Seachelles
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God never gives us more than we can handle.
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Fredericksburg, USA, usa, 474, 157, VA, Virginia
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You need to read this article that was put out yesterday. UNBELIEVABLE!!!! Mom doesn't want cell tower near ailing son 2006-01-19 by John Huether Journal Reporter SAMMAMISH -- Plans to erect a cell phone tower near a school bus stop are on hold while a group of residents in the Montage neighborhood try to convince T-Mobile to move it. Shannon Coleman readily accepts that the tower needs to go somewhere -- just not near her home on Southeast Second Place, where the pole on which T-Mobile wants to place its tower is visible out the family's front window. Coleman's motivation is deeply personal: Her 11-year-old son, Conner, suffers from a rare disease, Moyamoya Syndrome, which causes the closing off of the brain's arteries.
Cell phone towers didn't cause that, and doctors can't give her a cause, but Coleman has her reasons for suspecting radiation played a role.
She and a handful of her neighbors met this week with the City Council, which last summer adopted an ordinance regulating cell tower placement. A moratorium on such towers had been in effect awaiting the ordinance, and T-Mobile's application for the one at 226 Louis Thompson Rd. near Southeast Third is the first of many expected in this affluent Plateau community.
``Our city has written a crappy ordinance,'' said Coleman, arguing that Sammamish's law should include tighter restrictions on where cell towers can go. In particular, while federal law precludes using general health issues to limit tower location, she feels the city should allow for specific health issues in deciding where a tower can, or can't, go.
``We had a nationally noted consultant help us draft this ordinance,'' responded Mayor Michelle Petitti, who said the city is trying to bring the Montage neighbors and T-Mobile representatives together to resolve the issue.
``We realized that as a city, we don't have a lot of choice in these matters,'' Pettiti said, adding that the city's main input was to establish a hierarchy of preferred sites where cell phone towers can go.
At the top of that list, said community development director Kamuron Gurol, is a city arterial right of way, which is where T-Mobile has proposed its tower.
But Louis Thompson Road is only a two-lane arterial, which Coleman argues fits smaller neighborhoods where towers shouldn't be allowed. Put them on four-lane arterials, she suggests -- or, better still, down at Ebright Creek Park, a little more than half a mile away.
Petitti doubted that would be close enough to serve the cell phone company's needs. ``Sammamish is a city full of neighborhoods. We don't have a lot of open space to put these things,'' she said.
Any revisions in the city's ordinance could not be applied retroactively to T-Mobile's application, both she and Gurol noted.
A T-Mobile representative could not be reached Wednesday for comment. In a letter to the city on Tuesday, a zoning supervisor for the company expressed a desire to meet with the neighbors opposing the tower.
The tower opponents' best hope, Petitti said, would be if T-Mobile agrees to move its tower perhaps just a short distance, something that would also involve Puget Sound Energy's agreeing to allow it on a different pole.
Meanwhile, Petitti says the City Council will discuss the tower with staff Tuesday evening, and Coleman is awaiting that meeting with T-Mobile representatives.
She's not optimistic they'll agree to move the tower, though.
And while Petitti points to the lack of scientific evidence linking cell phones and their towers to any known health risks, Coleman's just as certain her fears are well grounded.
She cites her son's neurosurgeon at Children's Hospital, who told her that radiation treatments for brain tumors can give rise to Moyamoya Syndrome-- a term coined in Japan where, Coleman said, the disease occurs more frequently than anywhere else.
The connection with radiation resonates deeply with Coleman, whose mother lived in Hanford, home of the Hanford Nuclear Facility.
``My mother was a downwinder,'' Coleman said, using the term for residents near the nuclear site who were exposed to radiation releases. ``I spent every summer of my infancy down there, so I was exposed to the radiation as a downwinder, also.
``And I believe my higher-than-normal exposure to radiation caused Conner to develop this diesease.''
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