CHOMSKY Archives

The philosophy, work & influences of Noam Chomsky

CHOMSKY@LISTSERV.ICORS.ORG

Options: Use Forum View

Use Monospaced Font
Show Text Part by Default
Show All Mail Headers

Message: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Topic: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Author: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]

Print Reply
Subject:
From:
Reply To:
The philosophy, work & influences of Noam Chomsky
Date:
Thu, 27 Jan 2000 00:41:55 -0500
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (215 lines)
First, from Rockland County, NY, which lies across the Hudson River from
Ossining. This story also has major relevance to the issue of environmental
racism.

United Water urged to deny antenna plan
------------------------------------------------------------------------
By AMY TAXIN
COPYRIGHT 2000 The Journal News. All rights reserved.
Publication date: 1/11/2000




SPRING VALLEY --Village residents put pressure yesterday on United Water in
a last-minute attempt to get the company to deny Nextel Communications
permission to build cellular phone antennas on a local water tank.


In a meeting yesterday morning with United Water representatives, Mayor
Allan Thompson presented copies of petitions signed by residents asking the
company to prevent Nextel from using the space on Prospect and Ohio
streets.


Residents fear the radio waves transmitted by cellular antennas could put
their health at risk.


United Water declined to comment on the petitions or the copy of 250
signatures collected by the Rev. Jacques Michel in October and presented to
the village Board of Trustees in opposition to Nextel's application.


The company did, however, verify that it signed a contract with Nextel in
mid-1999 allowing the company to use the space. The water company would
collect payment from Nextel as rent, said Terri Guess, United Water
spokeswoman, but she would not disclose the amount.


Nextel's application to place 12 antennas on top of the water tank has been
controversial in Spring Valley for the past three months. Residents filled
the village boardroom twice in October, calling for the Board of Trustees
to reject the application.


The board, however, is bound by a federal law that prohibits municipalities
from banning cellular towers. According to the 1996 Federal
Telecommunications Act, municipalities have limited influence over where
antennas are placed and how they look.


The Rev. Sidney Buxton distributed the petitions to members of his
congregation, Faith Temple Church of Christ on Bethune Boulevard, in the
hope that the signatures get the water company to pay attention to
residents' fears.


"This is one of the ways we can attack it, letting them know we're not
pleased about it going up there," Buxton said.


Many residents who distributed and signed the petitions thought pressuring
the water company was a good idea, but one that came too late. The board
votes at 8 tonight on Nextel's application. The board has to vote now to
meet a deadline under New York law governing how much time can pass between
a public hearing on a topic and a decision.


"I think it's a little too late in the game to try to make a change," said
Stella Marrs, director of the Martin Luther King Multi-Purpose Center on
Bethune Boulevard.


Nevertheless, Marrs helped pass out petitions and collect signatures
yesterday, adding that "the village can't afford to get sued" if the
village violates the federal law governing placement of cellular antennas.


Thompson said that yesterday's meeting with United Water went well but
refused to disclose its outcome before talking with village trustees. He
and Trustee Margareth Jourdan distributed the petitions to some residents
Friday to help get the campaign against the water company off the ground.

The second story describes our action last week:

Ossining residents protest cell tower
------------------------------------------------------------------------
By ANDREA GREIF
COPYRIGHT 2000 The Journal News. All rights reserved.
Publication date: 1/20/2000




OSSINING -- As school board members met behind closed doors with Sprint PCS
officials last night, more than 300 citizens concerned about plans for a
cellular phone tower atop Ossining High School listened to testimony about
the potential health risks of radiation emissions.


The closed-door meeting between Sprint and the Board of Education was
expected to focus on beginning the bidding process for a contractor to
start work on the tower, said Larry McDonnell, a spokesman for Sprint.


But earlier yesterday, two members of Safe Ossining Schools announced they
had filed papers in state Supreme Court in White Plains seeking to force
termination of the project. The grass-roots group was organized to oppose
the tower, which the school board approved in September 1998. The board
could not terminate the deal after a surge of community opposition.


The legal action, called an Article 78, was made by Dr. Leslie Plachta and
Don DeBerardinis. It claims that the school district and school board acted
outside their authority in granting the lease to Sprint and that the
district failed to comply with state environmental review laws.


McDonnell said he was not aware of the lawsuit but said he doubted it would
be successful.


Before last night's meetings, about 50 parents and students gathered at a
candlelight vigil outside Ossining's Roosevelt Education Center, where the
school board was meeting with Sprint officials.


"Find another site," Connie Hochman said. "We don't want it at the school.
The community doesn't want it."


Later, inside Trinity Church, a pediatrician, a medical science journalist
and a public health professor discussed potential health effects of
cellular tower emissions.


B. Blake Levitt, the journalist, said there was serious contradictory
scientific information and questionable safety standards.


"We should err on the side of caution where children are concerned," she
said. "No safe levels of exposure have ever really been determined."


David Carpenter, a professor at the State University of New York at Albany,
said there was significant evidence that exposure to cell towers is
hazardous to people's health. He said that children exposed to this
technology could be more susceptible to leukemia and brain tumors.


McDonnell reiterated Sprint's position that "no studies have ever found any
harm associated with this technology at all."

A third story, from nearby (to Ossining, NY) Yorktown, isn't yet available
on the 'net, so will follow tomorrow, or check out:
http://www.northcountynews.com
headline story for the week of 1/26/00. It is important to note that the
residents of Yorktown cited the fact that they learned about potential
health hazards from the struggle in Ossining.

PLEASE E-MAIL TO ASK WHAT YOU CAN DO TO HELP, OR GET YOUR LOCAL GOVERNMENT
TO PASS THE FOLLOWING RESOLUTION:

WHEREAS the use of cellular telecommunications technology has exploded in
the past 5 years throughtout the country and much of the world, and

WHEREAS the question of adverse effects upon the ecology of, and all life
upon, planet earth has been raised, and

WHEREAS the state of medical science at this point in time is inconclusive
as to this question, although some research has provided indications of
potential increases in leukemia, brain cancer, impaired learning and memory
function and other adverse effects that may occur in humans, and

WHEREAS a host of medical experts currently agree that, until this
technology is proven safe for humans, a policy of "prudent avoidance"
should be followed in the placement of cellular transmission and relay
towers, particularly with respect to areas with concentrations of children
and adolescents,
and

WHEREAS the community of Ossining, NY, now facing the imminent
implementation of a decision to place a cell tower upon its only high
school, has begun to demand that the tower not be placed there or upon any
other school or place frequented by its children or adolescents, and

WHEREAS the plight of Ossining has pointed to the need for legislation at
the State level in order to prevent any further risk of exposure of other
students, faculty or staff in New York State to a similar risk, and

WHEREAS a member of the Ossining community, Don DeBar, has proposed an
amendment to the NYS Education Law, by adding to Section 403-a thereof a
new subsection 7, to wit:

"7. No school property shall be sold, leased, or otherwise alienated, or
used, for the placement and/or operation of any cellular transmission
and/or relay facilities."

NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the __________________
hereby calls upon the Senate and Assembly of the State of New York to pass
such legislation, and upon the Governor of the State of New York to duly
sign the same, and, further, that the Governor direct the Commissioner of
Education to impose a moratorium on the further execution, implementation
and/or consideration of any application to place any such facility upon any
such property over which it has jurisdiction anywhere within this State.

Respectfully submitted by
(YOUR LOCAL GOVERNMENT)


DDeBar
spikey@bestweb
DDeBar
[log in to unmask]

ATOM RSS1 RSS2