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Telecommunications Law. International Municipal Lawyers Association Annual Conference September 10, 2014 Baltimore, Maryland PRESENTED BY Matthew K. Schettenhelm.

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Presentation on theme: "Telecommunications Law. International Municipal Lawyers Association Annual Conference September 10, 2014 Baltimore, Maryland PRESENTED BY Matthew K. Schettenhelm."— Presentation transcript:

1 Telecommunications Law

2 International Municipal Lawyers Association Annual Conference September 10, 2014 Baltimore, Maryland PRESENTED BY Matthew K. Schettenhelm Wireless Facility Siting: How “Local Control” is Faring at the FCC and in the Courts ©2014 Best Best & Krieger LLP

3 Telecommunications Law Wireless provider approaches your City

4 Telecommunications Law New site, downtown area

5 Telecommunications Law Problem(s)

6 Telecommunications Law What do you do?

7 Telecommunications Law Just say no?

8 Telecommunications Law Just say no?

9 Telecommunications Law Work with the company

10 Telecommunications Law A solution that works for everyone

11 Telecommunications Law The site =

12 Telecommunications Law (1) centrally located

13 Telecommunications Law (2) hidden

14 Telecommunications Law (3) safe

15 Telecommunications Law win-win

16 Telecommunications Law Fast forward 6 months

17 Telecommunications Law Same provider

18 Telecommunications Law Same site

19 Telecommunications Law New idea:

20 Telecommunications Law Add

21 Telecommunications Law 4 equipment cabinets

22 Telecommunications Law 1 equipment shelter

23 Telecommunications Law new antennas

24 Telecommunications Law Multiple 20-foot extensions

25 Telecommunications Law Your answer?

26 Telecommunications Law Not a chance.

27 Telecommunications Law Not asking.

28 Telecommunications Law Not asking.

29 Telecommunications Law Telling

30 Telecommunications Law

31 Section 6409(a)

32 Telecommunications Law 47 U.S.C. § 1455(a)

33 Telecommunications Law “may not deny, and shall approve”

34 Telecommunications Law Is the provider right?

35 Telecommunications Law It depends.

36 Telecommunications Law

37

38 challenge

39 Telecommunications Law challenges

40 Telecommunications Law background

41 Telecommunications Law 2 federal laws

42 Telecommunications Law (1)

43 Telecommunications Law

44 47 U.S.C. § 332(c)(7)

45 Telecommunications Law Generally preserves

46 Telecommunications Law But

47 Telecommunications Law five limitations

48 Telecommunications Law A State or local government:

49 Telecommunications Law (1)

50 Telecommunications Law May not “unreasonably discriminate” among functionally equivalent providers

51 Telecommunications Law (2)

52 Telecommunications Law Shall not “prohibit or have the effect of prohibiting” the provision of wireless service

53 Telecommunications Law (3)

54 Telecommunications Law Shall act on a request “within a reasonable period of time”

55 Telecommunications Law (4)

56 Telecommunications Law Must make decision to deny “in writing” and “supported by substantial evidence”

57 Telecommunications Law (5)

58 Telecommunications Law May not regulate on the basis of the environmental effects of radiofrequency emissions

59 Telecommunications Law Hundreds of decisions

60 Telecommunications Law

61 90/150 days

62 Telecommunications Law

63

64

65 (2)

66 Telecommunications Law 47 U.S.C. § 1455(a)

67 Telecommunications Law “Notwithstanding... any other provision of law...

68 Telecommunications Law “a State or local government may not deny, and shall approve”

69 Telecommunications Law “any eligible facilities request for a modification of an existing wireless tower or base station that”

70 Telecommunications Law “does not substantially change the physical dimensions of such tower or base station”

71 Telecommunications Law Congress defined only one term

72 Telecommunications Law “Eligible facilities request”

73 Telecommunications Law “any request for modification of an existing wireless tower or base station that involves-- (A) collocation of new transmission equipment; (B) removal of transmission equipment; or (C) replacement of transmission equipment.”

74 Telecommunications Law Undefined:

75 Telecommunications Law “any request for modification of an existing wireless tower or base station that involves-- (A) collocation of new transmission equipment; (B) removal of transmission equipment; or (C) replacement of transmission equipment.”

