NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-1998-99T3
OMNIPOINT COMMUNICATION, INC.,
Plaintiff/Appellant,
v.
BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT OF THE
TOWNSHIP OF BEDMINSTER,
Defendant/Respondent.
Argued: December 20, 2000 - Decided: February 23, 2001
Before Judges Baime and Wallace, Jr.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New
Jersey, Law Division, Somerset County,
L-345-99.
Gregory J. Czura argued the cause for
appellant (Czura Stilwell, attorneys;
Mr. Czura, on the brief).
John Lore argued the cause for respondent.
The opinion of the court was delivered by
WALLACE, JR., J.A.D.
Plaintiff Omnipoint Communications, Inc. appeals from the
denial of its application for a conditional-use variance to
construct a monopole for wireless telecommunications services by
defendant Board of Adjustment of the Township of Bedminster
(Board). Plaintiff filed an action in lieu of prerogative writs in
the Law Division. The trial judge upheld the action of the Board
and dismissed plaintiff's complaint.
On appeal, plaintiff contends (1) the Board failed to follow
the requirements for granting a conditional use variance pursuant
to N.J.S.A. 40:55D-70(d)(3); (2) the Board's decision was
arbitrary, capricious, and unreasonable; (3) the trial court erred
in requiring plaintiff to demonstrate through an enhanced burden of
proof that the variance was not inconsistent with the zoning plan
and in relying on the grounds for the variance request to support
the denial; and (4) the denial of its application violated the
Telecommunications Act of 1996. We affirm in part and remand for
further hearing.
I
In February 1998, Bedminster adopted an ordinance aimed at
regulating the location of wireless communications structures
within the township. The ordinance sought to meet the mandate of
the Telecommunications Act of 1996, and at the same time, limit the
proliferation of wireless telecommunications towers. The ordinance
made wireless communications towers "a conditional use within all
zone districts of this Township."See footnote 11 In addition, the ordinance
provides that wireless communications antennas placed on existing
structures shall be a permitted use in all non-residential zone
districts and a conditional use in all residential districts.
Subsection 13-522.3 sets forth "Visual Compatibility Requirements,"
including specifications relating to fencing height, location, and
square feet of areas dedicated to support equipment, and that the
tower:
shall be located, designed and screened to
blend with the existing natural or built
surroundings so as to minimize visual impacts
through the use of color and camouflaging,
architectural treatment, landscaping, and
other available means, considering the need to
be compatible with neighboring residences and
the character of the community.
Subsection 13-522.4 establishes "Conditional Use Standards for
the Location of Wireless Telecommunications Antennas or Towers,"
and requires an applicant seeking to construct an antenna in a
residential zone or a stand-alone tower in any zone
shall provide a sufficient showing as to
[sic]:
1. present documentary evidence regarding
the need for wireless telecommunications
antennas at the proposed location. This
information shall identify the wireless
network layout and coverage areas to
demonstrate the need for new equipment at
a specific location within the Township.
2. provide documentary evidence that a good
faith attempt has been made to locate the
antennas on existing buildings or structures
within the applicant's search area. Efforts
to secure such locations shall be documented
through correspondence by or between the
wireless telecommunications' provider and
the property owner of the existing buildings
or structures.
3. document the locations of all existing
communications towers within the applicant's
search area and provide competent
testimony by a radio frequency engineer
regarding the suitability of potential
locations in light of the design of the
wireless telecommunications network. Where a
suitable location on an existing tower is
found to exist but an applicant is unable to
secure an agreement to collocate its
equipment on such tower, the applicant shall
provide sufficient and credible written
evidence of its attempt or attempts to
collocate.
4. demonstrate efforts to site new wireless
antennas, equipment or towers within the
applicant's search area according to the
priority schedule below. Such demonstration,
shall include the block and lot of any parcel
for which the wireless provider has attempted
to secure a lease or purchase agreement and
copies of all correspondence by or between the
wireless provider and the property owner.
In addition, Subsection 13-522.4 includes a priority schedule
ranked from one to twelve according to the zone, type of equipment
(antenna or tower), location of the equipment, and whether the
configuration constitutes a permitted or conditional use. For
example, "collocating" an antenna in a commercial/transportation
zone is a permitted use with a priority of one; construction of a
tower in a commercial zone is a conditional use with a priority
ranking in tenth place; construction of a tower in a residential
non-scenic transportation corridor, which includes lots with
frontage on Routes 202, 206, I-287 or I-78, is a conditional use
ranked in eleventh place; construction of a tower in a residential
zone is a conditional use ranked in twelfth, or last, place.
