HomeMy WebLinkAboutCommunity Letters Rec'd Nov 19 to 24Outlook
fcc bill no permits, no town control if this gets passed towers ever y where
From electrone11738@aol.com <electrone11738@aol.com>
Date Wed 11/19/2025 8:00 AM
To Codes <codes@townithacany.gov>; s <electrone11738@aol.com>
FCC Moves to Silence Communities and Flood the Country with Cell Towers • Children's Health
Defense
The fcc will be voting on this November 20th please let me know you received this email.
The link to read and post comments is below
to file a comment go to efs click on submit a comment here is a link on how to
post a comment
ARRL Guide to Filing Comments with FCC , Electronic Comment Filing System on
fcc call your congressman senate
ECFS - Filing Search Results put in docket 25-276 to see comments and to post
comments I do hope I'm reaching the correct part of the town go vt keep in mind
that the fcc want's comments when the government was shut down fcc site did
not work until a cupple of days ago they should extend the comment period they
doing this for other fcc filings I hope this helps. sincerely Stev en
Outlook
Please hold your ground in the face of Verizon!
From Vanessa Lynn Wood <vness.wood@gmail.com>
Date Wed 11/19/2025 9:13 PM
To Codes <codes@townithacany.gov>; Marty Moseley <MMoseley@townithacany.gov>;
cjrandeall@townithacany.gov <cjrandeall@townithacany.gov>; Chris Balestra <CBalestra@townithacany.gov>
**WARNING** This email comes from an outside source. Please verify the from address, any
URL links, and/or attachments. Any questions please contact the IT department
Dear Zoning Board Members,
I am writing as a longtime (21 years and counting) Ithaca resident and worker. I am asking for you to
please keep up your good work and stand firm in the face of Verizon's push to build a new tower
downtown. Residents have made their voices heard for years, with overwhelming consensus against
this and similar projects. Corporations are trying to usurp municipality decision making nation-wide,
and it is important for us to stand strong, even if it means going to court. They should not be trying to
strong arm Ithaca into forcing them to build unnecessary, unhealthy, and unsightly infrastructure that
we don't want.
As you likely know, there is a huge body of scientific work warning of the negative health effects of
proximity to cell towers. Putting more towers in the midst of residential neighborhoods and schools
could have disastrous consequences for the health and safety of residents, change the landscape, and
lower property values. The FCC wireless coverage map shows Verizon coverage already exists in that
area without exception, and anyone with Verizon using their phone downtown can attest to this as
well. The only gap related to this story is the gap in FCC regulations to protect Americans, which has
not kept up with new technologies or studies on the subject for decades now, despite court action to
this end.
Please stand strong, even if it is difficult. We can't just let outside corporations steamroll our decisions,
health, and values. Thank you for your attention and work.
Respectfully,
Vanessa Wood
Outlook
Please, request to deny the Verizon appeal for the 5G Tower 11-20-25
From Tom Clausen <tpc2@cornell.edu>
Date Thu 11/20/2025 1:10 PM
To Codes <codes@townithacany.gov>; Marty Moseley <MMoseley@townithacany.gov>; CJ Randall
<cjrandall@townithacany.gov>; Chris Balestra <CBalestra@townithacany.gov>
**WARNING** This email comes from an outside source. Please verify the from address, any
URL links, and/or attachments. Any questions please contact the IT department
To Whom it May Concern,
It is a sad and very unfortunate deja vu to think that our community is
confronting an issue that has already been determined to be unnecessary and
unwelcome. It would be a terrible precedence to at this point vote against
what you have already , sensibly, voted against. I hope you will remain
steadfast in your denial of Verizon's appeal and that the same good sense you
exercised on this previously will inform your action again at this time.
Gratefully, Tom Clausen
"everyday is a journey and the journey itself is home" ~ Basho
tpc2@cornell.edu
tclausen888@gmail.com
Outlook
Verizon tower project
From J Korn <jkornbloom@gmail.com>
Date Thu 11/20/2025 2:41 PM
To Codes <codes@townithacany.gov>; Marty Moseley <MMoseley@townithacany.gov>; CJ Randall
<cjrandall@townithacany.gov>; Chris Balestra <CBalestra@townithacany.gov>
**WARNING** This email comes from an outside source. Please verify the from address, any
URL links, and/or attachments. Any questions please contact the IT department
Dear Zoning Board Members,
My name is Benjamin Kornblum.
I am writing regarding the latest developments in the proposed Verizon Cell Tower project which was
previously DENIED by the Zoning Board for the height variance violation, which was well within the
Town of Ithaca's legal purview to do. It is extremely disappointing that Verizon continues to harass and
bully our town to achieve their own goals and in defiance of what the local community wants!
We cannot and should not allow such corporate bullying. Particularly when the proposed tower is in an
area with excellent cell phone service. This point has been brought to the boards attention by many
residents.
So many of us spoke up against this intrusive tower marring a beautiful landscape in a conservation
zone. Having it sit so close to residences does not make sense. Additionally, an eye sore like this can
significantly impact property values for residents.
I encourage you to hold strong and to not capitulate to Verizon. Please vote in a way that is congruent
with what our community wants. If the battle against this development requires funds, please let the
community know so that we can rally to support our town! We are here for you!! Will you stand up for
us??
I love living in the Town and appreciate the natural beauty around me every day. Having this tower
qualitatively impacts our daily life. I felt so proud of the community and board for standing up for our
values when the application was denied and I hope the zoning board can continue to stand strong!!
Thank you for your consideration and for standing for our community's rights,
Benjamin Kornblum
211 South Corn st.
Ithaca, NY 14850
Sent from my iPhone
Outlook
The clear rationale why you should not sign this illegal and unethical agreement with Verizon
From Andrew J. Molnar <andrewmolnar11@gmail.com>
Date Wed 11/19/2025 2:16 PM
To Codes <codes@townithacany.gov>; Marty Moseley <MMoseley@townithacany.gov>; CJ Randall
<cjrandall@townithacany.gov>; Chris Balestra <CBalestra@townithacany.gov>
1 attachment (248 KB)
Robert Berg, esq letter to the Town of Ithaca.pdf;
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Zoning Board members,
I was very disheartened and angered to hear of a secret settlement that the Town has negotiated with Verizon to build
a massive cell tower in our beloved town and conservation area against the overwhelming will of the public and the
well-considered vote of you, the Zoning Board. In discussion with our attorney, it has become clear that this
agreement is illegal and unethical, and we urge you to not sign on to it. (From him: "The Town is illegally pressuring
the ZBA to ex post change its decision.") This kind of corporate bullying is what telecom companies have tried, with
mixed success, in towns across the country. I, and the many Ithacans who oppose this, urge you to stand with those
towns that have courageously pushed back.
There are a number of problems with this lawsuit:
1. First and foremost, according to New York State law, you need good faith reasons - a real rationale - to
vacate your decision denying the variance. Being pressured by a vacuous and mendacious lawsuit is NOT
a valid or legal reason to do so. You are legally required to base any decision on solid facts. If you do not do
this, your decision will be seen as arbitrary and capricious. (Note: It is manipulative and without merit for
Verizon to state that the Town has violated the TCA without offering any specific proof. The Town's codes and
this process have absolutely complied with the TCA, and I urge you not to buy into this gaslighting.)
2. Our lawyer has assured us that the "public utility standard" of the Rosenberg case only applies to "use
variances", NOT an "area variances", which is what this is. Verizon is a private company whose sole
focus is to make money. They are NOT a public utility. Under NY case law, cell towers are deemed to be
"public utilities" only for the limited purpose of relaxing the legal standard to obtain a zoning "use"
variance, NOT an "area" variance. So, the "public utility standard" does not apply to the ZBA's decision. (If
you'll recall, the ZBA agreed earlier this year that the 'regular standard' applies here, not the 'public utility
standard.')