76 Telecommunications Law “any request for modification of an existing wireless tower or base station that involves-- (A) collocation of new transmission equipment; (B) removal of transmission equipment; or (C) replacement of transmission equipment.”

77 Telecommunications Law “does not substantially change the physical dimensions of such tower or base station”

78 Telecommunications Law “does not substantially change the physical dimensions of such tower or base station”

79 Telecommunications Law “does not substantially change the physical dimensions of such tower or base station”

80 Telecommunications Law

81

82 Received hundreds of comments

83 Telecommunications Law A number of important issues

84 Telecommunications Law three

85 Telecommunications Law (1)

86 Telecommunications Law What does it mean to “substantially change the physical dimensions of a wireless tower or base station?”

87 Telecommunications Law (2)

88 Telecommunications Law What is a “wireless tower” or “base station?”

89 Telecommunications Law (3)

90 Telecommunications Law What does “may not deny, and shall approve” mean?

91 Telecommunications Law (1)

92 Telecommunications Law What does it mean to “substantially change the physical dimensions of a wireless tower or base station?”

93 Telecommunications Law

94 troubling

95 Telecommunications Law Fixed; doesn’t consider context

96 Telecommunications Law A modification is a substantial change only if it involves one of the following:

97 Telecommunications Law (1)

98 Telecommunications Law Increasing an existing structure’s height by more than 10%

99 Telecommunications Law (2)

100 Telecommunications Law Installing more than four equipment cabinets or one equipment shelter

101 Telecommunications Law (3)

102 Telecommunications Law Adding an appurtenance that protrudes from the support structure more than 20 feet

103 Telecommunications Law (4)

104 Telecommunications Law Involves excavating outside the current structure site

105 Telecommunications Law Local governments = different approach

106 Telecommunications Law “depends on context, and does not lend itself to a mechanical, numerical formula”

107 Telecommunications Law Substantial change = a change that, in context, is “important”

108 Telecommunications Law Includes any physical-dimension change that would:

109 Telecommunications Law “make a facility unsafe,”

110 Telecommunications Law “render public streets or sidewalks less accessible or hazardous,”

111 Telecommunications Law “damage a historically significant area or structure,”

112 Telecommunications Law “expose a stealth facility,”

113 Telecommunications Law “or otherwise defeat conditions that were key to the underlying facility.”

114 Telecommunications Law Also: modifying a facility that has “legal, non-conforming” status should be considered “substantial”

115 Telecommunications Law Policy concern?

116 Telecommunications Law A solution that works for everyone

117 Telecommunications Law (2)

118 Telecommunications Law What is a “wireless tower” or “base station?”

119 Telecommunications Law “wireless tower”

120 Telecommunications Law FCC = a structure “built for the sole or primary purpose” of supporting antennas

121 Telecommunications Law Industry = much broader

122 Telecommunications Law Industry = Any structure that supports wireless equipment, including...

123 Telecommunications Law water towers

124 Telecommunications Law utility poles

125 Telecommunications Law streetlights

126 Telecommunications Law buildings

127 Telecommunications Law (for some)

128 Telecommunications Law Even if the underlying facility does not already host any wireless equipment

129 Telecommunications Law “base station”

130 Telecommunications Law FCC = includes a structure that “supports or houses an antenna, transceiver, or other associated equipment that constitutes part of a base station.”

131 Telecommunications Law This would include buildings, utility poles, streetlights

132 Telecommunications Law Local governments argued statute includes only one support structure (tower)

133 Telecommunications Law (3)

134 Telecommunications Law What does “may not deny, and shall approve” mean?

135 Telecommunications Law Two questions

136 Telecommunications Law Can a local government approve, but with other conditions?

137 Telecommunications Law What is the remedy?

138 Telecommunications Law Industry generally said that local governments can only condition on “nondiscretionary building and other structural safety codes”