The ordinance also establishes minimum setback requirements
that towers must be 500 feet from any existing residence, and 2,640
feet from another wireless communications tower. It provides that
the tower must be set back from the property line in compliance
with the zone district setback or the tower height, whichever is
greater, and the equipment compound must be set back in accordance
with the zone district setback requirements for an accessory
structure. The maximum permissible height of a tower designed to
accommodate a single vendor is 100 feet. Subsection 13-522.5(h)
provides, however, that a tower "shall be designed and constructed
so as to accommodate at least two (2) antenna arrays of separate
telecommunications providers."
On March 18, 1998, plaintiff filed an application with the
Board for a "c2" variance and conditional use approval for
construction of a 70-foot-high communications tower on property
located at 1
691 Route 206 in Bedminster. The pole would be located
18 feet from the property line in the OP zone. The OP zone was an
office and professional commercial district along a transportation
corridor. The zone setback requirement was 50 feet from the
property line, but the 70-foot height of the tower required a 70-
foot setback.
At the hearing before the Board, plaintiff clarified that it
was seeking a "d3" use variance because although the tower was a
conditional use in the zone in which it would be situated, its
construction required relief from the 70-foot setback requirement
and from the requirement that the tower be located 500 feet from a
residence. There were ten single-family residences located within
500 feet of the proposed location. The closest residences were at
a distance of 190 feet across Route 206; two residences were 310
feet; two at approximately 370 feet; one at 440 feet; and two at
approximately 475 feet from the proposed tower. Five of those
residences, however, were located in the OP zone. Plaintiff also
sought a waiver from the fencing requirement based on the existence
of vegetation.
The front of the lot, where the tower would be located, was
zoned OP, and the rear western portion was zoned as R-2, low
density residential. The OP zone was intended as a non-retail
transitional area between the village center and residential areas
to the north. The OP zone had a minimum lot size of one acre. The
proposed three-and-a-half-acre site contained a 3500-square-foot
office building with a parking lot for sixteen cars. The pole
would be located immediately adjacent to the parking lot and
existing vegetation along Route 206. The pole would be a "stealth"
structure, designed to look like a light pole, rather than an
antenna support structure. Plaintiff submitted a report by Bell
Labs stating that the proposed facility complied with applicable
FCC regulations and posed no health risk to the immediately
surrounding environment.
In support of its application, plaintiff presented the
following witnesses, Christopher Olson, a radio frequency engineer
employed as a consultant; William Moglino, an architectural expert;
Robert O'Connor, a site consultant; and William Masters, a licensed
professional planner.
Olson explained that plaintiff held a "personal communications
services" or "PCS" license. He explained that PCS signals offered
no interference with telephone, television or radio signals and
operated at higher frequencies than cellular technology. The
higher frequencies were less able than radio frequencies to travel
around obstacles such as hills and trees and operated on a line-of-
site basis. Olson acknowledged that implementation of plaintiff's
network eventually required a relay or tower every mile and a half
along New Jersey's major arteries. Plaintiff anticipated needing
no additional sites in Bedminster, however, because the large
western area of town that had no coverage was less populated.
Olson explained that a site adjacent to Route 287 had been
recently approved for Bell Atlantic, but it failed to meet
plaintiff's requirements because plaintiff had no plans to boost
its own coverage along Route 287, and the Bell Atlantic site left
a coverage gap for plaintiff's services of one-half to three-
quarters of a mile. Olson said plaintiff's engineers and site
acquisition group had examined the "202/206 corridor" but were
unable to find existing structures that could provide the necessary
coverage.
Moglino explained that plaintiff's tower would consist of a
70-foot-high unipole, designed to look like a light pole, with
options for color and decorative ornamentation and the addition of
a parking lot-type light. The light would illuminate the existing
adjacent parking area. The tower would emit 62 decibels of noise,
similar to the sound of a refrigerator and would be placed in front
of the property near the highway. At 70 feet the structure would
be above tree height, which was necessary. It was necessary for
the unipole to be above the 50 to 60 foot high trees in order to
operate properly. Moglino believed the pole at its proposed height
could only handle one carrier.
O'Connor testified that he researched the town's ordinances
and then drove around the town and consulted the tax maps and
zoning maps attempting to find suitable locations in the order of
the town's priority schedule. He located the property in the OP
zone along the highway that had the highest elevation with trees
that provided additional screening. Mr. Haltaway, the owner of the
property, agreed to lease the site to plaintiff.
