Cingular facility passes
Jenny Marder
A set of three antennas and a satellite dish will be attached to an
existing Southern California Edison utility tower at a city park,
despite complaints from nearby residents who fear it will be ugly and
noisy.
Upon hearing the neighbors’ complaints, City Councilwoman Connie
Boardman appealed the Planning Commission’s Jan. 27 approval of the
project.
“I wanted to give the neighbors a chance to speak,” she said.
The wireless facility, proposed by Cingular Wireless, will aid the
company in improving its wireless telephone service in the area.
The facility will be erected on Southern California Edison’s
existing tower at Langenbeck Park. It will consist of 12 antennas, a
2-foot diameter dish and a 10-foot high, 185-square-foot enclosure.
Critics fear the structure would adversely affect the surrounding
neighborhood.
Bernadette Jackson, whose house faces the park, said that upon
moving in, her family installed open fencing so that they could “look
out and see a big expanse of green space.”
“This might just look like a maintenance facility or a public
restroom,” she said. “I have to wonder why I’d want to look out my
window at what looks like a public restroom. ... It’s unfair when
people come to our city, spoil our neighborhood for their own
purposes and go back to their own city and leave us to deal with the
consequences.”
Nearby residents also worry that the facility surrounding the
antennas would become a target for graffiti or a lean-to shelter for
vagrants and would draw maintenance traffic into the park.
Suzanne Gatti, spokeswoman for Cingular Wireless, said that the
project was in compliance with wireless code and with the city.
“With regard to the shelter color, Cingular Wireless is amenable
to painting it any color that the city desires,” she said. “The noise
will operate at a lower level than what the city limits are.”
Gatti couldn’t answer whether the fans would be audible from the
nearby homes.
City Council members Debbie Cook, Jill Hardy and Gil Coerper
opposed the project.
“I really don’t think our parks should be used as perks,” Cook
said. “This is public parks space. This is too close to Measure C.”
Measure C, passed by voters in 1990, requires any development on
county beaches or parkland to be approved by a community vote.
The City Council approved the project on the condition that there
would be no lighting added to the structure and that the shelter
would be covered with vines.
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