3. But, even if you apply the Rosenberg standard as Verizon wants you to, Verizon must prove that a
significant gap in coverage actually exists AND this large monopole is the least intrusive means of filling that
gap. Instead, what the public presented to you and you yourselves agreed upon is:
A. There is no significant gap. As we showed earlier this year, the FCC wireless coverage maps
themselves, the authority of coverage in this country, show that there is widespread coverage in
the area of the proposed tower. (These maps trump any self-testing maps done by self-interested
companies.) The FCC maps show, and local residents attest, there is NO GAP IN THIS AREA. If you
look at the FCC map for the area of the proposed tower in Ithaca, THEY HAVE 100% COVERAGE FOR
4G IN JUST ABOUT THE ENTIRE AREA! This is the case both for 'outdoor stationary' AND 'in vehicle
mobile' (though, to be clear, federal law does not mandate constant coverage within vehicles). Keep in
mind, federal law does not guarantee coverage for 5G services - only to provide phone service, which
they clearly have (and the Rosenberg case was ONLY about phone service). If there's enough network
coverage to make and receive cell calls, there's no significant gap in coverage even if the carrier wants
to increase its capacity or to improve the network's ability to transmit data. In other words, just because
they might have some 5G deficiencies, this does not constitute grounds to build another antenna
under federal law.
B. Even if there was a gap (which there is not), a large monopole is not the least intrusive means to
fill it. As the town's own consultant testified, smaller small cell antennas could fill any gap. Verizon didn't
even offer you a plan using these antennas; they simply dismissed the idea because they didn't want to
do the legwork. (Note that profit motive is likely at work here: these smaller antennas would likely be
more expensive to install and operate.)
For you to vacate this decision, the burden of proof to prove these two points is upon Verizon, NOT on
you or us as citizens. They have proved neither, as you all agreed in February.
4. It is unethical for the ZBA to make any decision on this without employing its own lawyer separate
from the Town Board since the ZBA is an independent Board making its own decision. According to our
lawyer, it would be a serious conflict of interest to be represented by the same lawyer as the Town since its
lawyer can't represent both the interest of the Town and ZBA. It seems that the interest of the Town is not in the
best interest of the citizens or the ZBA, but rather to finalize an agreement with Verizon as quickly as possible
without having to go to court.
For all these reasons, if you vacate your ruling you will be going against the clear wishes of your constituents, allowing
the corporate bullies to prevail, and taking an illegal action that is arbitrary and capricious.
I urge you to take a stand and fight for what I believe you know is right. If that means going to court against Verizon,
so be it. The facts are on our side and any reasonable judge should follow the precedent of similar cases and
recognize that.
Thank you.
Andrew Molnar
Ithacans for Responsible Technology
PS: If you'd like more details about the legal case against Verizon, see the attached letter from our attorney from last
year.
Law Office of Robert J. Berg PLLC
19 Carriage House Lane
Mamaroneck, New York 10543
(914) 522-9455
robertbergesq@aol.com
October 28, 2024
Members of the Planning Board
Fred Wilcox, Chair
Caitlin Cameron, Vice Chair
William Arms
Elizabeth Bageant
Cindy Kaufman
Sara Reynolds
Gary Stewart
Alternate member, Kelda McGurk
Town of Ithaca
215 N. Tioga Street
Ithaca, New York 14850
Attention: Christine Balestra, Senior Planner (cbalestra@town.ithaca.ny.us)
Re: Bell Atlantic Mobile Systems, LLC, d/b/a Verizon Wireless -
Application for Cell Tower Special Use Permit and Site Plan
Approval on Property Located at 111 Wiedmaier Court (Tax
Parcel No. 56.-4.1.22) in the Town of Ithaca ("Sunny View" Site)
Dear Chairman Wilcox and Honorable Members of the Town of Ithaca Planning Commission:
Introduction
I am the attorney for Ithacans for Responsible Technology and certain Town of Ithaca
residents and property owners, most of whom live in close proximity to 111 Wiedmaier Court,
the so-called "Sunny View" site on which Bell Atlantic Mobile Systems, LLC, d/b/a Verizon
Wireless ("Verizon"), proposes to construct and operate a 138-foot tall monopole cell tower
(including a four-foot tall lightening rod, nine associated antennas and equipment) in a proposed
50 foot by 50 foot compound. This site is on a private lot owned by S Roberts WC Land LLC.
This lot is located in a Medium Density Residential ("MDR") and Conservation ("C") zone.
I have been retained to assist my clients in challenging Verizon Wireless' application.
My clients are not opposed to cell towers generally speaking. Rather, they are opposed to the
irresponsible siting of a tall, unsightly, uncamouflaged industrial cell tower immediately
adjacent (400 feet) to a developed residential neighborhood in a conservation zone such as
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Verizon is proposing. My letter demonstrates that Verizon has utterly failed to meet its burden of
proof under the Section 270-219 of the Town Code, supported by controlling federal case law in
the Second Circuit, that requires an applicant for a special use permit for a macro cell tower on
private property to (a) establish a significant gap in coverage in its wireless network in the area
where it proposes to site the cell tower; and (b) show that its proposed solution is the least
intrusive technologically feasible means of solving the demonstrated significant gap in coverage.
In summary, I show that Verizon's attorney misleadingly sets up a "straw man" "public
necessity" test for this Planning Board to consider when that test only applies to a Zoning Board
of Appeals' determination of an application for a "use variance," an iss ue which is outside of the
Planning Board's statutory authority and is not even at issue in Verizon's application. Moreover,
I explain that Verizon's RF expert fails to answer meaningfully the Planning Board's request that
Verizon analyze whether two shorter cell towers or other technology could "solve" Verizon's
purported significant coverage gap in place of Verizon's proposed single 138 -foot tall cell tower
at the Sunny View site. Finally, I illustrate one example of Verizon's failure to meet its burden
of proof in establishing that its application meets the criteria for site plan approval and issuance
of a special use permit under Section 270-219 of the Town Code -- I demonstrate that Verizon's
alternative site analysis is based upon a flawed, gerrymandered search area and a wholly
unexplained 1,000' AMSL maximum elevation restriction, and Verizon has rejected the four
alternative sites located therein without providing any detailed RF analysis for any of those sites.
In particular, my clients have asked me to reply to the Response to Planning Board
Comment 2 set forth in the letter from Jared C. Lusk, Esq., of the law firm Nixon Peabody, dated
October 22, 2024, to the Planning Board and the Zoning Board of Appeals on behalf of his client
Verizon. At the Planning Board's October 1, 2024 meeting on this application, the Planning
Board issued two comments to Verizon, and requested that Verizon provide the Board with
responses to those comments. Planning Board Comment 2 s tated:
Please analyze whether reliable service to the Sunny View coverage area can be
accomplished through two (2) shorter, less visible towers rather than the single 134'
tower as proposed or other technology.
In his October 22, 2024 letter, Mr. Lusk responds to Planning Board Comment 2 by
referring to Exhibit GG, a supplemental report from Verizon's RF design engineer, which Mr.
