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UPDATE: New York: Cell-Tower Applications Reach APA


trucks in snow.jpgIn regards to the story (HERE) which YW is keeping a close eye on – where the heavily traveled highway has no cell coverage and a person was R”L tragically killed in a car accident last year. (Thousands of Jews travel this route from NY to Canada.)

The Press Republican reports: Applications for three Verizon Wireless cellular-phone towers near I-87 are at the Adirondack Park Agency. Mark Sengenberger, director of Regulatory Programs at APA, told commissioners Friday that one proposed tower would go on the east side of Route 9 in the Town of Schroon, one would go along Route 9 in North Hudson and one would be in Lewis on the western side of Route 10 between Northway exits 31 and 32.

The applications arrived Thursday, he said, and staff started the review process.

Visual analysis of the towers — usually done as a photographic composition of tower models superimposed on pictures of the landscape — is not complete, Sengenberger said.

But Verizon is “well attuned to the information required in agency applications.”

Applications for two additional Verizon towers are expected to arrive in October, Sengenberger said.

APA commissioners could review tower proposals for permit approval as early as November.

The I-87 cell-tower project has been in great demand by the traveling public, emergency personnel and legislators.

Verizon Wireless announced last spring it would site 11 towers on lands adjoining the Adirondack Northway, to establish a continuous cell-phone signal covering dead zones on areas of roadway where tragic and deadly accidents have occurred several times in recent years.

The projects are being proposed, Sengenberger said, with an agreement structured in April by Gov. Eliot Spitzer’s office and five Adirondack environmental groups.

The agreement states that the towers will not be placed on state land and will be kept substantially invisible in accordance with Adirondack tall-towers policy.

In August, state Sen. Betty Little (R-Queensbury) and Assemblywomen Teresa Sayward (R-Willsboro) and Janet Duprey (R-Plattsburgh) called for a five-month, temporary solution using cells on wheels placed at I-87 rest areas from Schroon Lake north to Lewis.

The temporary towers, the North Country legislators said, would cover some of the dead zones this winter from December to May, while the Verizon cell-tower project is being designed and reviewed.

The temporary plan has not been activated.

(Source: Press Republican)



3 Responses

  1. I agree with Z. Calling them reshoyim is a little bit too much. But it would be nice to know that one could travel to Montreal and worry about calling 911 in an emergency, Chas V’shalom.

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