Point Roberts vs. the FCC: Modern David and Goliath

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Point Roberts vs. the FCC: Modern David and Goliath
Point Roberts vs. the FCC: Modern David and Goliath
John Lesow, a NWCitizen writer, wrote this on behalf of the Cross Border Coalition in Point Roberts and the Tsawwassen area of Delta, BC, Canada.
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Update, Oct 22 - John Lesow has commented with considerable more information on this. See the first comment below.
Update 2 pm Oct 21 - by publisher John Servais
County Hearing Examiner Michael Bobbink has denied the application by KRPI to build five radio towers on Point Roberts. David has knocked down Goliath. See John Lesow's article below for an explanation of this important issue of our remote Whatcom County neighbors.
Bobbink ruled today that the towers exceed height limits on Point Roberts. The public hearing at the County Council chamber scheduled for next Monday, Oct 27, is cancelled. The next probable step will be an appeal by the radio station.
Click to read Bobbink's memo as a pdf
We will post more information is this issue as it becomes available.
Finally, I want to note this is not all good news. KRPI will probably now go back to broadcasting from their 5 existing towers right next to Ferndale - the ones that the Point Roberts towers were going to replace. And a sister radion station has several towers right next to Blaine that also broadcast into Canada. All three towers are basically pirate radio stations, unlicensed in Canada and thus putting up towers in Whatcom County to broadcast into Canada. All three are powered to 50,000 watts, causing toasters, radiators and other electrical and metal items in nearby homes to broadcast music. So, this appears to throw the problem back to Ferndale where residents have complained for years of the interference. The Federal Communications Commission (FCC), the federal regulating agency, has shown an all too typical federal arrogance and dismissal of these citizen concerns, allowing the illegal radio stations to greatly disrupt the lives of county residents.
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See end of this article for an update on Oct 11.
A year ago, the citizens of Point Roberts woke up to the news that the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) had granted radio station 1550AM/KRPI permission to move their broadcasting facilities from Ferndale to Point Roberts.
A total of (5) 150’ towers were planned for a heavily forested, 10 acre site just a few hundred feet from the US/Canadian border. The towers would broadcast at the maximum allowable 50,000 watts and would beam their signal directly north, broadcasting South Asian programming to their target market in the Lower Mainland of British Columbia and the Fraser Valley.
One reason for the move from Ferndale to Point Roberts was the station’s admission that their broadcasting over the past decade had resulted in intolerable levels of blanketing interference for Ferndale residents, amounting to an admitted “poisoning the well” of their host community.
In the application, Point Roberts was characterized as a rural backwater with few residents and a community that would benefit from the economic boost of a powerful new radio station. In fact, a station broadcasting at 100 watts would be sufficient to reach every corner of the 4.8 square mile peninsula of Point Roberts.
Conveniently omitted from the application was the presence of Tsawwassen, BC, a community of 23,000 situated just a few hundred feet north of the international border. A map submitted with the application depicted the 23,000 resident community of Tsawwassen as a large, unpopulated blank space. Given the true proximity of the population of Point Roberts and neighboring Tsawwassen, the transmission of 50,000 watts would have exceeded the FCC’s parameters by some 3000%, or 30 times what is permissible by federal guidelines.
One could argue that this constitited a fraudulent application to the FCC, but, as is typical with many out-of-touch government bureaucracies, it slipped by unnoticed and unchallenged. The result was a federal decision in favor of a foreign-controlled commercial enterprise based on misinformation, impacting thousands of of Americans and Canadians in ways that would never be acceptable if the real facts had been provided. To keep the 50,000 watt broadcast strength in perspective, Bellingham’s KGMI 790 broadcasts at 5000 watts.
Last week, the Whatcom County Planning Department recommended approval of the Conditional Use Application to proceed with construction , based in part on the interpretation that radio towers are an “essential public utility” and therefore allowable by Conditional use permit in all jurisdictions. This characterization allowed the applicant to avoid both Whatcom County and Point Roberts height restrictions, as well as other County Code guidelines on rural character and view corridors.
Over the past year, a group of concerned U.S. and Canadian citizens, joined by civic groups in Point Roberts, have united as the Cross Border Coalition to Stop the Radio Towers. Last July, the FCC was asked for a Declaratory Ruling that the height restriction for structures in Point Roberts (45 feet) would not be pre-empted. To date, there has been no response from the FCC. At present, a Text Amendment to amend the Point Roberts Special District zoning to limit radio tower heights is in abeyance, pending the outcome of the FCC ruling. In any case, the present approval of the towers would not be affected by a prospective zoning text amendment.
Based on the empirical evidence from Ferndale over the past decade, there is no way to effectively mitigate the blanketing interference on all manner of electrical and conductive devices from a 50,000 watt radio transmission. These include interference with land line and wireless phones, computer connections, baby monitors, cellular phones and virtually any electronic device that has a speaker. The Ferndale signals have even been documented coming from non-communicative devices, including water heaters and radiators.
There is little research on the health effects of Electromagnetic Radiofrequency Radiation (EFR). This is primarily due to the fact that AM radio towers are never permitted in such close proximity to urbanized areas, as is the case here. However, scientists have begun to call for more stringent standards relating to the siting of radio towers near populated areas.
After concerted efforts at the federal and local levels in the United States and Canada, what is left for the Coalition is to try to stop the issuance of a conditional use permit at the county level. A hearing is set to begin October 27, 2014 before the Whatcom County Hearing Examiner at Council Chambers, 311 Grand Avenue.
The Coalition is fighting to preserve the quality of life on the peninsula and must now raise money to continue to fund representation before the hearing judge. They have raised over $70,000 in grass roots contributions. But the Coalition requires another $50,000 to field expert witnesses and to continue to fund our local legal team.
This is truly a David vs. Goliath struggle and a cause worth fighting for. We are committed to carry this fight through the Hearings Examiner phase and then on to the Whatcom County Council.
Grass roots fund-raising is now being augmented by social media efforts and an outreach to outside donors.
For more information and to donate, visit: www.notowers.webs.
Update: Saturday, Oct 11 - by publisher John Servais
The Vancouver Sun has an article today that explains more about this issue and how these radio stations are "pirate radio" as they have their offices and studios in the greater Vancouver area but are not licensed to have broadcast towers in Canada. And thus use Whatcom County for their broadcasts. See "CRTC orders Punjabi radio stations in Metro Vancouver to explain themselves".





















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