Lusk contends shows that neither two shorter cell towers nor the use of small cells are feasible to
provide reliable coverage to the Sunny View coverage area. That response, whatever its merits,
doesn't fully answer the question posed by the Planning Board. The Planning Board actually
asks a broader question -- whether any "other technology" or two shorter cell towers can provide
reliable service to the Sunny View coverage area rather than the proposed 134 -foot tall cell tower
(plus the four-foot high lightning rod). "Other technology" does exist, including the use of small
cell wireless communications facilities. Indeed, in his Preliminary Report, dated September 20,
2024, William P. Johnson, the Town's independent RF Engineering Consultant, addressed the
variety "of other approaches to deliver wireless communications that could avoid tall towers in a
given area." See Johnson Preliminary Report at Appendix G. Among these "other"
technologies, Mr. Johnson discusses Distributed Antenna Systems ("DAS"), micro cells, and
3
satellite-based systems. The use of these "other" technologies, especially small cell wireless
facilities attached to existing utility poles in the public right of way or on existing buildings, are
growing wildly. Elon Musk's satellite-based Starlink communications network is expanding
explosively and is revolutionizing wireless communications in rural and remote regions. Tall,
ugly, visually intrusive industrial cell towers are fast becoming albatrosses as rapidly developing
less intrusive and effective technologies are being deployed. Verizon's RF designer fails to
address the usability of such technologies, perhaps in conjunction with one or more shorter cell
towers, to "solve" Verizon's purported "coverage gap."
Turning to Verizon's Exhibit GG, the Supplemental Report, dated October 21, 2024,
submitted by Wasif Sharif, Verizon's RF Design Engineer, the report utterly fails to live up to
Mr. Lusk's billing. Mr. Sharif's analysis is entirely general and conclusory. He provides no
specific analysis of any alternative technological means to provide similar RF coverage to the
area purportedly to be served by Verizon's proposed 134-foot tall monopole cell tower at the
Sunny View site. Notably, Mr. Sharif fails to model any scenarios using "two (2) shorter, less
visible towers rather than the single 134' tower as proposed...," despite the Planning Board's
request for such an analysis. Instead, Mr. Sharif summarily dismisses the Planning Board's
perfectly reasonable request, stating: "When compared with a small cell site alternative (or a
cluster of smaller cell sites) in a rural area like this which is subject to significant terrain, large
geographic coverage area, and laced with foliage challenges the small cell coverage capability is
unsuitable. Small cells or smaller macro tower sites would be blocked (shadowed) by terrain and
foliage rendering them ineffective." That's a couple of conclusory statements. Mr. Sharif
provides no detailed engineering or topographic analysis at all. Mr. Sharif performs no modeling
of any possible small cell antenna deployments or of any other existing technologies. Verizon
simply fails to answer the Board's question.
Moreover, the RF engineer's thesis is actually implausible. I respectfully refer the
Planning Board Members to Google Maps and ask that you take a look at the Sunny View site.
Oddly, Verizon's selected site, the Sunny View site, sits at an elevation of only 824.4 feet AMSL
(above mean sea level). Though Verizon touts the need for the tallest possible tower to close its
purported network coverage gap (seeking the widest line of sight covereage), perhaps the chief
problem is that Verizon has selected a site that is 400 feet lower in elevation than nearby sites
north of Slaterville Road (Route 79) on the Eastern Heights or off of Snyder Hill Road. These
sites, just a couple of thousand feet away from the Sunny View site, would offer Verizon
tremendously enhanced line-of-sight coverage and would avoid the problematic, topographically
challenged steep cliffs and gorges from the Ithaca Reservoir northwest to the Second Dam and
towards Wells Falls.
It's hard to believe that a cell tower at the Sunny View site will provide adequate
coverage deep down by the creek bed in the twisty gorge leading to the reservoir. For some
reason, as I discuss below, Verizon's RF engineer has artificially constrained the maximum
AMSL elevation for the tower at 1,000'. There appears to be no Town Code requirement for
4
such an elevation limitation, and the Verizon RF engineer provides no explanation whatsoever --
which is highly suspicious.
Moreover, looking at the satellite image of the area on Google Maps, one sees a vast
higher elevation area north of Slaterville Road (Route 79) up to Snyder Hill Road which is
mostly undeveloped forest or rural land. There is no developed residential neighborhood on
those vast parcels. Further, the Finger Lakes Stone Quarry, an industrial mining site, at an
elevation of 1,200 feet, is present. What a perfect site for a cell tower! -- an existing industrial
quarry at an elevation four hundred feet higher than the Sunny View site.
Given the rural nature of the area -- and the paucity of residential properties in the area
(other than the development immediately adjacent to the Sunny View site) -- the need for a
macro cell tower at the Sunny View site seems dubious. The likely major need for better cell
coverage in this area is for drivers on the two main roads -- Route 79 and Snyder Hill Road. The
forests and fields in the area don't have much need for expanded cell phone coverage. This
strikes me as the perfect situation for using a series of small cell wireless antennas attached to
existing utility poles alongside the two main roads. That "solution" would provide fine cell
coverage for drivers on these roads and to the few residences that exist close to those roads. Of
course, Mr. Sharif never models such a solution.
Mr. Sharif's summary conclusions, with no actual modeling of any other possible
technologically feasible but less intrusive "solutions" to Verizon's putative coverage gap, are
grossly inadequate to meet Verizon's burden of proof on this Application. Respe ctfully, this
Planning Board should have its independent RF expert, Mr. Johnson, opine on this point.
Verizon Misstates the Legal Framework Underlying the Planning Board's
Consideration of the Application
A General Warning to the Planning Board
In the second part of Mr. Lusk's response to Planning Board Comment 2, he provides a
highly misleading analysis of the applicable law which he contends governs the Planning Board's
review of Verizon's permit application. Before I address Mr. Lusk's analysis, I respectfully offer
the Planning Board the following comments. I represent clients across the country who are
trying to protect their families, businesses, and communities from the uncontrolled and unsafe
deployment of wireless communications facilities within their municipalities. The wireless
industry is insatiable in its quest to blanket the entire nation in an endless, willy -nilly sprawl of
cell towers and small cell facilities, and is deaf to the concerns of the residents who live and
work near the industry's desired wireless communications facility sites .
According to statistics published by the Wireless Infrastructure Association on April 16,
2024, at the end of 2023, 153,400 purpose-built macro cell towers were in operation in the
United States. There were 244,800 macrocell sites, and 202,100 outdoor small cells in
5
operation, with 775,800 indoor small cell nodes in use. Verizon, as the largest wireless carrier, is
one of the worst offenders I come across when it comes to the irresponsible siting of cell towers.
Verizon simply doesn’t care what disruption its facilities cause to your community – the
degradation of views, the destruction of property values, the desecration of neighborhood
character, and the public safety dangers its towers pose to nearby persons and property from
icefall, falling debris, fire, and tower collapse.
You have been appointed to the Planning Board to safeguard the lives and properties of
your fellow residents and to protect the future of your Town from development that is
inconsistent with the Town’s Comprehensive Plan and Zoning Code. Your responsibilities under
Section 270 of the Town Code to oversee development in the Town and to ensure that the
Comprehensive Town Plan and Zoning Code are followed with respect to development projects
are very broad and important. Residents of the Town are fortunate that the Town Board had the
wisdom and foresight to enact a comprehensive wireless telecommunications code within the
Town Code that encourages -- yet responsibly regulates -- the placement, design, and
construction of wireless communications facilities within the Town of Ithaca, fully consistent
with the federal Telecommunications Act of 1996 (the "TCA") and State and federal law. See
Section 270-219. Personal wireless service facilities.
As Members of the Planning Board, you have the critical duty and responsibility to
ensure that Verizon has met its burden of proof in meeting the criteria set forth in Section 270-
219 of the Town Code. You sit as a regulatory board when reviewing a site plan and when
considering an application for a special permit. You act as the trier of facts and make factual and
legal determinations based on the evidence and legal arguments presented to you by the
applicant, by the Town's independent consultant, and by residents and other members of the
public, and their attorneys and/or witnesses. Your job is extremely important, and will greatly
impact the lives of your fellow residents and the future development of your town.
