIRELESS ORDINANCE, which
needs to be in place when the Wireless Moratorium is lifted
sometime in June 2009 or earlier. The proposed Wireless and Cable
Ordinance will limit our current rights which are severely
restricted by State and Federal Telecom laws.
The controversial Opportunity Site Map and the Cable part of the
Ordinance do not have a deadline. The City has not properly
notified the impacted neighbors to the Opportunity Sites and should
have mailed notifications to every property owner within 500 feet
of the proposed site. These two elements of the Wireless Ordinance
are not time sensitive and should be examined further by the public
and possibly amended at a later date or eliminated completely.
The City should investigate the legality of Opportunities Site Map
plan and the potentially discriminatory application process. I
believe Mr. Flynn, representing T-Mobile has already sued the City
of Pasadena regarding the application for a cell site in my
neighborhood on Oak Knoll Ave. and Alpine St. I thought the City
was trying to avoid lawsuits not encourage them.
We want the City attorney to draft a defensible and protective
Wireless Telecommunications Ordinance that will not create more
legal questions and invite more lawsuits.
Sincerely,
Miriam Nakamura-Quan
April 20, 2009
Full agenda to the February 23 City Council hearing:
http://www.cityofpasadena.net/councilagendas/2009
agendas/Feb_23_09/agenda.asp
The Link to the streaming video and agenda for the February 23 City
Council hearing will have the latest update and comments from the
City Council, Staff and the Public:
http://pasadena.granicus.com/MediaPlayer.php?view_id=23&clip_id=840
Link to my letter from the February 23 City Council hearing
regarding deficiencies in the proposed Ordinance:
On the agenda look at correspondence part 3
THERE IS NO FINAL DRAFT OF THE ORDINANCE AVAILABLE TO THE PUBLIC
UNTIL THE THURSDAY BEFORE THE FIRST READ OF THE WIRELESS AND CABLE
ORDINANCE AT THE MONDAY, APRIL 27, 2009 CITY COUNCIL HEARING @ 7:30
PM
PLEASE CHECK THE CITY WEBSITE FOR THE CITY COUNCIL AGENDA. SHOW UP
TO THE HEARING TO VOICE YOUR CONCERNS.
Miriam Nakamura
Date: 4/20/2009 |
|
| Prior Comments |
05-22-2009 |
TO: Mayor Bogaard and All Pasadena City Council Members:
Subject: "Opportunity Sites"-Wireless and Cable Ordinance
The East Orange Grove Neighborhood Association strongly opposes any
"Opporunity Sites" in our residential Neighborhood. We
demand a public hearing on the issue and are extremely disappointed
that the City has not yet held a public hearing on this very
important issue.
Please remember that you have a duty to represent the interests of
the residents of the City of Pasadena. We recommend that you
resolve this problem, in a manner that comports with your duty to
the City's residents.
Sincerely,
June Takenouchi
President
East Orange Grove Neighborhood Association, EOGNA
Date: 4/20/2009 |
|
| Prior Comments |
05-22-2009 |
PASADENA HIRED ATTY. FLYNN FOR ADVICE ON THE TELECOM ORDINANCE
YET THE PLANNING DEPT.REFUSES TO HEED HIS ADVICE. THIS NEW LAND USE
DESIGNATION IS BEGGING FOR LAW SUITES. OUR TAX DOLLARS PAY FOR THE
PLANNING DEPT, FOR THE ATTORNEY AND WILL PAY WHEN WE LOSE AGAIN IN
COURT! IF THE CITY PLANNER DOESN'T "GET IT", WHO
DOES?
THE CREATION OF THE OPPORTUNITIES SITE PLAN HAS CREATED A HOST OF
ERRORS (AND FUTURE LAWSUITS) WHICH HAVE BEEN ADDRESSED BY RESIDENTS
AT MORE THAN ONE CITY COUNCIL MEETING AS WELL AS IN NUMEROUS
EMAILS, YET "THE CITY" STICKS TO IT AS IF THEY HAVE SOME
PERSONAL INVESTMENT.
TO INSURE THIS PLAN IS IN PLACE FOR 20 YEARS WITHOUT PUBLIC INPUT
& NO PROTECTION SEEMS TO BACK-UP THE NOTION THAT RESIDENTS ARE
OF LITTLE CONCERN REGARDING THIS ORDINANCE.
NO STATE OR FEDERAL REGULATIONS PROHIBIT JUSTIFICATION STUDIES YET
CITY STAFF REFUSES THAT ALSO. WHY?
LUMPING THE WIRELESS, CABLE & TELECOMS INTO ONE ORDINANCE WILL
FURTHER COMPLICATE , NOT SIMPLIFY AS STAFF CLAIMS, THE ISSUE FOR
RESIDENTS. IF WE RESIDENTS TELL THAT TO STAFF, WHY DO THEY INSIST
ON THE OPPOSITE?
