HomeMy WebLinkAbout2024-11-18 Debra Greene From: Debra Greene
To: LPCtestimonv
Subject: Support Item#8
Date: Monday,November 18,2024 4:15:30 PM
Attachments: 11-22-24 Leeward written testimonv.odf
Aloha Planning Commission Staff,
Attached please find my PDF document of written testimony submitted in support of Item 98
for the upcoming meeting on November 21,
Mahalo!
Sincerely,
Debra
Debra Greene, PhD
Founding Director
Safe Tech Hawaii
PHONE: 808-874-6441
WEBSITE: www.SafeTechHawaii.com
Sent from my faster, safer, more secure HARDWIRED computer
Aloha Leeward Commissioners,
Thank you for your attention to the proposed Bill 194. I'm the Founding Director of Safe Tech
Hawaii, a grassroots coalition of thousands of residents across the state concerned about safe
technology. I'm writing in support of County Council Bill 194. Below I address each of the
concerns the Director used to justify his unfavorable recommendation.
1) Regarding proposed Section 25-2-74(1)
The Subsection requires a plot plan showing the location of the proposed antenna or
tower and all buildings and uses within 300 feet thereof. The Director claimed this
requirement is excessive without providing any rationale for his assessment. This is
ironic because he stated that lack of a detailed rationale for this requirement was a
"particularly significant" concern and grounds for an unfavorable recommendation.
Since both Bill 194 and the Director's proposed ordinance contain setback requirements
for residences and schools, one could easily see how a plot plan showing buildings and
uses could be very helpful. Further, the rationale for this requirement could have been
easily attained had the Director simply asked, as the draft ordinance was shared with
Planning over six months before the Director introduced his ordinance. Cooperation was
demonstrated by Council Member Evans, but not by the Director.
2) Regarding Proposed Section 25-2-74(5)
This Subsection proposes a report prepared by a licensed professional electrical
engineer certifying that the proposed use complies with all applicable standards and
regulations, including RF emissions regulations set by the FCC and the state of Hawaii.
The Director has raised three concerns:
First:The Director stated that the FCC already regulates RF emissions so an additional
report is redundant; yet, ironically, his proposed ordinance requires an additional report
from the FCC verifying compliance. Why is that not redundant?
Further, The Director's requirement that the FCC provide a statement of compliance or
that no compliance is necessary is of grave concern. Obtaining such a statement from
the FCC, a Federal agency that is not equipped to provide such statements to local
jurisdictions across the U.S., could take weeks and violate the 60-day approval timeline
mandated by HRS 4689.
Second: The Director stated that the proposed report places responsibility on planners
who lack technical expertise to review technical engineering reports; however, no such
burden would be placed on planners. The responsibility is with the licensed professional
who prepared the report. As is customary, planners simply would check a box indicating
that the report was provided.
A report by an independent professional is absolutely necessary because the FCC does
not send representatives onsite to test RF emissions, so there is no way to verify
compliance. According to telecommunications attorney Andrew Campanelli who has
successfully won lawsuits against telecommunications corporations, independent
testing done in other jurisdictions has shown instances in which RF emissions exceeded
the FCC guidelines. This is deeply troubling for the community because the FCC has
some of the most lenient emission standards in the world.
Third: The Director stated that this report requirement could conflict with federal law as
local governments cannot impose stricter RF standards than the FCC. How can a report
certifying compliance with Federal Law conflict with Federal law?There is absolutely
nothing in the proposed ordinance that would impose stricter RF standards than are
required by Federal law-quite the opposite. Again, the proposed requirement, as
stated, is to ensure compliance with Federal law.To suggest it potentially violates
Federal law reflects an inability to properly understand the ordinance. Or maybe there's
something else at play?
3) Regarding Proposed Subsections 25-2-74(6), (7), (8), (12), (13) and 25-4-12(i)(3) & (4)
These Subsections constitute plan approval application requirements. The Director
stated that these sections are outside the purview of Planning but this is not a valid
claim as there is nothing unusual about these sections. Conditions such as these are
routine for various permit applications here. They include conditions such as flood
control, fire prevention, Department of Health requirements, County code compliance,
and so forth. In addition,jurisdictions across the country have implemented ordinances
such as Bill 194 through their local planning departments. It's common practice here
and elsewhere to include such provisions.
4) Regarding Proposed Subsection 25-4-12(f)
This Section states that "the director may [emphasis mine] engage a private consultant
to inspect and determine whether the proposed use violates any" FCC standards
provided that the consultant's time not count toward the time limit.
The Director repeatedly and incorrectly stated that Bill 194 includes the "Use of Private
Consultants" when there is no required use of private consultants anywhere in the bill.
