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25/02/2010 at 23:35:00 By DIANA WORTHY - Waiheke Marketplace Auckland City mayor John Banks is backing calls for wider community consultation by telcos in the wake of new Waiheke Island protests. The mayor has confirmed his support for a group of Surfdale residents that want Vodafone to halt its plans to install cell masts above the bowling club. Nearby residents have received letters from Vodafone saying masts planned for Marama Avenue will go up next month. Legislation by the last government has enabled telecommunication companies to erect masts without resource consent notification. Surfdale group Andrew Crawford, Stephanie Honeychurch and Dr Stuart Reuben have been fighting for Vodafone to consult with residents for the past 18 months. They say the company is going ahead with its plans and has ignored pleas to talk to neighbours living within range of the emissions, including schools. Auckland Central MP Nikki Kaye and Auckland City's Hauraki Gulf islands' councillor Denise Roche have been supporting their cries. Their backing has drawn the interest of mayor John Banks and Auckland City Council councillor Aaron Bhatnager ? city development committee chairman. Mayor Banks says telecommunication companies are using non-notification, opposed by council but sanctioned by government, to do what they want. "Vodafone is putting towers up right across our beautiful city. At the very least, we would expect comprehensive consultation." But Vodafone national site acquisition manager Justin Rae says the company has consulted Surfdale residents. He says he and company representatives addressed around 30 people at a Waiheke public forum specifically about telecommunication activities, held in April 2009. "The majority of the evening was spent discussing the Surfdale Bowling Club site. We ran through the history of the site, the technical requirements, and Vodafone set out the alternatives we had considered. "There was quite a bit of Q & A, so it was quite interactive." Mr Rae says he followed up enquiries after the event and the company's community relations unit had been in frequent touch with Mr Crawford a year or so ago. Since then, he says, the company had received infrequent enquiries but he had responded to letters this January from Mr Crawford, Ms Honeychurch, and Dr Reuben. Mr Rae says letters sent to neighbours this month about the construction of the cell mast site had enclosed further information. Residents say the further information focused more on cell phone use than the sites themselves. Ms Kaye and Mr Bhatnager are both keen to see concerns resolved. Ms Kaye is a member of the environment and local government select committee engaged in hearings on government's third supercity bill but says she will get leave to attend a meeting over the cell site issue. She says Vodafone is arranging a meeting this week with members of the Surfdale group, herself, Mr Bhatnager and, possibly, council's utilities manager. Ms Kaye says Mr Bhatnager pushed for the meeting to happen and she is confident it will provide a chance to resolve issues. Mr Bhatnager has already asked Vodafone to delay putting up the mast, to consult with the community, and to try and find another location for its cell site. The councillor met with Mr Rae last week and says discussions were constructive.
Group member Dr Reuben says he has scientific proof of health risks from mast emissions, which he says has been so far ignored by government. He told a meeting of around 30 people on Saturday how government's inter-agency committee on health had just one medical professional sitting on it, Dr David Black. Dr Reuben said nearly all the other members came from industry. "We're soon going to have a telecommunications industry that's as big as tobacco." Labour list MP Jacinda Ardern ? the party's potential Auckland Central candidate ? was also at the meeting and says communities have a right to be heard. She believes the situation highlights the need for a strong community voice in both the Resource Management Act reforms and the supercity. Surfdale group member Andrew Crawford is determined to give neighbours a voice. He and other group members are urging people to erect "Shame on You, Vodafone" banners outside their homes and speak out if they do not want the masts to go up. "The bottom line is we have to mobilise ourselves now to look out for our home patch."