O'Connor was of the opinion that the higher elevation and
presence of trees made the Haltaway property the most appropriate
and least obtrusive location. When asked about "the next best
choice," O'Connor replied that "the Haltaway. . . property, that
was the best choice." He believed no other location had a ground
elevation that would permit construction of a pole under the 100-
foot-maximum height of the ordinance, but proffered no evidence of
any other locations that he had examined. The particular location
on the property and the unipole design were chosen in accordance
with Haltaway's wishes.
Masters testified that the location and design complied with
the ordinance's requirements for stealth designs, visual
compatibility, and the size of the tower, and its accompanying
equipment compound. The site was particularly suitable because it
was centrally located within plaintiff's search ring where it was
"needed to rectify a deficient service area." In addition, the
site was near "major traffic arteries which are strong generators
of wireless telecommunications service." He explained that the
unipole would neither significantly impact the environment nor
substantially conflict with surrounding land uses. Masters opined
that the pole would satisfy the positive criteria for granting a
use variance.
As to negative criteria, Masters posited that the public
interest at stake was "significant" and the provision of state-of-
the-art wireless telecommunications was a use that benefitted the
region and the public at large. Furthermore, the detrimental
effect from granting the variance, which Masters identified as
primarily visual, would be minimized because the proposed pole was
30 feet shorter than the permissible height, and the stealth
design, coupled with the existing vegetation, would render the
visual impact "aesthetically inconsequential." Masters
acknowledged, however, that the only benefactors would be
plaintiff's subscribers.
Plaintiff had no written report documenting its efforts to
locate sites that would comply with the ordinance's requirements.
Masters explained that the FCC required plaintiff to provide
"seamless coverage," which might require construction of the
facilities in residential as well as non-residential zones.
Many nearby residents objected to plaintiff's application for
aesthetic reasons and the potential impact on property values.
They expressed concern about the precedent that would be set by
granting the variance based on the fact that the pole's location
failed to comply with the 500-foot distance requirement. They
complained that granting the variance would nullify the ordinance's
protection for residents and effectively subject the entire town to
the possibility of having a tower constructed nearby because future
applicants could claim they were being discriminated against if
their applications were denied.
One resident expressed concern about the pole's limitations in
that it was capable of servicing only plaintiff's subscribers and
transmitting only for a short distance, thus requiring construction
of numerous poles to provide the service. Furthermore, he observed
that the technology created the potential that each licensee would
be requesting the right to build a pole. Another resident
suggested other potential locations for the pole, such as the
library and a building in town called the Advance Building.
The Board voted seven to one to deny the variance. The Board
made various findings in its resolution. The Board found that
Olsen offered no specific statistical evidence to support his
testimony that a gap in coverage existed between the nearest
telecommunications facility to the north and south of the proposed
site, and no specific factual information to support his opinion
that no location in the needed coverage corridor could fully comply
with the 500-foot set back; that testimony from Moglino, O'Connor,
and Masters showed the pole was a stealth design that would blend
in with the existing surroundings; that the proposed location was
specifically suited for the structure by virtue of its topography
and elevation and because it was in a non-residential zone, near
major highways; that the pole would generate no traffic and have no
significant impact on the environment; it would provide state-of-
the-art wireless communication; the carrier was licensed by the
FCC; that although O'Connor testified he was unable to locate a
site in the needed coverage area that would be 500 feet from a
residence, he did not provide any further details concerning the
specific distance of any residences from any other potential sites;
that ten residences were located within 500 feet of the proposed
pole; and that numerous members of the general public objected to
the application.
Based on these findings of fact, the Board reached the
following conclusions.
1. The within application before the Board
involves a request for a "d" variance, a "c"
variance and for preliminary and final site
plan approval.
2. The Board concludes that as a part of the
consideration of this "d" variance requests
[sic], the Board must determine that special
reasons exist for the granting of such relief,
as well as that the granting of the variance
will not substantially impair the intent and
purpose of the Zone Plan and Zoning Ordinance
(the negative criteria).
3. The Board also concludes that in deciding
the instant case, that it should consider the
provisions of
Smart SMR v. Fairlawn Board of
Adjustment,
152 N.J. 309 (1998) as the Board
does not deem the facility proposed herein to
be an inherently beneficial use and,
therefore, should endeavor to apply the
principles of the
Smart case to the instant
matter.
4. In the
Smart case, the Court stated that
generally to satisfy the positive statutory
criteria, an applicant must prove that "the
use promotes the general welfare because the
proposed site is particularly suitable for the
proposed use".
Further, in order to satisfy the required
negative criteria, any applicant, in addition
to proving that the variance can be granted
without substantial detriment to the public
good, must also demonstrate, through an
enhanced quality of proof, that the variance
sought is not inconsistent with the intent and
purpose of the master plan and zoning
ordinance.