His claim is misleading as the proposed ordinance does not mandate hiring a private
consultant. The choice to engage a private consultant is mentioned once, is optional,
and is at the discretion of the Director.
The Director raised four concerns.
First, he stated that "engaging private consultants may significantly raise costs for the
County, creating unnecessary financial burdens," but this claim is alarmist and
unfounded. Again, the proposed ordinance does not require hiring a private consultant.
The choice is optional and at the discretion of the Director.
Second, he stated "the current wording suggests that the consultant's determination
occurs after Plan Approval" but this claim is unfounded as the language refers to "the
proposed use" which indicates this option is part of an application process and does not
occur after Plan Approval. Even if the language needs to be tweaked a bit, that hardly
constitutes a "significant concern" that merits an unfavorable recommendation.
Third, the Director stated that "it would be more logical to hire a consultant before Final
Plan Approval rather than afterward" but, again, the language in this Section refers to
"the proposed use" which indicates this option is part of an application process and
does not occur after Plan Approval.
Fourth, the Director stated that "relying on private consultants could introduce delays in
the approval process" that may violate the 60-day timeframe mandated by HRS 4689.
Again, this claim is unfounded and alarmist because nothing in Bill 194 includes "relying
on private consultants". The choice to engage a private consultant is mentioned only
once, is optional, and is at the discretion of the Director.
5) Regarding Proposed Section 25-4-12(h)
This Section describes tower siting prioritization. It says:
(h) Telecommunication antennas and towers shall be sited in accordance with the
following order of priority:
(1) On building sites with existing telecommunication antennas or towers;
(2) On industrial zoned lands;
(3) All other lands, exclusive of industrial zoned lands and residential zoned lands;
and
(4) Residential zoned lands.
The Director stated five concerns.
First:The Director's stated concern is that it's "unclear how staff should prioritize
applications across zoning districts", which is confounding since the proposed Section
describes exactly how applications should be prioritized.
Second: He stated it "lacks guidance on whether applicants must analyze unviable
lower-priority sites."This statement is baffling. Why would an applicant need guidance
about analyzing unviable lower-priority sites? Why is this even a concern for the
Director? And even if it was a valid concern, telecommunications corporations have
endless resources at their disposal. They are free to do any and all analyzing of unviable,
low-priority sites if they so choose without that being stipulated in the ordinance.
Third: The Director stated it's "uncertain if staff must deny applications for underserved
areas without proper zoning or suggest alternative sites", a concern that could easily be
remedied.
Fourth: He stated that "prioritization could delay permitting, exceeding the 60-day
approval timeframe" but the Director gives no rationale for what could cause such
delays, so at this time that claim is purely speculative.
Five: He stated that "Enforcement remains undefined." If Planning is doing its job, they
will adhere to the prioritization and no enforcement would be required. Is the Director
suggesting planners may not adhere to the law and need to be policed, in which case all
of the provisions would need enforcement, not just this one?
Finally, the Director's proposed ordinance exempts eight zoning districts from setbacks.
This is of grave concern as several of those zones have residential and schools nearby
and even mixed in, so those zones should not be exempted from setbacks. Further, the
Director's ordinance requires a 1200-foot setback for residential and schools and, given
the proximity issue, this could potentially create a planning nightmare in trying to
differentiate the setbacks versus exemptions. Such exemptions could delay permitting
and exceed the 60-day approval timeframe mandated by HRS 4689. To avoid this
potential violation, the easy remedy would be to uniformly require setbacks with no
exemptions, which is exactly what Bill 194 does.
The one major difference that the Director failed to highlight is that Bill 194 includes
small cell infrastructure whereas his bill doesn't. This is a major oversight as small cells
are a novel and untested technology that absolutely require regulation for the good of
the public.
In closing, Council members are elected to enact legislation in a democratic process -we
elect them and they represent our needs. The Director has submitted comments that
are critical of Bill 194 and gave an unfavorable recommendation. At the same time he
submitted his own ordinance that goes far beyond simply updating the code to bring it
into compliance with state law, a law that's actually been on the books for years. Just
couldn't help but notice that timing.
We also couldn't help but notice that the Director only consulted with
telecommunication corporations and telecom advocacy groups. There was no actual
input from the community. In contrast, Council Member Evans consulted with us, and
other community groups, over the course of a year to craft her ordinance. Months of
research went into it, using ordinances already adopted in other jurisdictions as
examples to make sure it met all legal and policy requirements. It was cross-checked,
double-checked and re-checked. It's a good, solid piece of legislation that aligns with
others across the country. It deserves a favorable recommendation.
Thank you for your kind and thoughtful consideration of our comments. Please feel free
to reach out with any questions.
Sincerely,
Debra
Debra Greene, PhD
Founding Director
Safe Tech Hawaii
808-874-6441
debra@SafeTechHawaii.com