The applicant’s proposed 134-foot tall uncamouflaged, industrial cell tower will be a
blight upon the surrounding long-established residential neighborhood. The soaring cell tower
will be a glaring visual intrusion, destroying the rural residential viewshed of the immediate
neighbors, and decimating their property values. The industrial cell tower will be an eyesore to
travelers on adjacent Slaterville Road (Route 79). The cell tower will generate no revenues for
the Town. To suggest, as Verizon does, that the tower presents just a “minimal intrusion” to the
community, is a lie. You have to live here af ter Verizon moves on to desecrate the next
residential neighborhood.
I also warn you that Verizon may well try to intimidate this Board by threatening to bring
an action against the Town of Ithaca in federal court for violation of the TCA should this Board
deny Verizon's application for site plan approval and the special us e permit for its proposed cell
tower at 111 Wiedmaier Court. Verizon makes this threat -- and, indeed, acts upon it --
frequently. Many municipalities and their municipal attorneys buckle under these malicious
coercive efforts because they fail to understand the very broad powers that federal law provides
local governments to control the siting and operation of wireless communications facilities
within their boundaries. Moreover, they don't realize that a wireless carrier can never sue for
and recover from a municipality monetary damages or attorneys' fees if the municipality refuses
6
to allow the carrier to build and operate a requested wireless communications facility, even if a
court eventually decides the municipality actually has violated the TCA. As to the latter point,
the United States Supreme Court has expressly held, in City of Rancho Palos Verdes v.
Abrams, 544 U.S. 113 (2005), that neither monetary damages nor attorneys' fees are
available to a prevailing plaintiff in an action brought under the TCA. So even if Verizon
does sue the Town in federal court for denying final site plan approval and a special use permit --
and the Town somehow loses that lawsuit -- the Town can never be liable for monetary damages
or Verizon's attorneys' fees. The worst that could happen is that the Town would be required to
grant final site plan approval and to issue the special use permit for the project. Any fears or
implied threats that a wireless carrier will bankrupt the Town through litigation if the
Town denies a permit for a wireless communications facility are completely baseless.
Verizon's "Public Necessity" Legal Argument is Misplaced and Confusing
Verizon's lawyer, Mr. Lusk, in his October 22, 2024 Letter, argues: "Even if a 'two (2)
tower solution' were viable, however, applicable law prevents the Town from requiring Verizon
multiple facilities, when a single 134' wireless telecommunications facility will pr ovide reliable
coverage to the area." Mr. Lusk, invoking New York's "public utility" test, is attempting to
mislead you about the law and your duties thereunder.
While it is true that under New York case law (not the federal TCA), cell towers are
deemed to be "public utilities," that is for the limited purpose of relaxing the legal standard to
obtain a zoning "use" variance (not an "area" variance) from a zoning board. The New York
case law cited by Mr. Lusk has nothing to do with a local Planning Board's determination as to
whether a wireless communications facility applicant has met its burden of proof in meeting the
criteria for approval for a special use permi t called for under a municipality's zoning code
provisions for wireless communications facilities.
Nor does that New York "public utility" state case law have anything to do with whether
a local Planning Board's denial of an application for site plan approval and a special use permit
for a cell tower constitutes a violation of the federal TCA. That determination is governed by the
TCA itself and by federal case law interpreting the relevant provisions of the TCA.
Mr. Lusk's goal appears to be to confuse you by inserting a legal test that simply doesn't
apply to your consideration of the application before you. Let's unpack the "public utility" test
for cell towers under New York case law accurately. Most significantly, the “public utility”
legal standard does not apply to the Planning Board’s consideration of the applicant's
request for site plan approval and a special use permit. Rather, the test applies only to
requests for use variances under the zoning law. The Planning Board, of course, has no
power or authority to consider requests for zoning variances. That power is reserved for the
Town's Zoning Board of Appeals to which Verizon has already applied for an "area variance" for
this proposed tower since the proposed 138-foot tall tower greatly exceeds the height limit for
structures at the site under the zoning code.
The "public utility" legal standard was established by the New York Court of Appeals in
Consolidated Edison Co. v. Hoffman, 43 N.Y.2d 598 (1978), and was extended to the siting of
7
cell towers by the Court of Appeals in Cellular Tel. Co. v. Rosenberg, 82 N.Y2d, 364, 372
(1993). In Consolidated Edison, the Court created a “public utility” exception to the traditional
“unnecessary hardship” standard that zoning boards utilize in determining whether an applicant
qualifies for a “use variance.” The traditional “unnecessary hardship” test sets forth the
following factors that a zoning board must consider before finding unnecessary hardship
warranting the granting of a use variance: (1) the land in question cannot yield a reasonable
return if used only for a purpose allowed in that zone; (2) the plight of the owner is due to unique
circumstances and not to the general conditions in the neighborhood which may reflect the
unreasonableness of the zoning ordinance itself; and (3) the use to be authorized by the variance
will not alter the essential character of the locality.” Rosenberg, 82 N.Y.2d at 372, quoting In
Matter of Otto v. Steinhilber, 282 N.Y. 71, 76 (N.Y. 1939).
The Rosenberg Court described the Consolidated Edison “public utility” exception test as
follows: "Instead [of meeting the traditional unnecessary hardship test], the utility must show
that modification is a public necessity in that it is required to render safe and adequate service,
and that there are compelling reasons, economic or otherwise, which make it more feasible to
modify the plant than to use alternative sources of power such as may be provided by other
facilities" (Matter of Consolidated Edison,43 N.Y.2d 598, 611, supra). The Court stated further
that "where the intrusion or burden on the community is minimal, the showing required by the
utility should be correspondingly reduced" (id., at 611). Matter of Consolidated Edison
(supra), applies to all public utilities. It also applies to entirely new sitings of facilities, as well as
the modification of existing facilities. The Rosenberg Court applied the test to the siting of cell
towers.
Rosenberg, 82 N.Y.2d at 372.
The Rosenberg tri-partite test for considering use variance applications for cell towers
under New York state law consists of the following: 1) have the applicants demonstrated the
existence of a significant coverage gap? 2) will the proposed facility resolve the significant
coverage gap? and 3) most importantly, will the proposed facility present a minimal intrusion
upon the community? See Cellco P’ship v. Town of Clifton Park, 365 F.Supp.3d 248, 257
(N.D.N.Y. 2019); Omnipoint Communications, Inc. v. Town of LaGrange, 658 F.Supp.2d 539,
556 (S.D.N.Y. 2009).
The state court cases Mr. Lusk then uses to illustrate his point only prove mine -- i.e., the
"public utility" test applies only when the local zoning board considers an application for a use
variance. In Nextel Partners, Inc. v. Town of Ft. Ann , 1 A.D.3d 89, 766 N.Y.S.2d 712 (3d Dep't.
2003), the appellate court simply affirmed the trial court's ruling annulling a Town Board's
decision to deny Nextel's application for a zoning use variance to build a 110-foot tall cell tower
as arbitrary and capricious under the Rosenberg test. In Sprint Spectrum, L.P. v. Zoning Bd. of
Appeals for the Town of Guilderland, 173 Misc.2d 874, 662 N.Y.S.2d 717 (Sup. Ct. Albany
1997), the trial court ruled that the Town of Guilderland's decision to deny a zoning use
variance to allow Sprint to construct a 100-foot tall cell tower in a residential neighborhood
where such structures are banned was arbitrary and capricious under the Rosenberg public utility
test. Indeed, the court made a point to emphasize that Rosenberg "established the current
requirements for the approval of use variances with respect to telecommunications towers."
