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Short cell towers questioned by neighbours, 91原创 Township council

The heights of cell towers are set by technical issues, Telus says.
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This recently-built cell phone antenna on 240 Street is just below the height where public notification would have been required.

Telus is not trimming the height of new cell towers to avoid having to notify the public about their construction, a spokesperson for the company said last Thursday, May 29.

Liz Sauv茅 was responding to a Times query made after the issue was raised at a Township council meeting.

A resident had emailed council to complain a new Telus cell tower was being built at 2535 240 St. without notification.

The tower was 300 metres from the Wix Brown Elementary school, the resident said.

When Councillor Charlie Fox raised the matter during the May 5 afternoon meeting, he speculated the tower was 鈥渦nder the threshold鈥 of 15 metres where a company must notify nearby residents.

Community development and engineering general manager Ramin Seifi told council when Township staff contacted Telus, they were told the tower in question was just under the limit.

鈥淲e expressed some concern with the lack of consultation and apparent lack of process being followed and we were advised 鈥 that they, in fact, had made sure that the height of the tower is just below the Industry Canada requirement for public  consultation of 15 metres,鈥 Seifi told council.

鈥淚n fact, it鈥檚 14.9 metres,鈥 Seifi added.

He went on say that at least two other Telus cell towers were being built at the same height, just below 15 metres.

In her response to The Times, the Telus spokesperson said decisions about the height of an antennae are based on technical concerns.

鈥淲e build sites to the height that鈥檚 required,鈥 Sauv茅 said.

Sauv茅 said the company has seven wireless sites in the Township under various stages of development ranging in size from one that is 40 metres tall to one that 鈥渋s simply an antenna on the side of an existing structure.鈥

Sauv茅 added the Township has expressed a preference for shorter towers, and Telus is 鈥渞especting that by building smaller sites wherever possible, as we鈥檙e doing in this case.鈥

Earlier this year, federal Industry Minister James Moore announced that Canadian telecommunications companies would, in the future, be required to consult with communities when it comes to building new cellphone towers of any size.

The move by the federal government was a response to complaints that the height limit was being exploited as a loophole by cellphone companies that have built towers across Canada just under 15 metres, apparently to bypass the requirement for public consultation.

The change does not apply to any towers approved before the new rules took effect.

Last year, after several controversies over cell tower placement, 91原创 Township council approved a new municipal bylaw that requires an 80 per cent yes vote from people living near any proposed new cell phone antenna.

Under the new rules, cell phone companies will have to pay the cost of polling residents within a 500 metre radius of the proposed towers.

At the time, Telus government affairs manager Chad Marlatt told council while the Township doesn鈥檛 actually have legal authority to prevent construction of cell towers, Industry Canada, the federal authority that does have the power, would likely defer to the municipality.

Marlatt also told council Telus knows most people don鈥檛 want a cell tower near their homes.

Usually, he said, only 10 per cent of nearby residents will support a new cell tower.

 

 

 

 



Dan Ferguson

About the Author: Dan Ferguson

I鈥檓 the guy you鈥檒l often see out at community events and happenings around town.
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