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Mobile Phones and Telecommunications

Phone Masts - a cause for concern?

New proposals for mobile phone masts or base stations are invariably controversial - particularly if they are sited in residential areas.

Behind the concern is usually a sense that the health risks associated with mobile phone technology have not been properly explained.

Local residents will inevitably look to their council to control the development of new sites. But in many ways councils' planning powers are limited.

More Phones, More Masts

The rapid growth in mobile phone usage is fuelling the demand for more transmitter sites. In the urban areas of the Borough sites on tall buildings are limited and already in many cases being used. In the rural areas and the villages issues around the visual impact are often important.

A Growing Network

The Government is facilitating the expansion of the network throughout the country. It has raised £22 billion from the sale of new licences to the telecommunications companies.

 

The technological changes mean that the mast network has to be updated. The Government has a duty to assist the process, but it does have to be aware of environmental considerations.

 

Councils do not make money out of phone masts.

 

The mobile phone companies tell us each year where they are looking for new masts.  We also record where the Council has granted permission in the past for masts and where they have been erected.  This information is avaliable from our Interactive Map.

Are Masts Safe?

The Government commissioned a report in 2000 to look into the effects of both mobile phones and transmitters.

 

The report (known as the Stewart Report) said that for the general population, the levels of exposure to radiation arising from phones held near to the head or other parts of the body were substantially greater than whole-body exposures arising from base stations.

 

The report also stated that where a mast was proposed close to a school the radio frequency (RF) beam of the greatest intensity should not fall on any part of the school or its grounds without the agreement of both the school and parents.

 

The report urged young people to limit their use of mobile phones and called for 'switch off' signs to be erected at the entrances to hospitals.

It concluded that base stations should comply with the radiation guidelines of the International Commission on Non-Ionising Radiation Protection (ICNIRP).

 

Even so the Stewart Report confirmed that it was not possible to say that exposure to RF radiation, even at levels below national guidelines, would be totally without potential adverse health effects, and that the gaps in knowledge were sufficient to justify a precautionary approach.

 

The Government's advice to planning authorities is that where a proposed installation falls within these guidelines, it should not be necessary to consider further the health effects.

 

The key scientific body - the National Radiological Protection Board (NRPB) says that exposures from mobile phone base stations are usually small fractions of international guidelines, typically less than 0.01% at most locations accessible to the public. Surveys also show that radio and TV transmitters can produce exposures that are comparable with those from mobile phone base stations.

The Planning Rules

The planning requirements for mobile phone masts are laid down by the Government.

In many cases new masts can be installed without the need for a full planning application.

Most crucially of all, councils have been told by ministers that they should not refuse planning applications for masts or base stations on health grounds where these meet the ICNIRP guidelines.

 

The general rules are:

  • Mobile phone antennae erected on the roof of a building do not normally require planning permission.
  • Base stations up to 15 metres in height can be installed without the need for a full planning application.
  • Masts above this height - and all proposals in conservation areas - will require planning permission.
  • Where an application is required, there may be grounds for refusing permission if the mast is considered so unsightly that it would have a detrimental impact on the immediate area.
  • A council can also take into account the degree of obstruction caused by an installation to pedestrians - especially those with prams or wheelchairs.

Public Concern

The Stewart Report acknowledged public concerns about the risks associated with base stations and mobile phone technology.

It urged the appropriate scientific body - the NRPB to address these concerns in a more sensitive and informative manner and called for a more open and proactive approach.

 

And it called on the Government to circulate a leaflet to every household in the UK providing clearly understandable information on mobile phone technology and on related health aspects. This has still not happened.

 

It is against this background of public concern, lack of information and frustration with the limitations of the planning process that councils have to take decisions on applications for new sites.

A Balanced Approach

The council looks closely at all new proposals for masts - including base stations and antennae erected on buildings.

Although health factors will not be the main consideration where the proposal meets ICNIRP guidelines, the council will carefully examine the visual and environmental effect of any proposal on the surrounding area.

Useful Websites

This webpage was updated on 8/9/2010

 

Ashford Borough Council, Civic Centre
Tannery Lane, Ashford TN23 1PL
Telephone: 01233 331111
Email: customer.care@ashford.gov.uk or view our contact us page.
Ashford Borough Council Ashford, Best Placed in Britain

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