Sba Communications v. Zoning Commission, No. Cv 00 0081364s (Jul. 18, 2000)

2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 8389
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJuly 18, 2000
DocketNo. CV 00 0081364S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 8389 (Sba Communications v. Zoning Commission, No. Cv 00 0081364s (Jul. 18, 2000)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sba Communications v. Zoning Commission, No. Cv 00 0081364s (Jul. 18, 2000), 2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 8389 (Colo. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
The plaintiff, SBA Communications, Inc. ("SBA"), has brought this appeal from the decision of the defendant, Zoning Commission of the Town of New Milford ("Commission"), denying SBA's special permit application to construct a personal wireless telecommunications facility pursuant to C.G.S. § 8-8 (b). The facility was to consist of a 195 foot monopole and associated base station equipment within a fenced area on property located in an R-80 zone; such a wireless facility is permitted in that zone subject to special permit approval by the Commission.

SBA provides services to various licensed personal wireless telecommunications carriers in Connecticut. These services include the location, leasing, zoning, construction, and ownership of facilities. Carriers wishing to utilize SBA monopoles to improve their wireless coverage attach antennas to the monopole and locate the related equipment adjacent to the monopole after receiving the necessary regulatory approvals. Each monopole is therefore capable of supporting the antennas of several licensed carriers. SBA determined several such carriers, to include Omnipoint Communications ("Omnipoint"), provided either inadequate or no services to the New Milford area — particularly portions of the heavily traveled Routes 202 and 109 — and it therefore determined the area within which a facility must be located in order to provide coverage to the area not presently serviced. SBA entered CT Page 8390 into a lease with Gary and Linda Sullivan to construct the facility on property they owned at 137 Park Lane Road (Route 202) in New Milford. Their property consists of 10.4 acres of which 6,400 square feet were leased by SBA for the proposed facility. Under the terms of the Option and Land Lease the Sullivans and SBA entered into on April 15, 1999, and the Addendum to the agreement of the same date, the lessee (SBA), upon exercise of the option, would pay monthly rental to the lessors for an initial term of five (5) years each and for automatic renewal periods of up to five (5) additional terms of five (5) years each.

On or about June 30, 1999, SBA submitted a Special Permit and Site Plan Review Application ("Application") and related documents to the Commission to construct the facility. The applicant was specifically identified as "SBA Communications, Inc." who is admittedly not a licensed wireless provider or carrier; Omnipoint is, however, a licensed carrier and, at the October 19, 1999 hearing before the Commission, an engineer for Omnipoint asked it be considered a co-applicant and asserted Omnipoint would in fact locate in the tower if this Application were approved.

The Commission opened the public hearing to consider the Application on August 10, 1999, and continued the hearing for a total of six (6) additional public sessions until October 19, 1999, at which time the hearing was closed. The Commission conducted a site walk on October 5, 1999. It hired an outside consultant, Walter Cooper of Flack Kurtz, LLP, who was present at the time of the site walk and who faxed to the Commission, on October 14, 1999, a written opinion with comments. The Commission heard testimony from Mr. Thomas Flynn, a zoning consultant for SBA, Mr. Haider Syed, an Omnipoint radio frequency engineer, various residents and taxpayers — all of whom opposed the Application for multiple reasons to include aesthetics and safety; it considered extensive documentary evidence offered to include site plans, propagation maps (with and without site), a map of the search ring, photographs, a tower study, a structural engineering report, etc. The Cooper memorandum was prepared after his review of the Application with its attachments and the gentleman's participation in the site walk. It is also clear Mr. Cooper had been provided and had reviewed minutes of the prior public hearings.1 Among other opinions proffered, Cooper asserted SBA had not provided information regarding alternate sites and did not prove the need for a facility at the proposed height. The primary thrust of that memorandum, however, was that the documents submitted did not provided sufficient data to determine a need for this tower. Without such data as he specifically therein referenced, he opined it was "not possible to adequately evaluate the degree of existing coverage, the appropriateness of the search ring, the minimum tower height required, or the degree to which the proposed (or alternate) facilities meet this need." R. 22 at CT Page 8391 pp. 2-3.

At its regularly scheduled meeting of October 26, 1999, the Commission directed its Zoning Enforcement Officer to work with its attorney to draft a resolution of denial; at its November 23, 1999, meeting, the Commission chairman read a motion to deny the Application as prepared by its attorney. The motion stated the following reasons for the denial:

1) There is no evidence in the Record demonstrating that SBA Communications, Inc. is a personal wireless service provider nor is there any evidence in the Record to demonstrate that the applicant intends to become such a provider. Hence, the commission is unable to determine the need for the proposed wireless facility, the necessity that it be constructed at the particular location chosen by the applicant and/or whether a tower of the design and height requested is required. The needs of a provider must be presented to the commission so that the commission is able to determine compliance with the standards set forth in the zoning regulations.

2) No alternate sites were specifically identified or discussed in the application. No data, other than a general statement, was provided concerning the technical suitability of alternate sites.

3) The applicant did not submit to the commission the information needed to adequately evaluate the degree of existing coverage, the appropriateness of the "search ring" shown in Exhibit 4, the minimum tower height required, or the degree to which the proposed (or alternate) facilities meet this need. It is also not known if the gap in coverage alluded to by the applicant applies to only one carrier or to several. Different carriers may have different needs that would make the proposed tower inappropriate for their use.

4) No radio frequency power density calculations were presented to the commission so that the commission could determine compliance with the Federal Guidelines.

5) The requested tower height 195' above ground level cannot be justified by the data provided in the application. Without adequate consideration of alternate sites and without complete and fully annotated propagation plots, as discussed in the report of Flack Kurtz to the commission dated October 13, 1999, it is impossible to determine that the requested height is the minimum necessary to provide adequate service as required by the zoning regulations.

6) The construction and utilization of a 195' tower on a 6,400 sq.ft. parcel of land in the midst of a single-family residential district, in CT Page 8392 the opinion of the commission, is not in compliance with the standards set forth in Article III A. of the zoning regulations and in particular with the standards set forth in subsections 7.a., 7.b. and 7.c. thereof.

The Commission denied the Application and SBA was notified by letter dated December 3, 1999. This appeal was taken on December 15, 1999.

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Bluebook (online)
2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 8389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sba-communications-v-zoning-commission-no-cv-00-0081364s-jul-18-2000-connsuperct-2000.