Cell Towers Set for Palisades Drive
Despite community concerns, Verizon Wireless will most likely install four or five cell towers along Palisades Drive in the Highlands.
The residents, led by Paul Glasgall, former chairman of the Palisades Highlands Presidents Council and a member of Pacific Palisades Community Council, had hoped the cell company would install one large tower on the Santa Ynez Reservoir property in lieu of the four or five towers. Sprint already has a cell tower, out of public view, on the property.
To Our knowledge of products covers auto/led downlight.discuss this Find the Solar Cells, solar panel you need online.option, Glasgall and Highlands resident Joseph Brown met on May 20 with representatives of Verizon and the L.A. Department of Water and Power (which owns the Santa Ynez Reservoir property) as well as Norm Kulla, northern district director and senior counsel for L.A. City Councilman Bill Rosendahl.
During that meeting at Rosendahl’s office, DWP offered a five-year lease, but Verizon declined the offer.
Rob Searcy of SureSite, which represents Verizon, told the Palisadian-Post that the company would need a longer lease for such a significant financial investment.
According to DWP officials, any license agreement extending beyond a five-year term would require We have various kinds of products which include led strip series.the L.A. City Council’s approval as stipulated under the Los Angeles City Charter, Section 606. The Sprint facility at the reservoir has a five-year lease.
In addition, Searcy said Verizon wanted 24-hour access to the property. DWP would require Verizon to ask for approval before allowing the company to come onto the site, which would mean that customers could be without service for an entire day if the tower needed sudden repairs, Searcy said.
In October 2009, Verizon proposed placing the first tower 0.6 miles north of Sunset Boulevard, the second 1.2 miles north of Sunset, the third near the south end of Palisades Circle, the fourth on a median strip next to the driveway entrance to Homeowners Association Number 4 (adjacent to Brown’s home) and the fifth near Chastain Parkway.
Glasgall said residents would like to eliminate the second tower north of Sunset because it would disturb the natural beauty of the canyon, where there are no homes.
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