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More Cell Towers Proposed for Wantagh
by Laura Schofer

Originally published in the 2010 July 8 edition of The Wantagh-Seaford Citizen.
Published online with kind permission from our friends at The Citizen.

Cell service provider T-Mobile has proposed to erect six cellphone towers on the roof of the Wantagh-Farmingdale Jewish Center on Woodbine Avenue in Wantagh. Residents of Wantagh Woods learned about the proposal when attorney William F. Bonesso, Esq, (Forchelli, Curto, Deegan, Schwartz, Mineo, Cohn & Terrana) representing T-Mobile, sent a letter to residents who live within 100 feet of the proposed project. In his letter, Mr. Bonesso wrote that a public hearing before the Town of Hempstead Board of Zoning Appeals will take place on Wednesday, July 14, at 2 PM. He also invited residents to a meeting to review the proposed project on the evening of July 7, at the Knights of Columbus on Wantagh Avenue.


Wantagh Jewish Center on Woodbine Avenue
is the Proposed Location for the Controversial Cell Towers

Residents, who rallied after learning about the proposal, first met on June 30 to discuss the plans, said Jeanine Boiko, a Wantagh resident. Approximately 50 people attended the meeting, which took place in a private residence. “I am outraged that T-Mobile sees nothing wrong with erecting six cellphone towers in a completely residential area,” said Ms. Boiko. “I have two children under the age of five, and I now fear for their health. Why they would choose a non-industrial area to erect these radiation-emitting towers is beyond me. There should be some sort of regulation by the Town of Hempstead to keep these towers at least 1,500 feet from residential areas and schools.”

Residents of other communities agree. In nearby Merrick, two groups have been formed – MOMS (Moms of Merrick/Bellmore Speak out) and a Cell Tower Taskforce – to  address the proliferation of cell antenna equipment in residential neighborhoods. The Merrick Gables Association brought a lawsuit against NextG Networks and the Town of Hempstead last year, in an effort to persuade the town to provide more stringent control over the placement of wireless equipment. The state Supreme Court ruled in favor of NextG and the Town of Hempstead.

In Wantagh, residents raise the same question. “It’s a residential community with hundreds of kids in the vicinity being exposed to potentially hazardous technology,” said Kenny Lack, who lives directly across the street form the Jewish center. “Dozens of studies show a direct correlation between RF emitting towers and cancer. T-Mobile is certainly putting business before people.”


Public Hearing Notice received by Residents within 100 Feet of the Proposed Cell Towers

In fact, there is ongoing debate over the health risks from electromagnetic fields that has raged for decades. The Citizen found some studies on this issue that go back as far as 1986. In 2003, the United Nations Earthwatch wrote that evidence “remains inconclusive due to the inability of epidemiological studies to detect small effects and a lack of consistency in results in different laboratories on the same experiment.”

The federal government took the same position when it put into effect the 1996 Telecommunications Act. This legislation does not permit residents to cite health concerns as a reason to keep cell towers and equipment out of residential neighborhoods. But many residents are still concerned.

Andrew Campanelli, a federal commercial civil rights attorney attended the June 30 meeting in Wantagh. He also represents the MOMS of Merrick and is currently in litigation with the Village of Bayville and several cellphone companies to remove more than 500 cellular transmission antennae from a water tower that is located 50 feet from Bayville’s elementary school where three students have died of Leukemia and allegedly 30 percent of the staff have cancer and other serious illnesses. He has told our sister paper, Merrick Life, that cell equipment is “being banned overseas and moved 1500 feet away from schools in countries such as Germany, Taiwan and Australia. Why aren’t our children being protected, here?”

For further information, please visit www.DontCellOut.com, www.WantaghConcernedCitizens.com, the Facebook Page or call Pam Dempsey at 221-6567.

Copyright © 2010 The Wantagh-Seaford Citizen & LI Dot. All rights reserved.

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