139 Telecommunications Law FCC proposed that requests shall be “deemed approved” automatically

140 Telecommunications Law Local governments = due process/10 th Amendment problems

141 Telecommunications Law Local governments = courts should decide based on the facts

142 Telecommunications Law Historic Site – Now Historic 50’-high silos with approved attachment of six panel antennas painted to match exterior surface to minimize visual impact. Located at Dufief Mill Road and MD Route 28 (Darnestown Road) in Montgomery County, Maryland. Photos by: Robert P. Hunnicutt, Columbia Telecommunications Corporation

143 Telecommunications Law Historic Site – Post Guidance? Illustration showing potential impact of co-location of an additional approximately 20’-high pole mounted antenna array. Photos by: Robert P. Hunnicutt, Columbia Telecommunications Corporation

144 Telecommunications Law Historic Site – Now Photo of Simeon T. Toby’s Bank Building, Columbia City Historic District, King County, WA. Blue arrows point to current location of cell towers. Building listed on National Registry of Historic Places

145 Telecommunications Law Historic Site – Post Guidance? Illustration showing potential impact of co- location using photos of actual rooftop installations

146 Telecommunications Law Brickyard Rd. DAS Site – Neighborhood Photos by: Robert P. Hunnicutt, Columbia Telecommunications Corporation

147 Telecommunications Law Brickyard Rd. DAS Site – Now Pole to support DAS antennas (68’ high) now at Brickyard Road in Montgomery County (part of a multi-node installation that extends down Brickyard Road) Photos by: Robert P. Hunnicutt, Columbia Telecommunications Corporation

148 Telecommunications Law Brickyard Rd. DAS Site – Post Guidance? Illustration of an extension to existing utility pole with additional structural bracing and guy wires to support the extension, which rises approximately 20’ above existing DAS antennas. Blocks at bottom reflect related typical pole-mounted equipment cabinets. Photos by: Robert P. Hunnicutt, Columbia Telecommunications Corporation

149 Telecommunications Law Is it too late?

150 Telecommunications Law No.

151 Telecommunications Law “ex parte” process

152 Telecommunications Law Action likely later this year.

153 Telecommunications Law 47 U.S.C. § 332(c)(7)

154 Telecommunications Law Five lessons

155 Telecommunications Law (1) Do no rely on the environmental effects of RF emissions in any respect

156 Telecommunications Law T-Mobile Northwest LLC v. Loudoun County, 748 F.3d 185 (4th Cir. 2014)

157 Telecommunications Law Board had “substantial evidence” to deny for aesthetic reasons, but...

158 Telecommunications Law One board member insisted that RF concerns also be listed.

159 Telecommunications Law This rendered the denial unlawful.

160 Telecommunications Law (2) Distinguish regulatory and proprietary activities

161 Telecommunications Law Omnipoint Communications v. City of Huntington Beach, 738 F.3d 192 (9th Cir. 2013)

162 Telecommunications Law Voter approval process for leasing of certain City property

163 Telecommunications Law Process is not subject to Section 332(c)(7) preemption

164 Telecommunications Law (3) Issue denials “in writing”; state reasons clearly

165 Telecommunications Law T-Mobile South, LLC v. City of Roswell, 731 F.3d 1213 (11th Cir. 2013)

166 Telecommunications Law Put denial in writing, but did not include reasons for denial (minutes from hearing showed reasons)

167 Telecommunications Law 11th Cir.: this is enough.

168 Telecommunications Law Supreme Court will hear argument this fall.

169 Telecommunications Law (4) Regulate aesthetics by developing a record

170 Telecommunications Law N.E. Cellular Inc. v. City of North Platte, slip op., No. 13-3190 (8th Cir. Aug. 22, 2014)

171 Telecommunications Law N.E. Cellular Inc. v. City of North Platte, slip op., No. 13-3190 (8th Cir. Aug. 22, 2014)

172 Telecommunications Law Testimony from a dozen residents that it would be inconsistent with neighborhood was sufficient

173 Telecommunications Law Tip: the more specific, the better. Courts find that “generalized” grievances do not constitute substantial evidence.

174 Telecommunications Law Matthew K. Schettenhelm Best Best & Krieger LLP Washington D.C. (202) 785-0600 matthew.schettenhelm@bbklaw.com www.bbklaw.com


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