Proposed pole would rise above the tree line.

Cell Tower Gets Unwelcome Reception

<p>Verizon&rsquo;s proposal to build a cell phone tower to improve service in West Tisbury came before the Martha&rsquo;s Vineyard Commission last week, sparking a long discussion and volumes of correspondence protesting the location of the tower near Tisbury Great Pond.</p> <p>The company has proposed installing an 80-foot tower on a 50-square-foot piece of land on New Lane in West Tisbury, and has identified three potential locations for the tower. Two of the sites are in the inland zone of the coastal district of critical planning concern.</p>

Verizon’s proposal to build a cell phone tower to improve service in West Tisbury came before the Martha’s Vineyard Commission last week, sparking a long discussion and volumes of correspondence protesting the location of the tower near Tisbury Great Pond.

The company has proposed installing an 80-foot tower on a 50-square-foot piece of land on New Lane in West Tisbury, and has identified three potential locations for the tower. Two of the sites are in the inland zone of the coastal district of critical planning concern.

The pole would rise above the tree line in the area, which is designated a rural district. Verizon is applying for a special permit under West Tisbury bylaws, and the West Tisbury zoning board of appeals referred the matter to the commission for review.

Verizon representative Carl Gehring said that the additional cell tower is needed to expand coverage in the area; he noted that when President Barack Obama vacationed on the Vineyard and stayed in Chilmark, portable cell towers on wheels (or COWs) were placed in the proposed location to improve service.

Mr. Gehring cited cell phone service lapses, especially around the West Tisbury town hall and at the intersection of Edgartown and County Roads.

Verizon has said it would prefer using a monopine, a tower that would have fiberglass branches, antennae painted green and a pole painted brown, to resemble a pine tree. The other option would be a stealth monopole, a single pole painted flat brown or dull gray, with antennas hidden inside.

The monopine would allow co-locators, or other carriers, to use the tower.

“Our goal is to get on air and make everyone happy and hopefully be our customers,” he said.

“Never,” a woman in the audience responded, one of about a dozen people who attended the meeting.

“This is the record amount of materials we’ve ever received, from applicant and citizens,” DRI coordinator Paul Foley said after Mr. Gehring gave a project overview, which included large binders of information. About 60 people wrote letters in opposition to the project, with about 24 signing a spiral-bound 78-page document against the project. About 20 people signed a form letter of support for the application.

“Knowing that cell phone service in this area is at best barely functional and understanding the location for this site is greatly obscured by the surrounding high woods, I encourage the board to approve the project when it comes up before the board for review,” the form letter said.

But opposition to the cell tower focused in some cases on the monopine idea, and others said the location would spoil the Tisbury Great Pond area.

“Just wait awhile, the world will not end if we don’t get a cell phone tower in 2013,” David Sample of Leesburg, Va., wrote.

“We . . . live in West Tisbury because of its rural setting, which you can appreciate driving into town from Edgartown or on Old County Road. The visual impact of an 80-foot ugly tower (looking like a phony Christmas tree) is only detrimental to the West Tisbury setting,” neighbor Marilyn Hollinshead wrote. “I have tried, hard, to imagine how the cell tower would change this experience. What I know is that the beauty of the tree line — amazingly unbroken on either side of the pond up to the present day — will be forever scarred,” West

Tisbury resident Patricia Moore wrote.

“Please take this little step to preserve this small wild place in our Island world,” she concluded.

Thomas Hodgson wrote in favor of the monopine proposal. “Scenic preservation is important. The idea of having a ‘standard’ cell tower is really awful. This is a much better alternative. It won’t be there forever . . . all things pass, even cell phone towers.” He also said the monopine was a fun alternative.

Just a few audience members spoke at the meeting, though some became emotional when addressing the commission.

“What we’re really talking about is corporate access to customers on the Island,” said West Tisbury home owner Marsha Feinberg, noting she has to stand in “certain corners” of her house to get cell reception. “I have to make some compromises. The reason why we’re on this Island is because we’ve made compromises . . . because we want someplace that is special and preserved and different from other places.”

The commission decided to refer the issue back to the land use planning committee so the various options could be addressed, before bringing the issue back to the commission.

