Monday, May 28, 2012

Burbank Residents Protest Cell Tower Plan


Burbank Residents Protest Cell Tower Plan

T-Mobile wants to put tower on church in residential area

By John Cadiz Klemack and Yvonne Beltzer
|  Tuesday, May 22, 2012  |  Updated 11:25 PM PDT






Burbank residents are upset about plans to build a cellphone tower on a church in a residential neighborhood. John Cádiz Klemack reports from Burbank City Hall for the NBC4 News at 5 p.m. on May 22, 2012.
Burbank residents are upset about plans to build a cellphone tower on a church in a residential neighborhood. John Cádiz Klemack reports from Burbank City Hall for the NBC4 News at 5 p.m. on May 22, 2012.
Residents of a Burbank neighborhood protested Tuesday evening outside Burbank City Hall against plans to install a cell phone tower atop a church.


T-mobile wants to build the wireless telecommunications facility (WTF)  atop the Little White Chapel Christian Church in the 1700 block of North Avon in Burbank.
Residents of that neighborhood claimed the tower would only be 500 feet from an elementary school and a little more than a thousand feet from a middle school.
Last October, the city of Burbank changed its ordinance on cell towers to permit the building of them in residential neighborhoods as long as they were placed on properties such as churches that are used for institutional purposes.
A grass-roots group of parents, property owners and neighbors have appealed to the city to block the tower.
They were concerned about the constant emission of electromagnetic radiation coming from the tower and the potential for adverse health effects.
“We don’t want to take a gamble,” said Roy Weigand, a Burbank resident who was an organizer of the protest movement.
“We’d rather look foolish in ten years and say maybe we overreacted but we’re healthy than look back in 10 years and say you know these brain tumors some of us are getting, maybe we can trace those back to the cell phone towers we live underneath," Weigand said.
They also said the tower would lower property values.
But Burbank city officials claimed their hands were somewhat tied on the matter.
Senior City Planner Jesse Brown explained why:
"The FCC has said we can't deny these facilities based on the health affects of the facilities. So that mainly leaves us with aesthetics to control the facilities."
The group opposing the tower submitted a photo showing what the tower would add to the church, but city officials claimed it meets the city’s aesthetic and other building requirements.
http://www.nbclosangeles.com/news/local/Burbank-Residents-Protest-Cell-Tower-Plan-152787035.html

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