8
In the instant matter, the issue of a zoning use variance is completely outside the scope of
the Planning Board's statutory duties. Moreover, even with respect to the Town's Zoning Board
of Appeals, Verizon's application does not seek a zoning use variance. That's because the Town
Code actually allows as a permitted use wireless communications facilities in all zoning districts
in Town, provided that the Planning Board, upon consideration of all the evidence -- pro and con
-- determines that the applicant successfully meets the criteria set forth in Section 270-219 of the
Town Code for site plan approval and issuance of a special use permit for the proposed cell
tower.
Respectfully, you Members of the Planning Board need to stay focused on your
responsibilities. Do not be misled by Mr. Lusk into a diversionary legal analysis that is not in
your bailiwick. You do not need to worry about the "public necessity" test. Nor should you be
distracted by Mr. Lusk's false suggestion that you are mandating that the applicant build two cell
towers of lesser height rather than the single 134-foot tall cell tower (plus the 4-foot tall lightning
rod) which Mr. Lusk claims is beyond the scope of your authority. Your "mandate" is only to
vote "yea" or "nay" on the Verizon's application for site plan approval and a special use permit,
with or without conditions. You can't require the applicant do anything, but you do have the
power to approve or disapprove of its application. Please don't fall into Mr. Lusk's trap.
You should be aware that the Town of Ithaca Town Code provisions regarding wireless
telecommunications facilities were carefully drafted to comply with the federal TCA and with
the controlling federal Second Circuit Court of Appeals decisions interpreting the TCA. As
such, Section 270-219 of the Town Code closely follows the guidance and legal tests of the
Second Circuit.
The TCA limits to some degree state and local regulation 'of the placement, construction,
and modification of personal wireless service facilities.' Omnipoint Commc'ns, Inc. v. City of
White Plains, 430 F.3d 529, 531 (2d Cir. 2005) (quoting 47 U.S.C. §332(c)(7)). Such regulation
'(I) shall not unreasonably discriminate among providers of functionally equivalent services; and
(II) shall not prohibit or have the effect of prohibiting the provision of personal wireless
services.' 47 U.S.C. §332(c)(7)(B)(i). "The Second Circuit has clearly stated that this subclause
'precludes denying an application for a facility that is the least intrusive means for closing a
significant gap in a remote user's ability to reach a cell site that provides access to land lines.''
Verizon Wireless of E. LP v. Town of Wappinger, 2022 WL 282552 (S.D.N.Y. Jan. 31, 2022), at
*12 (quoting Sprint Spectrum L.P. v. Willoth, 176 F.3d 630, 643 (2d Cir. 1999)). "If an
applicant's proposal is not the least intrusive means of closing a significant gap in coverage, a
local government may reject [the] application ... without thereby prohibiting personal wireless
services." T-Mobile Ne. LLC. v. Town of Ramapo, 701 F.Supp.2d 446, 456-57 (S.D.N.Y. 2009)
(internal quotations omitted); ExteNet Sys., Inc. v. Village of Plandome, 2021 WL 4449453
(E.D.N.Y. Sept. 29, 2021), at *20 ("[T]o be sure, [a] local government may reject an application
for construction of a wireless service facility ... without thereby prohibiting personal wireless
services if the service gap can be closed by less intrusive means." (Internal quotations omitted").
Section 270-219 of the Town Code expressly requires the Planning Board to consider the
evidentiary record while following these controlling federal legal standards. Section 270-
9
219(G)(2)(r) provides for the applicant to conduct an alternative site analysis; Section 270-
219(G)(2)(s) requires the applicant to conduct a significant gap analysis; and Section 270 -
219(G)(2)(t) provides for the applicant to demonstrate that its proposed wireless facility is the
least intrusive means of addressing the significant gap in coverage.
To meet its evidentiary burden of proof with respect to each of these subsections, the
applicant cannot simply make conclusory statements. The subsections each require the applicant
to provide evidentiary substantiation. While I was only very recently retained by my clients, I
have reviewed Verizon's submissions, and they fall woefully short of meeting Verizon's burden
of proof. Due to time and other constraints, I will focus on Verizon's alternative site analysis --
required under Section 270-219(G)(2)(r) -- and point out a number of glaring deficiencies in its
submission.
In my considerable experience representing clients in these matters, I find that all tower
developers tend to play the same phony game with respect to alternative site selection, but
Verizon tends to be the worst player. The game goes as follows: the tower developer's RF
engineer defines an extremely narrow search radius -- often 1/2 mile or less -- arguing that
topographical peculiarities and foliage considerations require that the cell tower be sited with in
the resulting small search zone. The reality is that the RF engineer typically locates the best site
for the carrier's RF needs using a computer software package, and the RF engineer has no
personal familiarity with the site; the search zone is gerrymandered to fall within the RF
engineer's narrow "best choice" area, and then the area is provided to a third party site
acquisition team whose mandate is to find a property owner who is willing to lease a portion of
his property very cheaply to the carrier and who doesn't give a damn about his neighbors. If the
site acquisition specialist is successful, then that "winning" site instantly becomes the only
technologically feasible site for the tower, and the other few alternative sites within the small
search zone are quickly discarded on pretextual grounds. While I say this slightly "tongue-in-
cheek," the sad truth is that this is really how the telecoms act.
Verizon's own alternate site analysis in the instant application proves my point. In its
application at Exhibit I, Verizon provides a "Sunny View Site" Site Selection Analysis, dated
September 19, 2023. The Site Selection Analysis was prepared by Brett Morgan of Airosmith
Development, a consultant to Verizon Wireless. The critical "search ring" was determined by
Tim Zarneke, a Verizon Wireless RF engineer, who describes its creation in his "Engineering
Necessity Case - 'Sunny View,'" submitted as an exhibit to Verizon's Application. According to
Mr. Zarneke, on page 14 of his report, "[a] Search Area is the geographical area within which a
new site is targeted to solve a coverage or capacity deficiency. Three of the factors taken into
consideration when defining a search area are topography, user density, and the existing
network." Mr. Zarneke imposes a very odd elevation constraint into his search area algorithm.
He states on the bottom of page 15: "The site needs to be located within the search area but also
at a ground elevation below the ridge of 1,150' or below [sic] to keep the site contained. The
proposed site is located at 824' AMSL which meets this requirement and is strategically located
within the ring to allow for Line of Sight (LOS) to the coverage objective area." At the top of
page 15, Mr. Zarneke states: "The below image is absent any coverage to help the viewer with
area orientation as well as visualizing the need for the below 1,000' AMSL (maximum ground
elevation requirement)."
10
Mr. Zarneke provides no explanation for the purported need to keep the proposed cell
tower site at an AMSL below 1,000' or below the ridge of 1,150'. The Town Code does not
appear to contain any restrictions on locating otherwise conforming cell towers or wireless
communications facilities at AMSLs of 1,000' or greater. The 1,000' AMSL maximum ground
elevation requirement has enormous ramifications -- it grossly limits the possible search radius to
the absurdly narrow radius defined by Mr. Zarneke. As I stated above, vast areas of land on the
Eastern Heights and along Snyder Hill Road are 400 feet higher in elevation than Verizon's
proposed Sunny View site. Yet Mr. Zarneke excludes them entirely from his search radius
because of his completely unexplained 1,000' AMSL maximum elevation constraint "to keep the
site contained" (whatever that means). The Planning Board needs to question Verizon
extensively about this apparently artificial constraint which I strongly suspect is intended to
gerrymander the boundaries of the search area in order to support the Sunny View site.
In my experience, if the Planning Board charges Mr. Johnson, its own independent
consultant, to come up with an appropriate search radius for a possible cell tower site, he will
determine one that is far more expansive than Mr. Zarneke's and one which opens up scores of
potentially feasible alternative sites. I respectfully urge the Planning Board to do so or to simply
to reject Mr. Zarneke's artificially narrow and seemingly unjustified search area.
