Plans aired for 120-foot monopole

FALLS VILLAGE — Representatives of AT&T Wireless met with members of the Inland Wetlands and Planning and Zoning commissions, and the public, at an informational meeting Wednesday, Dec. 9, at the Lee H. Kellogg School.

The cell phone company is proposing a 120-foot monopole at a site some 4,000 feet up the hill from 8 Barnes Road. The parcel, which is privately owned, is 50 acres and the lot is 100 square feet with an enclosure of 75 square feet encompassed by an 8-foot-tall fence.

Access is through an existing logging road, upgraded with gravel. The road would be steep, rising 670 feet from Barnes Road.

The phone company representatives said that 24 residences in a 2-mile radius of the tower would have a year-round view of the top 30 to 60 feet of the tower; eight homes would have a seasonal view. The nearest home is 1,765 feet away.

All necessary utilities for the facility will be underground, they said.

The goal is to improve coverage along routes 7, 63 and 126, and ultimately to provide consistent service from the Northwest Corner to Danbury.

The commissioners then began asking questions. Woods Sinclair from Inland Wetlands noted the plan calls for cutting 159 trees, and said he had concerns about rare or endangered species at the site.

“We’re not dealing with an area that doesn’t have high environmental value,â€� said Sinclair.  “Do we have any notion of the effect of the tower on species in the area?â€�

Sinclair also noted that the Northwest Corner is part of the federal Highlands conservation region, which stretches through multiple states along the east coast. It is also in the Upper Housatonic Valley National Heritage Area.

“Nothing in the plan mentions any of that. We’re very protective of this very special region. It’s important for you folks to know that.�

Tom Scott, a member of the Planning and Zoning Commission, said the town will be hiring an engineer to evaluate the plan.

Towns are severely limited in what they can do about cell phone tower placement, Scott acknowledged. He urged residents to write letters to the Connecticut Siting Council if they have concerns about the Barnes Road tower.

“It’s the only way to influence this,� he said.

Copies of the AT&T proposal are available at Town Hall and the D.M. Hunt Library.

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