Comment now on cell tower plan

CORNWALL — An application for a proposed Verizon Wireless telecommunications tower off Bell Road Extension has been filed with the Connecticut Siting Council.

This is one of the same two tower sites that were the subject of numerous informational sessions and balloon float tests last year.

Verizon had also considered a site on the same ridge, above 78 Popple Swamp Road. Representatives said they added the Bell Road Extension site for consideration — and believe it to be a better alternative — in part because it does not have the same potential to directly affect wetlands as the Popple Swamp Road site.

Town residents and members of the Housatonic Valley Association objected to potential impacts from either site.

Lengthy switchback driveways and drainage will need to be built for either. Both are on the same ridgeline, which overlooks Route 4.

While the red test balloons that floated against a backdrop of foliage did not have the visual impact many had expected, how that will translate as towers rising above the top of the ridge literally remains to be seen.

The entire application is available online at ct.gov/csc (look for docket #402, Cellco Partnership d/b/a Verizon Wireless). It includes details of the 110-foot tower and 15-panel-type antennas that will be installed at the top (for a final aggregate height of 113 feet), as well as a small equipment building and clearing.

The site will be accessed via a 545-foot long driveway constructed at the end of an existing 1,675-foot driveway, on property leased from Ralph Gulliver Jr.

The documents say that construction is set to begin when the application is approved, and that it will take two to four weeks. The total cost is estimated at $995,000.

The goal is to provide cell phone service along Route 7 and in portions of the Housatonic State Forest between West Cornwall and Cornwall Bridge. Rising from behind the ridgeline on the shore of the Housatonic River, the proposed tower placement is designed to provide that coverage.

While the lengthy application appears identical to one that was presented to the town last year, Verizon attorney Kenneth Baldwin, who has been the front person for this project, did not answer an e-mail question as to whether or not that is the case.

At any rate, the Siting Council’s public hearing process will begin in Cornwall. Baldwin did say on Monday of this week that a date has not yet been set by the council.

The boards of selectmen in Cornwall and Sharon have until June 7 to submit initial comment on the tower proposal. Under the law, towns within 2,500 feet of a proposed tower site are afforded the same input opportunities, including a public hearing.

The siting council Web site is also the vehicle for applying for intervener or party status, and to e-mail comments. The mailing address is 10 Franklin Square, New Britain, CT 06051.

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