Unsurprisingly, given the gerrymandered tiny search area concocted by Mr. Zarneke,
Verizon's site acquisition consultant found no existing towers or tall structures within the search
area, nor any municipally-owned properties in the search area. Mr. Morgan, the site acquisition
consultant, purportedly conducted a "comprehensive investigation of the Sunny View Search
Area" and found five private properties to analyze as potential sites for the proposed tower.
Interestingly, when Mr. Morgan reached out to the five property owners, each was initially
interested in leasing his property to Verizon for use as the cell tower site. (Often, some
landowners are not interested in tying up a portion of their land for 30 years or more -- and/or
restricting the development potential of their property -- for the small revenue stream offered by
a cell tower developer). But despite all the landowners' interest, after Mr. Morgan forwarded the
site information for each of the parcels to Verizon's RF engineer, Verizon's RF engineer
determined that none of the locations except for the Sunny View site would be adequate, as those
locations "would have not adequately covered the intended coverage area in the same capacity as
the selected location." That incomprehensible "word salad" is the entirety of the explanation Mr.
Morgan provides for the rejection of the four alternative sites. Verizon provides no RF analyses
for each rejected site demonstrating the veracity of the explanation. Simply put, the explanation
is completely inadequate to meet Verizon's burden of proof under the Town Code.
The foregoing represents just a taste of the litany of well-founded reasons why the
Planning Board should deny Verizon application for site plan approval and for a special use
permit. Please give me a call to discuss any questions you may have.
Best regards,
Robert J. Berg
/s/ Robert J. Berg
Outlook
Please hold your ground in the face of Verizon!
From Vanessa Lynn Wood <vness.wood@gmail.com>
Date Wed 11/19/2025 9:13 PM
To Codes <codes@townithacany.gov>; Marty Moseley <MMoseley@townithacany.gov>;
cjrandeall@townithacany.gov <cjrandeall@townithacany.gov>; Chris Balestra <CBalestra@townithacany.gov>
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Dear Zoning Board Members,
I am writing as a longtime (21 years and counting) Ithaca resident and worker. I am asking for you to
please keep up your good work and stand firm in the face of Verizon's push to build a new tower
downtown. Residents have made their voices heard for years, with overwhelming consensus against
this and similar projects. Corporations are trying to usurp municipality decision making nation-wide,
and it is important for us to stand strong, even if it means going to court. They should not be trying to
strong arm Ithaca into forcing them to build unnecessary, unhealthy, and unsightly infrastructure that
we don't want.
As you likely know, there is a huge body of scientific work warning of the negative health effects of
proximity to cell towers. Putting more towers in the midst of residential neighborhoods and schools
could have disastrous consequences for the health and safety of residents, change the landscape, and
lower property values. The FCC wireless coverage map shows Verizon coverage already exists in that
area without exception, and anyone with Verizon using their phone downtown can attest to this as
well. The only gap related to this story is the gap in FCC regulations to protect Americans, which has
not kept up with new technologies or studies on the subject for decades now, despite court action to
this end.
Please stand strong, even if it is difficult. We can't just let outside corporations steamroll our decisions,
health, and values. Thank you for your attention and work.
Respectfully,
Vanessa Wood
Outlook
Please, request to deny the Verizon appeal for the 5G Tower 11-20-25
From Tom Clausen <tpc2@cornell.edu>
Date Thu 11/20/2025 1:10 PM
To Codes <codes@townithacany.gov>; Marty Moseley <MMoseley@townithacany.gov>; CJ Randall
<cjrandall@townithacany.gov>; Chris Balestra <CBalestra@townithacany.gov>
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URL links, and/or attachments. Any questions please contact the IT department
To Whom it May Concern,
It is a sad and very unfortunate deja vu to think that our community is
confronting an issue that has already been determined to be unnecessary and
unwelcome. It would be a terrible precedence to at this point vote against
what you have already , sensibly, voted against. I hope you will remain
steadfast in your denial of Verizon's appeal and that the same good sense you
exercised on this previously will inform your action again at this time.
Gratefully, Tom Clausen
"everyday is a journey and the journey itself is home" ~ Basho
tpc2@cornell.edu
tclausen888@gmail.com
Outlook
Verizon tower project
From J Korn <jkornbloom@gmail.com>
Date Thu 11/20/2025 2:41 PM
To Codes <codes@townithacany.gov>; Marty Moseley <MMoseley@townithacany.gov>; CJ Randall
<cjrandall@townithacany.gov>; Chris Balestra <CBalestra@townithacany.gov>
**WARNING** This email comes from an outside source. Please verify the from address, any
URL links, and/or attachments. Any questions please contact the IT department
Dear Zoning Board Members,
My name is Benjamin Kornblum.
I am writing regarding the latest developments in the proposed Verizon Cell Tower project which was
previously DENIED by the Zoning Board for the height variance violation, which was well within the
Town of Ithaca's legal purview to do. It is extremely disappointing that Verizon continues to harass and
bully our town to achieve their own goals and in defiance of what the local community wants!
We cannot and should not allow such corporate bullying. Particularly when the proposed tower is in an
area with excellent cell phone service. This point has been brought to the boards attention by many
residents.
So many of us spoke up against this intrusive tower marring a beautiful landscape in a conservation
zone. Having it sit so close to residences does not make sense. Additionally, an eye sore like this can
significantly impact property values for residents.
I encourage you to hold strong and to not capitulate to Verizon. Please vote in a way that is congruent
with what our community wants. If the battle against this development requires funds, please let the
community know so that we can rally to support our town! We are here for you!! Will you stand up for
us??
I love living in the Town and appreciate the natural beauty around me every day. Having this tower
qualitatively impacts our daily life. I felt so proud of the community and board for standing up for our
values when the application was denied and I hope the zoning board can continue to stand strong!!
Thank you for your consideration and for standing for our community's rights,
Benjamin Kornblum
211 South Corn st.
Ithaca, NY 14850
Sent from my iPhone
Outlook
Verizon tower special permit
From Jenn Heatley <jennheatley@gmail.com>
Date Thu 11/20/2025 7:18 PM
To Codes <codes@townithacany.gov>; Marty Moseley <MMoseley@townithacany.gov>; CJ Randall
<cjrandall@townithacany.gov>; Chris Balestra <CBalestra@townithacany.gov>
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Dear Zoning Board Members,
I am writing to respectfully urge you to maintain your original decision denying Verizon’s request for a
height variance and special permit for the proposed tower.
Your earlier findings were grounded in solid evidence: FCC broadband and mobile coverage maps—
the federal government’s own authoritative data—show full Verizon LTE and 5G coverage in the area.
Federal law is clear that a carrier must demonstrate both (1) a significant gap in service and (2) that the
proposed facility is the least intrusive means of remedying that gap. Verizon has not met either
requirement. They have not provided credible, independent evidence of a coverage deficiency, nor
have they meaningfully pursued less intrusive alternatives.
For these reasons, your denial of the height variance was entirely within your legal authority and
aligned with the purpose of local zoning: to protect community character, safety, and
environmental resources. Reversing that decision under pressure of litigation would set a troubling
precedent—allowing any carrier to obtain approvals simply by threatening lawsuits rather than
meeting their burden of proof.
I urge you not to cave under pressure and to stand by the careful, fact-based conclusions you have
already reached.
Thank you for your continued service and for your thoughtful stewardship of our community.