WHERE IS THE TRANSPARENCY?
THERE HAS BEEN NO FAIR PUBLIC PROCEDURE. PERHAPS THE CITY HAS MET
THE LETTER OF THE LAW BUT THEY HAVE CERTAINLY NOT MET THE SPIRIT OF
THE LAW!! WE WILL PAY A HIGH PRICE FOR THIS ARROGANCE.
FREDDIE HANNAN
Date: 4/17/2009 |
|
| Prior Comments |
05-22-2009 |
myself and my neighbors DO NOT want any [word omitted] cell
towers any where near our property.
kim santell
Date: 4/17/2009 |
|
| Prior Comments |
05-22-2009 |
Madison Heights Neighborhood Position of Concern Regarding
Opportunity Site for Telecommunications and Cable Equipment
The Board of the Madison Heights Neighborhood Association is
concerned about the designation of the South Lake Pocket Park as an
opportunity site for cable and wireless equipment. We recognize the
need for effective communications services and the fact that
Federal and State laws grant telecommunications companies favorable
access to sites for cellular antennae and related equipment.Our
major area of concern with respect to the opportunity site status
for the South Lake Pocket Park is that no mechanism exists to limit
the number of telecommunications companies that could make use of
the site. Our understanding of current laws is that all companies
must be given equal access to the site. Installation of one
company's equipment may be handled in a manner that would not
destroy the park, but there appears to be no available means to
prevent "commercialization" of the park site.
Installation of equipment from multiple companies would effectively
make the site unsightly and render it useless as a park.Our City
has strict zoning regulations to prevent "mansionization"
of residences. We ask the City to implement similar regulations to
prevent "commercialization" of opportunity sites in
residential areas. A site should not be suitable for designation as
an opportunity site in a residential area unless it can adequately
support installations from multiple companies without becoming an
unsightly blight on the immediate surroundings.Residents of Madison
Heights are passionately concerned about protection of green space
in our City and consider use of park land as an undesirable
alternative. Therefore we recommend the following as possible
regulations for consideration.
1. Minimum separation of 500 feet between installations of ground
equipment located in a park
2. Prohibition of equipment clusters from more than one service
provider as this would have an adverse impact on residents adjacent
to the cluster.
3. Ground equipment in parks should be camouflaged with appropriate
plantings
We hope these suggestions will help the City Attorney draft an
ordinance that provides adequate regulations for protection of
residential areas and parks that address location, concentration
and aesthetics.
Neil Kleinman
Date: April 16, 2009 |
|
| Prior Comments |
05-22-2009 |
Dear City Council,
I am unable to attend the City Council meeting April 27th, so I am
writing to request that the Catalina Library at Washington/Catalina
be taken off the Opportunities Site Map for Pasadena and I also
want to register my opinion that the entire Opportunities Site Map
for Pasadena be made null and void, that is, terminated, as part of
the Wireless Ordinance for the City. It is unworkable and sets a
legal precedent at the designated 'Opportunity' sites which
restricts public input and notification. Not only that, but it also
facilitates expedited and incentivized applications for the
wireless telecommunications companies, as well as the cable
companies. The FCC requires municipal governments to encourage
public participation and it appears to me that the Ordinance and
map accomplish just the opposite. This map also appears to be a
blatantly self-serving way of compensating for decreases in permit
fees for the City in a way that harms the property values and
beauty of my historic neighborhood, Historic Highlands, and other
neighborhoods in the city. Further, the Ordinance itself ought to
be crafted in such a way that it applies to wireless
telecommunications companies only. Cable companies should not be
included under the umbrella of this Ordinance.
I mentioned in a previous City Council meeting that I have a
building permit ready and waiting to be used for an *extensive*
renovation of my 1914 Craftsman house, one of the finest examples
of its kind in this part of the city. The renovation project is in
limbo, pending the outcome of a cell tower proposed for St.
Elizabeth's in Altadena, just up the street from my house. This
means that there is revenue not flowing to a local Pasadena
architect, local Pasadena contractors, etc. Not to mention, no
investment in the long-term structural health and integrity of my
Pasadena house and neighborhood. I question how the Pasadena
Wireless Ordinance will protect me and others property owners like
me at the edge of our fair city...property owners who WANT TO
INVEST IN OUR CITY.
Lastly, I advocate for using fiber optic networks everywhere in the
city, as opposed to designing a system of wireless repeaters on top
of lamp posts in the right of way. Connecting wireless antennae to
fiber optic cable increases transmission speed and lowers the
signal strength at the antenna itself, so it is a win on both
counts. Give the current constraints of the FCC and PUC, it would
be wise to hold the wireless telecommunications industry to a
higher standard of design which will benefit the city in the
future, since fiber optic represents the truly sustainable future
of digital communication.
Sincerely,
JMD
J. Donnelly
Date: April 16, 2009 |
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