22/02/2010 at 01:56:21
Hi. Auckland University's Brain Research Centre in conjunction with the Neurological Foundation and other groups is holding a series of lectures and seminars at the Auckland University Business School in Grafton Rd on Saturday 20 March. Its the final day of Brain Week. I wonder if the topics will include cellphone and other pulsed microwave radiation and DNA strand damage, calcium ion eflfux and the promotion of brain tumors? www.cbr.auckland.ac.nz You might like to forward some of your views on the matter. Cheers
Dear Minister Please could you urgently provide copies of all written and electronic documentation (and any other information that is currently not in written form) that was relied on by “the government” (presumably led by you as “the responsible Minister”) to justify its decision not to adopt the 24 November 2009 recommendations of the Local Government and Environment Select Committee in relation to the petitions of Sarah Allen and 3100 other (mostly Nelson) residents. Please could you advise who was responsible for driving the “the government’s” decision on this important environmental and public health matter (if it was not you personally). If this was more than one person please could you list who they were. Please provide whatever information you can electronically. The rest can be provided by mail to PO Box 1653, NELSON. Please ring me if you have any queries (03 545xxxx). Thanks Sue Grey LLB(Hons), BSc, RSHDipPHI
The government's response to the LG&E Report of 24 November 2009 is available from the link below. It is unbelievably arrogant and simply abysmal! Where on earth did "the government" get its advice? Where is the transparency and accountability? Who bears the costs of resulting harm- no doubt the communities who asked for more responsibly in the first place. Whatever happened to listening to the communities who are affected. The government's response completely ignores the serious uncertainties in the NZS2772:1 1999 and that many European states have adopted a far more a precautionary approach with standards up to 1000 times more stringent than New Zealand. It ignored the warnings that are now widespread about unnecessary EMR exposures especially for children. What influences have affected our government's assessment of the risk of EMR and made them so different from the far more considered assessment of the EU, and many individual European states? How did "Big Brother" come to know more than the Select Committee members who listened to the people? This is simply bizarre. Sue Please find attached for your information a link to the Government's response to the Local Government and Environment Committee's recommendations on the cellphone tower petitions: 20/02/2010 at 20:32:25 by Julia Proverbs | 19th February 2010 Photo: John Borren. Roly Hammond says a cellphone tower
They say property values will plummet and are worried about the possible effects of radiation. "It was done in one day and no one was consulted ... we had no chance at all to object," Mr Hammond said. "I have had a number of irate callers. They are all very, very agitated. Some of the older ones are very concerned about radiation. It is in the best part of Matua. It's not on. It shouldn't happen in a subdivision like Matua or for that matter in any other suburb." Mr Hammond said the value of his $500,000 property had dropped "thousands" overnight. John Buckley, who lives directly opposite the tower, said he and his wife would never have bought their property if they knew it was going to look on to a cellphone tower. Read the full story in the Bay of Plenty Times
By SAM McKNIGHT - The Southland Times
The fight against a Telecom cellphone tower in Windsor suffered a knockout punch yesterday when a crane lowered the structure into position in King St. The selection of the site in a residential area has been a controversial choice for Telecom, with nearby property owners forming a group opposing its decision. Bill Robertson, whose property is about 10m away from the newly erected tower, said it was disappointing to see it up but nothing more could be done. "We just have to swallow it." There was nothing illegal about it, but it was immoral, he said. "John Key came down to open the Fonterra plant at Edendale. We thought he might be here to unveil this. I bet he wouldn't get one in his backyard." Many of the nearby residents who opposed the tower had changed from Telecom to other providers, he said. The issue of the towers was highlighted in a Southland Times poll last month that returned almost 75 per cent opposition to cellphone towers in residential areas. Some residents had also expressed concern that the placement of the tower could send house prices in the area tumbling. A Telecom spokeswoman yesterday said it would probably take until the end of the month for the site and its tower to "go live". The company had listened to community concerns and the tower was changed to reduce visual impact by opting for a slimline design and covering the antennae with a shroud, she said. The tower was needed to meet increased cellphone traffic demand, including mobile broadband. Coverage and performance of Telecom's services should improve when the site was activated, the spokeswoman said. 11/02/2010 at 22:32:29 By Anne Gibson 4:00 AM Monday Feb 8, 2010 NZHERALD.CO.NZ
The Castle on the side of Mt Victoria in Devonport is being opened to ticket-holders on a March 5 fund-raising tour. The historic house has made headlines for years, particularly around 1998 when former owner Dan Holloway struck a controversial deal to allow Vodafone to install a cellphone site inside. That raised the ire of Devonport Primary School and heritage campaigners and sparked a national debate about the safety of cellphone sites. Nine years later, Mr Holloway planned huge changes to the listed house known as Woodlands, thought to have been built around 1885, although he never went ahead with the alterations. About a year ago, Devonport businesswoman Charmaine Barnett bought the huge decaying house for $3.2 million. She has just negotiated to terminate Vodafone's 20-year lease early and says all the transmission equipment will be removed in April. Vodafone's equipment, in metal boxes on a wall inside the front door and directly above in a locked cupboard about the size of a single wardrobe upstairs, will go. Ms Barnett, who described the equipment in a house as absurd, said she had engaged legal experts to argue the case for early lease termination. This had taken some time to complete but had been resolved. A sympathetic restoration of the house will then begin and she said she would allow people to see inside it for the first and last time next month. Verandas which were enclosed many years ago on the northern front will be opened but no internal walls will be demolished, Ms Barnett said. More recent alterations at 34 Mays St, including construction of a wooden lean-to and a staircase leading to the roof, would be demolished. People would be surprised by the size of the house, "which is much smaller than they think", and its state "because they think it's faded glory and in fact it's pretty bare", she said. Ms Barnett said she supported the tour being organised by Devonport Heritage and the Masonic Friendly Society, which is trying to save the 144-year-old Masonic Hotel on the waterfront at Devonport. Proceeds from $45 tickets available at Paradox Bookshop will help fund Environment Court action against changes to the hotel. Tour 10am-4pm on March 5, emailtickets@masonicfriendlysociety.org or visit Paradox Bookshop, Victoria Rd, Devonport.
This website is a single issue community site dedicated to reflecting the current concerns of the people in the area of Corder Park, Nelson. The content is under constant review and is changed and updated regularly by volunteers. Thank you for visiting and please check back soon for the latest reports. |
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A public peek inside one of Auckland's strangest and most controversial houses is planned early next month.