5. When the Board applied the foregoing
principles to the instant fact situation, the
Board concludes that it is not satisfied that
either the positive or negative criteria were
satisfied by the applicant herein.
Specifically, the Board does not find that the
subject site is particularly suited for the
proposed monopole and cabinet because although
the Board has been presented with certain
evidence indicated [sic] that certain physical
features of the property make it attractive
for this use, the proposed location of the
monopole on the subject property places it
within 500 feet of 10 private residential
dwellings, the two closest being within 190
feet of the proposed facility, while the
recently adopted Township Telecommunications
Ordinance, adopted as part of the Township's
Land Development Ordinance, requires a minimum
set back of 500 feet from private residences.
The Board concludes that the number of
houses proposed to be within the aforesaid 500
foot area, and the closeness thereof of
several of such houses, is just too great in
magnitude and degree to permit the Board to
conclude that the subject site is particularly
suited for the proposed use.
6. With reference to the negative criteria,
as indicated above, the Board concludes that
same have also not been satisfied herein, and
so concludes on the basis that the applicant
has not demonstrated through an enhanced
quality of proof that the requested variance
is not inconsistent with the intent and
purpose of the master plan and ordinance.
With reference thereto, the Board notes that
the Township Telecommunications Ordinance was
only adopted in 1998, and is an extremely
liberal ordinance in that it provides that
wireless Telecommunications towers shall be
conditional uses within all zone districts in
the Township.
Obviously, certain conditions and bulk
requirements must be met, within the 500 foot
restriction of location of such towers with
respect to provide [sic] residences being the
only element thereof described to protect
residential occupants from the impacts of
telecommunications facilities.
With reference thereto, the Board concludes
that it does not find an enhanced quality of
proof that the (d) variance herein would not
be inconsistent with the purposes of the
zoning ordinance provisions concerning
telecommunications towers, and, in fact, finds
that with or without applying such enhanced
burden of proof, it could not conclude that
the granting of the within variance would not
be inconsistent with the purpose of the zoning
ordinance.
The magnitude of the existing residences
affected, and the extreme proximity of several
of such residences to the proposed facility
can only lead the Board to the conclusion that
the requested variance would be inconsistent
with the intent and purpose of the new
telecommunications provisions.
7. Further, based upon the foregoing, the
Board can only conclude that the intent and
purpose of such ordinance provisions would be
substantially impaired by the granting of the
(d) variance requested herein.
8. The Board further finds that, since there
are insufficient reasons for the granting of
the "d" variance, the request for a "c"
variance is, thereby, rendered moot and no
determination is being made on that particular
aspect of the application.
II
Plaintiff argues in Points I, II, and IV of its brief that the
Board failed to analyze its proposal in accordance with the
criteria for granting a conditional use variance and its decision
was arbitrary, capricious, and unreasonable. Further, plaintiff
contends the trial court erred by requiring plaintiff to
demonstrate through an enhanced burden of proof that the variance
was not inconsistent with the zoning plan and in relying on the
grounds for the variance request as the support for the denial.
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-70(d) governs applications for "use" or
conditional use variances. In its current formSee footnote 22, the statute
provides the following powers to the board:
in particular cases for special reasons, grant
a variance to allow departure from regulations
pursuant to article 8 of this act to permit:
(1) a use or principal structure in a district
restricted against such use or principal
structure, (2) an expansion of a nonconforming
use, (3) deviation from a specification or
standard pursuant to section 54 of P.L. 1975,
c 291 (C.40:55D-67) pertaining solely to a
conditional use
. . .
A variance under this subsection shall be
granted only by affirmative vote of at least
five members, in the case of a municipal
board, or 2/3 of the full authorized
membership, in the case of a regional board,
pursuant to article 10 of this act [40:55D-77
to 40:55D-88]. . . .
No variance or other relief may be
granted under the terms of this section,
including a variance of other relief involving
an inherently beneficial use, without a
showing that such variance or other relief can
be granted without substantial detriment to
the public good and will not substantially
impair the intent and the purpose of the zone
plan and zoning ordinance. . . .
[
Ibid.]
"Conditional use" means a use permitted in a
particular zoning district only upon a showing
that such use in a specified location will
comply with the conditions and standards for
the location or operation of such use as
contained in the zoning ordinance, and upon
the issuance of an authorization therefor by
the planning board.
[
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-3.]
A conditional use is a use permitted in a particular zone, but
only upon certain conditions. That is, a conditional use, as
opposed to a prohibited use, is based on the premise that the use
is generally suitable to a particular zoning district, but not at
every location in the district.
