Stanly commissioners sued by Verizon regarding cell tower construction

The construction of cell phone towers in Stanly County by Verizon Wireless will soon be taken up by a federal court.

On Friday, attorneys representing Cellco Partnership, a subsidiary of Verizon, filed a federal lawsuit in North Carolina Middle District against Stanly County and its Board of Commissioners.

The Stanly County Board of Commissioners denied a request by Charlie and Patricia Almond May 17 to rezone a portion of their property on McLester Road for a cell tower. (For more on the board’s decision, follow this link to a previous story on it: https://www.thesnaponline.com/2021/05/18/request-for-rezoning-proposed-mclester-cell-tower-fails/ )

Friday’s lawsuit said the company is looking for injunctive relief from the county for an “unlawful denial” of the tower’s construction.

The suit states: “Federal law and policy favor the rapid development of wireless communication infrastructure in order (to) facilitate providing wireless service to the public.”

Verizon also alleges in the suit the proposed tower would “remedy significant gaps in its wireless coverage in the surrounding area.” The tower, the suit said, would “meet skyrocketing customer demand for increased capacity and new and improved services.”

Quoting the Telecommunications Act of 1996 (TCA), the suit alleges Stanly’s denial “violated the federal law embodied” in the act. The suit further says the county “did not provide any explanation or support for the denial, much less support it with substantial evidence in a written record.”

The lawsuit states Stanly violated Section 332 of the TCA. In Section 332, the act states: “Any decision by a state or local government or instrumentality thereof to deny a request to place, construct, or modify personal wireless service facilities shall be in writing and supported by substantial evidence contained in a written record.”

In the TCA, the act also denies local government the right to regulate construction of a tower based on “the environmental effects of radio frequency emissions.”

Verizon states in the facts section of the suit that “a significant gap” exists in the company’s ability to provide coverage around Oakboro and along N.C. Highway 24-27.

The company filed a petition to the county but contends Verizon “was never provided with notice that the Petition was incomplete, deficient or otherwise failed to meet the requirements of the (local) Ordinance.”

Verizon also in the suit alleges a letter received from the county “does not list any grounds for denial.”

County Manager Andy Lucas said he was “unable to comment about any ongoing litigation to which the County is a part.”

SportsPlus

News

Stanly County Schools to purchase land for new central office

News

STATE: As new ballots are printed, absentee voting on hold in North Carolina

News

Albemarle Police Reports – Sept. 9, 2024

News

New London church will host Dusty River Band, Yesteryear 1974

News

Former Oakboro officer, town officials clash regarding funds for K-9 dogs

News

State reports first measles case in North Carolina since 2018

News

Rhett Lowder tosses 6.1 scoreless innings in second MLB start

News

State Board appeals decision to take Robert F. Kennedy Jr. off North Carolina ballots

News

Pfeiffer guarantees pathway for Montgomery Community College grads

News

Albemarle Police Reports – Sept. 8, 2024

News

North Carolina State Lottery Commission releases August sports betting revenue report

News

David Freeze: Three bay lake state parks and a black water river

News

PEEKING INTO THE PAST: Peeler Reunion

News

American Red Cross issues critical call for blood, platelets

News

2 million eggs and counting for Holbrook

News

Food: Stick to your diet while dining out

News

Butterfly House hosts 12th annual Dancing With the Stars event

News

Albemarle Police Reports – Sept. 6, 2024

News

Badin breaks ground on 14-acre park

Community

Student graduates from Washburn University

News

Food: Enjoy a homemade crispy pan pizza

Community

SSA removes signature requirements for many forms

News

CHAMBER DIRECTORY: Mayes, Boles continue a family tradition at Sassy Cakes

News

Rescue, rehab, release is the motto for Wildside Wildlife Rescue