A lawsuit has been filed to help stop 5G. Want to add your complaint about 5G cells or other “small wireless facilities” in your locale? Your statement re: the harm experienced can help stop placement of these facilities in the USA, and assist with this new lawsuit.
The following is an email we received from the Cellular Phone Task Force, helping to gather statements, nationwide. We thank its director, Arthur Firstenberg, for his decades of work to educate the public about the dangers of electrosmog pollution from cell phones and other wireless sources. Reposted with permission.
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Dear Friends,
The Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) filed a lawsuit against the FCC on May 14, 2018. NRDC is challenging the legality of the FCC’s March 30, 2018 order exempting “small wireless facilities” from environmental review.
In order for NRDC to have standing to challenging the FCC’s ruling, the NRDC needs statements from its members about the harm to them of 5G technology. The NRDC lawyers have asked me to forward this request to my email lists:
“Please share the following email address to help us identify NRDC members who might be interested in providing a statement regarding the harm from 5G technology and siting of the so-called small wireless cells needed to deploy it. Such statements are necessary to give us standing to sue the FCC in court and invalidate the Commission’s recent action. Ideally, the individuals will need to identify specific existing, proposed or reasonably foreseeable facilities that affect where they live, go to school or areas/ communities to which they have a regular connection.”
Statements should be emailed to nrdcinfo@nrdc.org. Reference Case No. 18-1135 in the subject line of your email.
Time is of the essence. Initial submissions by the parties are due July 2. In addition to NRDC, ten Indian tribes are challenging the FCC’s ruling because it also exempts small wireless facilities from review under the National Historic Preservation Act. The CTIA and Sprint have intervened against NRDC and the Indian tribes and are likely to file motions to dismiss for lack of standing.
The FCC’s ruling defines “small wireless facilities” as any facilities that are up to 50 feet tall, OR do not extend more than ten percent higher than other adjacent structures, whichever is greater — OR the antennas do not extend more than ten percent higher than the structure they are mounted on. In other words, virtually NO wireless facilities (not just 5G) that are built from now on will be subject to environmental or historic preservation review.
[WHO CAN FILE A STATEMENT]
If you are an NRDC member and you presently live near any cell tower up to 50 feet tall and you are being harmed by it, you quality and can submit a statement. If you are an NRDC member and you live near any cell tower of any height, so long as it is not much taller than adjacent structures, you also qualify.
Contact me if you have any questions or need help in drafting your statements for NRDC.
Arthur Firstenberg
Director, Cellular Phone Task Force
www.cellphonetaskforce.org
info (at) cellphonetaskforce.org
5G and the FCC: 10 Reasons Why You Should Care (A must-read, must-share NRDC blog post)
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