Coventry Square v. Westwood Zoning
Bd. of Adjustment,
138 N.J. 285, 294 (1994). Consequently, a
conditional use ordinarily will require compliance with special
enumerated standards with respect to traffic patterns, street
access, parking and such, to assure that it can be compatibly
integrated with the district as a whole.
Id. at 294. Deviations
from those standards, however, trigger the need for a (d)(3)
variance.
Id. at 287. Under Bedminster's ordinance, Section 13-
522.2, stand-alone wireless telecommunications towers, such as the
one proposed by plaintiff, are conditional uses in all zone
districts.
An applicant for a variance permitted by
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-
70(d), whether for a conditional or prohibited use, must satisfy
the statute's "positive criteria" or "special reasons" for the
grant of the variance, and its "negative criteria" that require the
variance "can be granted without substantial detriment to the
public good and that it will not substantially impair the intent
and the purpose of the zone plan and the zoning ordinance."
Smart
SMR of N.Y., Inc. v. Borough of Fair Law Bd. of Adjustment,
152 N.J. 309, 323 (1998).
The burden for proving special reasons to obtain a variance
from compliance with a conditional use is less onerous than that
for a use prohibited in the zone.
Coventry Square,
supra, 138
N.J.
at 297-99. Unlike the high standard of proof required to establish
special reasons for a prohibited use, the proofs to support "a
conditional-use variance need only justify the municipality's
continued permission for a use notwithstanding a deviation from one
or more conditions of the ordinance."
Id. at 298.
The Court explained in
Coventry Square, that to obtain a
conditional-use variance, an applicant must adduce proof:
sufficient to satisfy the board of adjustment
that the site proposed for the conditional
use, in the context of the applicant's
proposed site plan, continues to be an
appropriate site for the conditional use
notwithstanding the deviations from one or
more conditions imposed by the ordinance.
That standard of proof will focus both the
applicant's and the board's attention on the
specific deviation from conditions imposed by
the ordinance, and will permit the board to
find special reasons to support the variance
only if it is persuaded that the non-
compliance with conditions does not affect the
suitability of the site for the conditional
use. Thus, a conditional-use variance
applicant must show that the site will
accommodate the problems associated with the
use even though the proposal does not comply
with the conditions the ordinance established
to address those problems.
[
Id. at 298-99.]
The analysis of the negative criteria for a conditional-use
variance also focuses on the specific deviation and its potential
effect on the surrounding properties and the zone plan. In
analyzing the first prong of the negative criteria, that the
variance can be granted "without substantial detriment to the
public good," the board "must evaluate the impact of the proposed
[conditional-]use variance upon the adjacent properties and
determine whether or not it will cause such damage to the character
of the neighborhood as to constitute 'substantial detriment to the
public good.'" Ibid. (quoting Medici v. BPR Co.,
107 N.J. 1, 22 n.
12 (1987)). In determining the second prong, whether the variance
"will not substantially impair the intent and purpose of the zone
plan and zoning ordinance," the board "must be satisfied that the
grant of the conditional-use variance for the specific project at
the designated site is reconcilable with the municipality's
legislative determination that the condition should be imposed on
all conditional uses in that zoning district." Ibid.
"If, however, the proposed use is inherently beneficial, an
applicant's burden of proof is significantly lessened. An
inherently beneficial use presumptively satisfies the positive
criteria." Smart, supra, 152 N.J. at 323 (citing Burbridge v.
Governing Body of Township of Mine Hill,
117 N.J. 376, 394 (1990)).
With an inherently beneficial use, satisfaction of the
negative criteria does not depend on an enhanced quality of proof,
but instead the grant of the variance depends on balancing the
positive and negative criteria. Ibid. See also Sica v. Board of
Adjustment of Twp. of Wall,
127 N.J. 152, 160-61, 163 (1992). When
striking the balance, boards must: (1) identify the public interest
at stake, recognizing that some uses are more compelling than
others; (2) identify the detrimental effect that will ensue from
the grant of the variance; (3) study whether the detrimental effect
can be mitigated by imposing reasonable conditions on the use; and
(4) weigh the positive and negative criteria and determine whether,
on balance, the grant of the variance would cause a substantial
detriment to the public good. Id. at 164-66.
Moreover, the 1997 amendment to N.J.S.A. 40:55D-70
substantially codified the Sica balancing test. Smart, supra, 152
N.J. at 324. Thus, even with an inherently beneficial use, an
applicant must satisfy the negative criteria. Ibid. In any event,
the Court in Smart declined to recognize mobile communications
facilities as an inherently beneficial use. Id. at 329.