In other business, the commission approved a fiscal year 2014 budget of $1,325,350, an increase of about 10 per cent from last year. The amount Vineyard towns are assessed from the commission has increased by $104,084, or 12.8 per cent over last year.

Treasurer Brian Smith said most of the increase can be attributed to higher legal expenses and retirement costs. The commission spent $196,613 on legal expenses in 2012, as opposed to the budgeted $60,000.

A typical house assessed at $500,000 will pay about $23.60 for the commission budget, an increase of about $2 from last year.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 02/01/2013 - 08:27

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Beth Kevles Chilmark and Maryland

I'm all in favor of improving cellular service up-island. With landline service also somewhat unreliable, cell service is imperative.

If the monopine is so ugly, perhaps we could encourage Verizon to come up with a more palatable tower design? Frankly, the pine IS ugly, and it's ugly everywhere, not just in West Tisbury. That no one has asked Verizon to create a more attractive tower doesn't mean Verizon is incapable of doing so.

Let's put together a contest for a new, visually acceptable tower design. We'd win, Verizon would win, and so would all those people who walk or drive past ugly cell towers every day.

David R White The Yard, Chilmark

Those of us who work (or dance) for a living up-island need better service. This is not just a NIMBY landscape debate, but a key economic issue for those of us providing services to our communities here and to the island at large. But I am intrigued by the idea of Verizon coming up with a better mouse trap - sorry, cell tower. This is an island of builders, engineers, landscapers, artists - following on Beth's imaginative suggestion, why not ask Verizon to sponsor a real-world design competition, with a prize, to imagine a much better monopine, a sculptural object (e.g., a sail, a stabile, an Aeolian wind harp, whatever) that would have true functionality but would ride above the tree line with at least the grace of our windmills. Select three finalists, and have the community vote the winner. Now - on to getting Chilmark to allow liquor licenses . . .

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 02/01/2013 - 10:14

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peter simon Chilmark

Happily, I'm an AT&T subscriber, which provides fairly seamless service across the Island. But, I do care about visual despoilation of our landcsape. So here is an alternative that may (or may not) have been considered. Two other locations come to mind: (a) Inside the steeple at the West Congregational Church, or (b) above the fire station along the West Tisbury Edg. Road. Neither of those spots would have a jarring visual impact. I'm also one of those people who doesn't worry too much about the radiation. Living right next to power lines or breathing in second hand smoke on a regular basis seems much more potentially injurious.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 02/02/2013 - 22:43

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Hudson Lee West Tisbury

Verizon should be forced to join the existing up-island DAS. Can't let regional monopolies ignore/outsource low profit remote areas like the vineyard while they profit massively from other areas. Would this tower even reach the Aquinnah cliffs? I'm guessing not, it's about 8.5 miles to the cliffs from New Lane. I say only allow verizon a new tower if they run FIOS across the whole island including chappy. Google "vineyard distributed antenna system" for more info.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 02/03/2013 - 16:05

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BG Edg

Why not make the cell tower look like a windmill, for example just like the one @ morning glory farm.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 02/06/2013 - 17:47

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un-named the whole island

Verizon is not known for it's good business sense and it is a conglomerate that would be more then happy to get local business. Personally, I would go out of my way not to have them as my carrier if in fact they did put a tower in west tisbury and although some of the younger folks here would, I would hope the seasoned folk would boycott them. I think the island should think very closely if they want to make the island into the same eye soar, towered, cabled, accessable in all means and ways as if it where not an island. Not a fragile ecosystem. It is very noticable that the island is changing too rapidly for it to maintain the wonderful feel and spirit is always has been. The houses are larger, the rural areas are being bought and trophy homes up, the treeline is gone thanks to N-Star and many days we cannot make a left hand turn because of traffic, in the winter. If you want convenience, great reception, every station, a webcam so you can watch a dock at every corner, and 3 cars (one in case uncle charlie comes) then why are you here? Perhaps you would rather be in Mashpee. After all in another 35 years it will look like mashpee. Then will we have all those barbeques and family re-unions. Oh right. there is always Macinac. I think they just deal with the invconvenience. They don't even allow cars on that island. Can you imagine....

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