Sincerely,
Jenn Heatley
Outlook
Dear Zoning Board Members
From Britton Dougherty <great.britton@hotmail.com>
Date Thu 11/20/2025 8:44 PM
To Codes <codes@townithacany.gov>; Marty Moseley <MMoseley@townithacany.gov>; CJ Randall
<cjrandall@townithacany.gov>; Chris Balestra <CBalestra@townithacany.gov>
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Dear Zoning Board Members,
I sincerely thank you for your time and diligence in serving our beloved community. I was extremely
heartened to see you listening to your community when every single person at the meetings for the
proposed cell tower in the conservation area expressed strong disinterest. It is in no way the least
intrusive means possible to "fill the gap". Which, I live in that area and do not experience any gaps in
coverage, as many others that live in that area also expressed.Actually, the FCC wireless coverage maps
show full Verizon coverage in the area (and these maps are the ultimate authority on this subject). The
FCC maps should be considered more authoritative than coverage maps made in house from the party
with a vested financial interest.
I am writing this because I heard that Verizon is suing the town of Ithaca to try to bully their way into
getting the tower built. You do NOT need to let them do this when you have seen how strongly your
community is opposed to this tower for a variety of reasons. I sadly heard that the Town of Ithaca and
Town Board have bowed to their bullying without taking this issue to court. I would call that a disgrace,
as no members of the town expressed that they want this giant tower in a beautiful conservation area
that already has cell service. We need you to stand strong against their bullying. We believe that you will
listen to the people in the community and what they need, not the bullying of a corporation. We, the
people of Ithaca, beg you not to sign this agreement with Verizon. There was so much relief in the
community upon hearing that the tower wasn't going to be erected and to reverse that, without a fight,
would be a disgrace. The facts are on our side that there isn't a gap in coverage to warrant this tower
and this is absolutely not the least intrusive means possible to fill a gap if there was one. Small cells can
be explored to fill any small gaps that may exist. You are legally able to deny this height variance, and
don't let them try to bully you into thinking otherwise.
We, the people of Ithaca, beg and urge you to deny this height variance and to stand tall with your
community in what is appropriate, wanted, and needed by your community. Please do the right thing.
Thank you for your time and dedication,
Britton Dougherty
Outlook
Dear Zoning Board members
From Kae Valkaria <kaealexanderv@gmail.com>
Date Fri 11/21/2025 8:28 AM
To Codes <codes@townithacany.gov>; Marty Moseley <MMoseley@townithacany.gov>; CJ Randall
<cjrandall@townithacany.gov>; Chris Balestra <CBalestra@townithacany.gov>
**WARNING** This email comes from an outside source. Please verify the from address, any
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Good Morning,
My name is Kae and I live at 107 Wiedmaier Ct, Ithaca, NY 14850
Iam ABSOLUTELY AGAINST this cell phone tower situation. It took me months to find this home in this
beautiful area. It will be extremely disruptive to home live AND to the wildlife!
PLEASE! I urge you to uphold the denial of this tower! DO NOT let big corporations like verizon to
strongarm anyone into changing the decision. WE THE PEOPLE do NOT want this in our backyards.
Verizon claims a significant gap in coverage, and yet, as was discussed at the February Zoning Board
meeting, the FCC wireless coverage maps show full Verizon coverage in the area (and these maps
are the ultimate authority on this subject). The FCC maps should be considered more authoritative
than coverage maps made in house from the party with a vested financial interest.
This is unnecessary and hurts the Ithaca way of life.
Thank you for your time,
Kae
Outlook
Verizon Cell Tower
From Molly Kornblum <mollykornblum@gmail.com>
Date Fri 11/21/2025 4:14 PM
To Codes <codes@townithacany.gov>; Marty Moseley <MMoseley@townithacany.gov>; CJ Randall
<cjrandall@townithacany.gov>; Chris Balestra <CBalestra@townithacany.gov>
**WARNING** This email comes from an outside source. Please verify the from address, any
URL links, and/or attachments. Any questions please contact the IT department
Dear Zoning Board members,
I know that you are facing pressure from all sides and I really and truly appreciate your time and attention to this
matter. I'm writing to ask that you please stand with the people of the Town of Ithaca and uphold your decision to
deny the tower and decline to sign the agreement with Verizon. Threats of a lawsuit should not overshadow the truth
that there is no coverage gap, as per the FCC, our most reliable, least biased, source for coverage data. Also, if we
are going to consider a new cell installation, please let it be the least obtrusive option, not a huge, ugly tower. Please
don't let a big corporation bully us. Please stand strong with and for the people of Ithaca and uphold your decision to
deny this tower. Thank you for your time.
Sincerely,
Molly Kornblum, Long Time Ithaca Resident
Outlook
Please Deny Verizon's Tower Agreement
From Jerone Gagliano <jerone@brightbuilding.us>
Date Fri 11/21/2025 4:43 PM
To Codes <codes@townithacany.gov>; Marty Moseley <MMoseley@townithacany.gov>; CJ Randall
<cjrandall@townithacany.gov>; Chris Balestra <CBalestra@townithacany.gov>
Cc jerone.gagliano@gmail.com <jerone.gagliano@gmail.com>
**WARNING** This email comes from an outside source. Please verify the from address, any
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Dear Zoning Board members,
I am a local resident here for the last 23 years, an NYS licensed professional engineer, and father of
two wonderful boys. I was so surprised and devastated to hear that Verizon has been bullying the
Town with the usual corporate legal threats to push in their 110+ foot cell tower and then to watch the
Planning Board cave to signing Verizon’s agreement! This massive, ugly, and unnecessary cell tower in
our community and conservation area goes totally against the desires and will of our community. I
understand that the Planning Board and Zoning Board have been put in such a difficult position with
the corporate legal threats, however, please remember that you have followed the law and have every
right to uphold your decision.
As an engineer, I urge you to take precautions and do not sign Verizon’s agreement. You, the Zoning
Board, denied their requested height variance on proper grounds following our Codes. Allowing
Verizon to erect this massive tower goes against the will of the community, goes against your rightful
decision to protect the natural beauty of our area, and will set a precedent for other telecoms to do
the same in our Town! Once this cell tower infrastructure is in place, it will not go away, and we will
only see more and more of it in our beautiful community.
Again, you were very well within your legal purview to deny their height variance back in February.
Verizon does not have good evidence that their proposed macro tower is the least intrusive means to
remedy a coverage gap AND they have not proven using a qualified, unvested, third party that there is
a gap in coverage. The FCC Mobile Broadband map shows that Verizon has 4G LTE coverage in that
area, link to map.
I strongly urge the Town Zoning Board to remain unwavering in your initial decision to deny
Verizon’s request and DO NOT SIGN the agreement.
Sincerely,
Jerone
--
Jerone Gagliano PE, CEM
Founder & CEO
brightbuilding.us
Outlook
to Zoning Board Members, re: verizon
From david gallahan <davidgallahan@yahoo.com>
Date Sat 11/22/2025 10:18 AM
To Codes <codes@townithacany.gov>; Marty Moseley <MMoseley@townithacany.gov>; CJ Randall
<cjrandall@townithacany.gov>; Chris Balestra <CBalestra@townithacany.gov>
Dear Zoning Board members,
In February, you had the boldness to analyze Verizon's own data in more detail, discovering the fact that the gap in
coverage they claimed was a fabrication. They had deliberately twisted the data into a lie, and you untwisted it.
This was a brilliant and powerful act, to carefully examine the company's presentation to uncover the truth and act
correctly, in face of intense pressure. I would say it was heroic.
Of course, they did not like that and now threaten us with legal action, what appears to be a SLAPP suit. This is
obviously intimidation to get you to vacate your carefully considered legal decision.
Please hold strong: do not succumb to Verizon's intimidation. Your community fully supports you and is grateful for
your dedication to the good of the Town.
