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Legal Concerns with Proposed Draft Code <br />The proposed 1200-foot setback is contrary to federal law. <br />The Department proposes a setback for all towers of "at least 1,200 feet from nearby residences <br />and schools not on the subject property." Proposed Subsection 25-4-12(d)(2). <br />Under federal law, a local jurisdiction is preempted from considering the environmental effects <br />of radio frequency ("RF") emissions (including health effects) in regulating the placement of <br />proposed wireless facilities.3 This means a local jurisdiction cannot regulate, deny, or condition <br />a wireless facility based on concerns about RF emissions.4 An example directly relevant here, is <br />a case in New Jersey where a 1000-foot tower setback condition was determined invalid and <br />stricken.s In response to the local jurisdiction's argument that the setback was for aesthetic <br />purposes, the court noted that such a setback "is of little if any significance regarding <br />aesthetics."6 <br />The Department's stated rationale for this proposal is a "broader trend of using substantial <br />setbacks to manage safety risks, visual impacts, and community concerns with placement of <br />telecommunication towers near residences and schools."7 <br />AT&T disagrees that there is a "broader trend" of using setbacks greater than a tower -height <br />setback from a shared property line; to the contrary, the jurisdictions cited by the Department are <br />outliers. One of the examples listed by the Department is Copake, New York, which is a town of <br />3,400 people and 14 square miles in size. Based on the town's size and population, Copake does <br />not require many wireless facilities. Lane County is the only jurisdiction that AT&T's team is <br />aware of in the Pacific Northwest (Oregon and Washington) that has such a large setback from <br />residences and schools. Although the 1,200-foot setback remains in Lane County's zoning code, <br />AT&T is aware of at least one instance where a local decision -maker found application of this <br />setback to be in violation of federal law, resulting in Lane County approving the facility with a <br />lesser setback. <br />Specific "safety risks" are not identified in the Department's rationale. In AT&T's view and in <br />typical wireless codes, issues related to a "fall zone" are adequately addressed by the proposed <br />120 percent setback from property lines, provided however, that an exception to the setback be <br />granted for towers constructing using breakpoint technology.$ In addition, the current building <br />code, including structural code requirements, significantly reduces the likelihood of falling <br />towers. <br />147 U.S.C. § 332(c)(7)(B)(iv). <br />4 AT&T Wireless Services v. City of Carlsbad, 308 F.Supp.2d 1148 (S.D.Cal. 2003)(a denial may not be indirectly <br />based upon concern over the environmental effects of RF emissions and how such concern may impact property <br />values); Sprint Spectrum L.P. vs. Ringwood Zoning Board, 898 A.2d 1054 (2005)(a 1000-foot setback is <br />preempted). <br />5 Sprint Spectrum L.P., at 1059. <br />6 Id. at 1059. <br />Planning Director's Report, PL-PDI-2024-000008, Background and Recommendation, July 23, 2024, p. 13. <br />8 With breakpoint technology, towers are engineered to collapse on themselves, significantly reducing a fall zone to <br />less than tower height. <br />