Before addressing plaintiff's arguments, we note several
established principles governing review of zoning matters. A
municipal zoning board is entrusted with the sound discretion to
determine whether an applicant has met the statutory criteria to
obtain a variance. Kaufmann v. Planning Bd. for Twp. of Warren,
110 N.J. 551, 558 (1988); Home Builders Ass'n of Northern N.J. v.
Borough of Paramus,
7 N.J. 335, 341-42 (1951); Northeast Towers,
Inc. v. Zoning Bd. of Adjustment of Borough of West Paterson,
327 N.J. Super. 476, 493 (App. Div. 2000). A board's decision is
presumptuously valid and we should sustain it unless it is
arbitrary, capricious, and unreasonable. Sica, supra, 127 N.J. at
166-67; Smart SMR, supra, 152 N.J. at 327; New York SMSA Ltd.
Partn. v. Board of Adjustment of Twp. of Bernards,
324 N.J. Super. 149, 164 (App. Div.), certif. denied,
162 N.J. 488 (1999).
Further, a board's denial of a variance is entitled to greater
deference than a decision to grant the variance. Northeast Towers,
Inc., supra, 327 N.J. Super. at 494.
With these principles in mind, we turn to plaintiff's
contention that contrary to the holding in Coventry Square, the
Board failed to focus on the variance sought and any ensuing
detrimental effects. Plaintiff essentially argues that its proofs
satisfied the special reasons criteria and the Board's findings
that the number of houses within the 500-foot area and the "extreme
proximity" of several houses to the proposed location were "just
too great in magnitude" to permit the variance were misplaced. We
disagree.
Here, the variance sought would affect ten adjacent
properties. Contrary to plaintiff's contentions, neither the Board
nor the trial court merely relied on the existence of the deviation
to conclude that the variance should be denied. Rather, the Board
clearly stated that it was concerned with the magnitude of the
deviation, both in terms of distance and the quantity of residences
affected. Consistent with the holding in Coventry Square, the
Board was charged with assessing the appropriateness of the
conditional use variance by considering the degree of deviations
from that standard. Moreover, as the trial judge recognized, the
burden of proving the existence of special reasons was on
plaintiff, as was the burden of convincing the Board that the site
was suitable notwithstanding the deviations. Coventry Square,
supra, 138 N.J. at 298-99. By establishing the 500 foot distance
requirement, Bedminster determined that locating communication
towers close to a residence was detrimental. Plaintiff failed to
show why locating the tower within 500 feet of ten residences was
sufficiently mitigated in this case. Although the tower would look
like a light pole, its design did not change the fact that it would
be much higher than the surrounding treetops and nearby structures.
Since communications towers usually generate little pollution
or demand on municipal services, the primary objections to their
construction concern the aesthetic impact of the pole on the
character of the locality and on property values, in conjunction
with fears that the unregulated and competitive nature of the
industry will lead to their widespread proliferation. See New
Brunswick Cellular Tel. Co. v. Borough of S. Plainfield Bd. of
Adjustment,
160 N.J. 1, 15 (1999); Smart SMR, supra, 152 N.J. at
330-31; New York SMSA Ltd. Part. v. Board of Adj. of Twp. of
Middletown,
324 N.J. Super. 166, 171 (App. Div.), certif. denied,
162 N.J. 488 (1999). Although all communications towers and
monopoles may not be aesthetically displeasing, the present state
of the technology nonetheless means that they "are often vastly
higher than other structures in the municipality, particularly
those in residential areas." Smart SMR, supra, 152 N.J. at 331.
Consequently, some zones and certain sites within a particular zone
may be better suited than others for a tower or monopole. Ibid.
In addition, plaintiff failed to present documentary evidence
of any attempt to locate its antenna on existing structures, or any
effort to locate the antenna in accordance with the priority
schedule, both of which are conditional standards set forth in the
ordinance under Sections 13-522.4(a)(2) and (4). Further,
plaintiff did not present any documentary evidence establishing the
existence of a gap in coverage demonstrating the need for new
equipment at the chosen location, another conditional standard.
Section 13-522.4(a)(1). Clearly, the Board's resolution reflected
its concern with the lack of documentation.
"[W]hether or not a . . . monopole will substantially impair
the character of a neighborhood will depend on the circumstances of
each case." Smart SMR, supra, 152 N.J. at 332. In our view, the
conditional standards imposed by Bedminster's ordinance reflect
these concerns by requiring detailed documentary evidence
supporting the need for the tower in the particular location sought
and by specifying required distances between towers, and between
towers and existing residences. The ordinance allowed construction
of towers in every zone on either a permitted or conditional use
basis. We are satisfied plaintiff failed to establish special
reasons to warrant grant of the variance.
