Ehrhardt citizens outraged over tower location

“I feel like I’ve been raped,
beaten and left on the side of the
road for dead,” Ehrhardt resident
Donna Rogers said of Ehrhardt
City Council’s decision to
approve the construction of a 300-
ft. cell phone tower on Ehrhardt
Road in the town of Ehrhardt.
Rogers, a native of
Hueytown, Alabama, said that her
main concern was that she and
other residents along the street
were not told the tower would be
built on their street.
Rogers says she purchased
the home, which is located on
Ehrhardt Road, four years ago
upon moving to Ehrhardt and now
“it is worthless” because of the
cell phone tower. She expressed
her concerns about the health
effects of placing a cell phone
tower in a residential area.
“Residents didn’t know the
tower was being built. Shouldn’t
we have been given the courtesy
of letting us know this would
happen? We knew nothing about
it at all. How in the world could
you plop this horrible thing in the
middle of our neighborhood?”
Rogers acknowledged that
she was aware that there was
discussions of the city putting up a
cell phone tower, but she said a
final location “to her knowledge”
was never shared with the people
in her neighborhood.
“Putting my health in
jeopardy and making my property
worthless in this point and time
because that tower is going in and
is only worth $10.00 per year to
this town that SCANA will pay
annually. This is not just about
me; this is a neighborhood of
older residents. I’ve got every
penny of my whole 60 years in
this house, my retirement, my
heritage to my children, my blood,
sweat and tears.”
Ehrhardt City Councilman
Bill Edinger, whose committee
oversaw the project, stated
Ehrhardt City Council had three
readings on the construction of the
cell phone tower and over the past
year and a half, the matter had
been brought up numerous times
in city council meetings, as to the
status of the project and “people
across the street knew a year ago
where the tower was going.”
“It (construction of the cell
phone tower) was not hidden
Edinger,” said. “If people don’t
come to city council meetings
how were they to know?” Edinger
said that construction of the cell
phone tower has been “a longtime
coming.” “Everyone has
wanted a cell phone tower so bad,
and now that we are getting one,
people are complaining,” he said,
noting that “cell phones don’t
work” in town now.
Nell Walling owner of the
Walling Agency Insurance
Company of Ehrhardt, said that
placing the cell phone tower on
Ehrhardt Road was “not a good
choice.” She stated that the
residents should have been
surveyed and a thorough
examination of health data done
on the short and long term
exposure to radiation. Walling
stated that she thought the tower
northwest of Ehrhardt was
supposed to be “the tower.”
“My office is within a few
hundred yards of the location and
my family spends every day
there,” Walling said. “My own
grandchildren are here many
hours each week. I’m sure some
landowner with open acreage
further away from a town full of
people would’ve been willing to
lease a site for this purpose. If the
town stood to gain to some huge
financial extent, I would think that
greed was overshadowing the
public good.”
She noted that as for citizens
getting information on the tower
from the local newspaper; “many
people don’t get or read the
paper” and most people only
knew when preparations had
begun on the site.”
Councilman Edinger stated
that in his opinion the placement
of the tower in the town will not
devalue property value. He noted
that the $10.00 in revenue the
town is to receive from SCANA
could vary depending on “what’s
on the tower” and how many
companies are using it.
Edinger said that it was “not
an easy thing” getting a company
to place a tower in Ehrhardt. He
said that he personally contacted
several companies and was turned
down. SCANA and (SCE&G) has
a cell phone tower division and
was the only company that said
they would place a tower in
Ehrhardt. “They were good
people to work with.”
Edinger said that city council
tried to seek other locations to put
the tower but finally decided to
place it on property owned by the
town. He said the phone company
wanted the tower placed in a
certain location, possibly for relay
purposes.
Edinger noted that the tower,
being built on city property was
surveyed, checked and cleared
with the State to make sure that it
was not on Indian land or
historical property. “It’s an asset
to the town.” As for concerns
about the health of citizens living
in the area of the tower Edinger
said that he knew of no ill effects
that the tower would bring, noting
that cell phone towers are “all
over the country.”
Marion Bazzle, sitting on his
porch, down the street from the
construction site of the cell phone
tower Sunday afternoon, said that
he did not know what was
happening at the location. But, he
went on to say that he had no
problem with the tower being
constructed on his street.
It’s not the tower, its location,
location, location; “I’m not
against cell phone towers; I’m
truly not against it. I understand
people need it, it’s just the
location. I’m speaking for the
others on this block. I’m going to
fight it for all I’ve got,” Rogers
said.
A legal notice was printed in
The Advertizer-Herald on
November 21, 2007 stating that
SCANA communications was
proposing the construction of a
300-ft Self Support Lattice
Communication Tower northwest
of the Franklin
Street/Murdaugh Reach St.
intersection, in Ehrhardt, SC in
Bamberg County. The notice also
requested in writing any
comments concerning the
proposed tower to be submitted
by December 20, 2007. |