Very Sincerely,
David Gallahan
Outlook
Zoning Board - you have ever y right to say no to Verizon's appeal
From marie <marieskweir@gmail.com>
Date Sun 11/23/2025 6:41 PM
To Codes <codes@townithacany.gov>; Marty Moseley <MMoseley@townithacany.gov>; CJ Randall
<cjrandall@townithacany.gov>; Chris Balestra <CBalestra@townithacany.gov>
**WARNING** This email comes from an outside source. Please verify the from address, any
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Dear Zoning Board,
I was disappointed and angered to hear that the Town negotiated behind-the-scenes to pacify Verizon’s
unsubstantiated legal threats. I hope you, the Zoning Board, remember that you are an independent entity
from the Town, and that you get to make an independent legal judgment about whether or not to vacate
your prior decision.
You’ll notice that in the Consent Order, assertions were not substantiated by facts or evidence; rather you
were offered “proof by assertion”, backed up by threats. Legally, Verizon carries the burden of the proof
in this decision, and the legal standard required is a preponderance of evidence (i.e. more than the
opposing side). I imagine they don’t want to go in front of a judge because they know they don’t have it.
In any case, the Zoning Board’s job is and was to neutrally weigh the evidence that Verizon offered-
disregarding all assertion not backed up by proof-equally against all the other information you
considered, including pretty compelling evidence in the record:
1) From the federal level, where the FCC coverage maps indicates full cell coverage in that area,
2) From the Town’s own professional consultant, who confirmed that less intrusive technology
was available,
3) From all the public who wrote in, on the record, showing proof of much less intrusive
technology, and
4) From the public who actually live in the area, who have publicly asserted that they have no
actual problem with coverage.
You, the Zoning Board, can simply assert that given all this proof, including from the FCC itself, you
truly believe there is sufficient coverage in the area, and, that if a small gap in coverage were found, it
could be easily covered by much less intrusive means. You have every right to say:
We believe the FCC coverage map showing coverage in the area…more than maps produced by an
entity that has a vested financial interest.
We believe the consultant who has asserted that much smaller antennas on telephone poles could
work to fill a gap in coverage.
We believe the residents that have come forward stating that they have no problem with coverage.
This is more than enough substantial evidence to assert and put into the written record that your denial is
not effectively a prohibition of service. You have followed not only our Town code, but also the TCA
(which clearly states that telecoms must still comply with local regulations including location, height,
design, and safety, AND that local governments can deny an application if it is not properly
justified.) You have done your due diligence.
Conversely, where is the evidence that this tower is the least intrusive means to remedy the gap in
service?
Tellingly, Verizon carefully avoids addressing this in the Consent Order. Instead they write, “The
administrative record in the Action demonstrates that there is a Service Gap in the area of the Project,
that the location of the proposed facility will substantially remedy that Service Gap.”
Separately, as part of its “throw everything at the wall and see what sticks” campaign, it is clear that
Verizon is attempting to inappropriately leverage the ‘public utility’ argument to get the variances they
want. In NY state the public utility variance standard applies only to use variances, not area
variances. Even the 1993 Rosenberg case-cited to try to prove applicability of the public utility standard-
was only about telephone service. No one in this industry could honestly assert that a tower this size is the
least intrusive means to provide telephone service in this area!
I thank you for initially having the courage to probe and ask the difficult questions, to rationally weigh
the substantive evidence of both sides, and to take a strong stand for common sense in local land use
decisions - for smart design, for evidence-based planning, and for community values.
I urge you to continue to stand for your principles, and to uphold your initial carefully considered
decision. For me, this is not only about "my backyard", but also for all the other communities nationwide
who are taking a stand against corporate hegemony.
As always, thank you for your service. I know you’re in a difficult position here, but I’m counting on
you.
Marie Skweir
Outlook
Please vote NO on Verizon tower
From Daniel Seib <danielcseib@gmail.com>
Date Sun 11/23/2025 9:08 PM
To Codes <codes@townithacany.gov>; Marty Moseley <MMoseley@townithacany.gov>; CJ Randall
<cjrandall@townithacany.gov>; Chris Balestra <CBalestra@townithacany.gov>
Cc ithacasafetech@gmail.com <ithacasafetech@gmail.com>
**WARNING** This email comes from an outside source. Please verify the from address, any
URL links, and/or attachments. Any questions please contact the IT department
Dear Zoning Board members,
I am writing as a resident of Ithaca who is suffering through these continued efforts by Verizon to force
an unneeded tower on our neighborhood, and I continue to stand in opposition to this. Please refuse
to sign any settlement agreement that would reverse your previous denial of their efforts. Verizon is
using its money to scare the City of Ithaca and bully them into putting up a monstrous tower that will
negatively affect our community. Verizon will just be using it to make money, all while we are stuck
with that eyesore. Verizon hasn't proved that this tower is the least intrusive means of remedying a
so-called 'significant gap' in service, and according to the Federal Telecommunications Act of 1996,
you do not need to reverse your denial since they haven't proven this. Please hold firm to your
previous ruling and protect the well being and property of the people of Ithaca.
Thank you for your time,
Daniel Seib
1581 Slaterville Road, Ithaca, NY
Outlook
You Do Not Have To Bow Down To Verizon's Bullying
From Bob Babjak <bobbybabjak@gmail.com>
Date Mon 11/24/2025 11:45 AM
To Codes <codes@townithacany.gov>; Marty Moseley <MMoseley@townithacany.gov>; CJ Randall
<cjrandall@townithacany.gov>; Chris Balestra <CBalestra@townithacany.gov>
**WARNING** This email comes from an outside source. Please verify the from address, any
URL links, and/or attachments. Any questions please contact the IT department
Dear Zoning Board Members,
About ten months ago, you all made a decision, a correct one, to deny Verizon's requested zoning
variance for 111 Wiedmaier Ct. Now here we are, back at another crossroads. In one direction is
Verizon’s boot positioned squarely on the neck of our Town Government, threatening further legal
action if the Zoning Board upholds its existing (lawful) denial of a height variance. To go in this
direction is to kowtow to corporate power and bullying, as well as give in to fear-based pressure from
those on the Town and Planning boards who wish to cede our sovereignty to the profiteers who do
not even live in this community.
In the other direction lies a commitment to your prior decision, a commitment to the will and wishes
of the residents of the town of Ithaca, a commitment to the ethics of being an officer of the town
government and upholding the legally enshrined Town Codes. To reaffirm your commitment to all
these things is to oppose the Consent Order. This is the more difficult path, but then doing the right
thing is never usually easy.
The fact is that this Consent Order presents no material change to the application you denied in
February, save for a 15 foot reduction in height- which is still 89 feet OVER the limit set for th in
code 270-16.
They still have added no new evidence to prove the existence of a coverage gap besides their
own assertions, which was one of the main reasons for the denial. FCC coverage maps as well as
Verizon’s own maps both show that the area in question is in fact completely covered by the low
band frequency.
They have not established that this tower is the least intrusive means of remedying this alleged
coverage gap, which it is required to do by our Town Codes. Independent expert William
Johnson even stated on the record that small antennas, though not preferable, could technically
provide the necessary coverage. Verizon continues to completely ignore this fact. This has not
changed in the Consent Order, therefore I see no reason for your previous decision to be
changed.
If the substantiate issues that prompted your initial denial have not changed, then why would you
reverse your decision now? What compelling evidence is there other than Verizon’s legal threats and
pressure for the Town Board? New York State law requires “good faith reasons” to vacate your previous
decision. Based solely on the facts at hand, the parameters of the previous application and the
parameters of the consent order being nearly identical, there is no legally valid reason to change your
established denial.
I urge you to stand your ground, adhere to your moral and ethical code, and do not give in to fear and
pressure. Uphold the denial of this height variance and I pledge to do all I can to help the Town fight
Verizon’s malicious campaign against the citizens of Ithaca to force us to bend to their will. Thank you
for your time.
Sincerely,
Bob Babjak
106 Wiedmaier Ct.