Plaintiff also asserts that the Board's decision was
arbitrary, capricious and unreasonable. Plaintiff argues that the
Board's findings were "perfunctory" and "conclusory" and no
evidence was presented to contradict plaintiff's expert testimony
that no site would alleviate the problem with the setback
requirement. The Board was free, however, to accept or reject the
testimony of plaintiff's experts, and we are bound by its choice.
Kramer, supra, 45 N.J. at 288; Northeast Towers, Inc., supra, 327
N.J. Super. at 498.
As the trial judge observed, plaintiff's "expert's testimony
was conclusory, simply stating that the proposed site is the only
site to fulfill their needs and no other site was adequate." Olson
introduced mylar maps that he said demonstrated a half-mile gap in
coverage that would remain if plaintiff located its antenna on a
recently approved Bell Atlantic tower. However, he presented
neither reports nor calculations to support his conclusions, and no
evidence for the conclusion that wireless communications service
was unavailable or deficient in the gap area.
O'Connor testified only that he located the highest ground in
the OP zone, which was the Haltaway property, approached the owner,
obtained his consent, and leased the property. He thought he could
not find a lot that was not within 500 feet of a residence, but
offered no examples of alternate sites and the number of residences
that would be affected. He testified that placing the pole on a
site with an elevation lower than the Haltaway property would
require a higher pole. He provided no documentation, however,
explaining the alternatives of siting a higher pole on a lower
elevation that might be located beyond the 500-foot setback area.
Plaintiff's experts merely testified that the Haltaway property was
the one site that satisfied plaintiff's needs but made no effort to
justify their conclusions. Bedminster's telecommunication's
ordinance contained explicit requirements with respect to
documentary evidence of an applicant's search for a suitable site,
and the Board was not unreasonable in rejecting the testimony of
plaintiff's experts who made no effort to comply with those
provisions.
In short, the Board's factual findings that plaintiff
presented no documentary evidence concerning the gap in coverage,
or concerning its attempts to locate other, suitable locations that
either would be outside the 500-foot residential setback
requirement or impact fewer residences, is supported by the record.
Plaintiff also asserts that the Board "misunderstood the
positive criteria" by failing to acknowledge that plaintiff's
possession of an FCC license established that plaintiff had met its
burden concerning the positive criteria and, furthermore, because
the Board and the trial court "wrongfully determined" that
plaintiff must establish the negative criteria according to an
enhanced burden of proof.
In our view, it is necessary to distinguish the special
reasons standard to be applied when a telecommunications facility
requires a use variance from the standard applicable for a
conditional-use variance, such as the one here. For a use
variance to construct a telecommunications tower in a zone in which
it is prohibited, the positive criteria require a showing that 1)
the use serves the general welfare, and 2) the site is particularly
suitable for the proposed use. Smart SMR, supra, 152 N.J. at 331-
32. The existence of a FCC license satisfies only the first of
these criteria. Id. at 336. The applicant nonetheless must show
the site is particularly suited for the tower. Ibid.
On the other hand, the value of a conditional use to the
general public is implied by the municipality's determination that
the use should be permitted so long as it meets certain
requirements. Furthermore, in the absence of any deviation from
the enumerated conditions, the site is presumptively suitable. See
Exxon Co., USA v. Twp. of Livingston,
199 N.J. Super. 470, 477-78
(App. Div. 1985). However, we do not believe those presumptions
lessen the applicant's need to comply with the special reasons
standard set forth in Coventry Square, which focuses on the
deviation and its effect on the continued suitability of the site.
See Coventry Square, supra, 138 N.J. Super. at 298-99. We are
satisfied the Board engaged in the correct analysis in basing its
special needs determination on the magnitude of the deviation.
Plaintiff argues that with regard to its obligation to meet
the negative criteria the Board should have applied the balancing
test set forth in Sica, supra, 127 N.J. at 165-66, rather than
requiring it to meet the enhanced burden of Medici. Under Medici,
supra, 107 N.J. at 21, an applicant for a variance for a non-
inherently beneficial use must establish "by an enhanced quality of
proof" that the variance would not be inconsistent with the intent
and purpose of the master plan and zoning ordinance. In
instituting this standard, the Court in Medici was responding to
the practice whereby "expert testimony designed to satisfy the
negative criteria was being expressed as an incantation of the
statutory phrase." Id. at 22. The enhanced standard was designed
to ensure the negative criteria continued to act as "an essential
'safeguard' to prevent the improper exercise of the variance
power." Ibid.
The Court in Sica, supra, 127 N.J. at 164, recognized,
however, that both the statutory standard for the negative criteria
and the nature of an inherently beneficial use implied the need for
a balancing test. First, the legislatively established negative
criteria explicitly required the determination of whether the
variance would cause "substantial detriment to the public good,"
such that not every detriment would suffice to deny the variance.
Ibid. Second, in the absence of balancing, "a local board's
finding that an applicant has not satisfied the negative criteria
would always defeat an inherently beneficial use, no matter how
compelling the need for that use." Ibid. Consequently, the Court
suggested that with an inherently beneficial use, a board should
balance the positive and negative criteria by 1) identifying the
public interest at stake; 2) identifying the detrimental effect
that would ensue from granting the variance; 3) determining if the
detrimental effect could be reduced by the imposition of reasonable
conditions on the use; and 4) weighing the positive and negative
criteria to determine if, on balance, granting the variance would
cause substantial harm to the public good. Id. at 165-66.
In Smart SMR, supra, 152 N.J. at 332-33, the Court determined
that it would apply a balancing test to determine whether granting
a use variance to a telecommunications facility would satisfy the
negative criteria, notwithstanding its determination that such a
structure was not an inherently beneficial use. The Court
concluded the variance could be granted without substantial
detriment to the public good. Id. at 332. The Court found that a
"telecommunications facility is a paradigm for a use that serves a
greater community than the particular municipality" and,
furthermore, the facility in question would offer services
unavailable through existing cellular systems. Ibid. The
detrimental effects would be minimal because the tower would
produce no noise, vibrations, smoke, dust, odors, heat or glare,
and would require little or no municipal services. Id. at 333.
The pole would not substantially impair the zoning plan because,
although abutted on one side by residential zoning, the location
was zoned for industrial uses and surrounded on three sides by
industrial and commercial uses. Ibid.
Here, the Board's resolution stated that plaintiff had "not
demonstrated through an enhanced quality of proof that the
requested variance is not inconsistent with the intent and purpose
of the master plan and zoning ordinance." Further, the Board found
that "with or without applying such enhanced burden of proof" it
was unable to conclude the variance would not be inconsistent with
the purpose of the ordinance.
In our view, the Board's statement regarding the negative
criteria followed the directions in Coventry Square to focus the
negative criteria analysis on the deviation. Thus, the Board
determined that the variance could not be reconciled with the
municipality's previous determination that the 500-foot residence
setback should be imposed on all stand-alone towers. Coventry
Square, supra, 138 N.J. at 299. Further, plaintiff presented no
documentary evidence of its efforts to locate the tower on
properties where it would be 500 feet from the nearest residence
or, at least, affect fewer residences. The Board properly focused
its concern on the magnitude of the deviation as reflected by the
tower's proximity to the homes and the number of homes affected.
In short, the Board's conclusion that plaintiff failed to satisfy
the negative criteria was reasonably supported by the record.
Moreover, we need not determine whether the Sica's balancing
test should apply to the conditional use variance sought here.
Simply put, once the Board reasonably concluded that plaintiff
failed to establish both the positive criteria and the negative
criteria, there was nothing to balance. Both the positive criteria
and the negative criteria were on the same rejected side of the
scale.
III
Plaintiff contends that the denial of the variance violates
the Telecommunications Act of 1996. Specifically, plaintiff argues
that the denial of its "applications has 'the effect of prohibiting
the provision of personal wireless services' in and around the
Township, contrary to
47 U.S.C. §332(c)(7)(B)(i)(II)" and,
"constitutes an entry barrier in violation of 47
U.S.C.A. Section
253."
The Telecommunications Act provides:
(i) The regulation of the placement,
construction, and modification of personal
wireless service facilities by any State or
local government or instrumentality thereof_
(I) shall not unreasonably discriminate among
providers of functionally equivalent services;
and
(II) shall not prohibit or have the effect of
prohibiting the provision of personal wireless
services.
[
47 U.S.C.A.
§332(c)(7)(B).]
However, the Act also provides: "Except as provided in [
47 U.S.C.A.
§332(c)(7)], nothing in this chapter shall limit or affect the
authority of a State or local government or instrumentality thereof
over decisions regarding the placement, construction, and
modification of personal wireless service facilities."
47 U.S.C.A.
§332(c)(7)(A).
The trial judge rejected plaintiff's contention that the
denial of its application violated the Telecommunications Act
because it found that, by itself, the mere denial of plaintiff's
single application did not indicate that the ordinance violates the
statute.
Our Supreme Court has recognized that certain restrictions
imposed by the Telecommunications Act parallel those already found
in New Jersey law, including the requirement that an agency's
decision be supported by sufficient evidence in the record.
Smart
SMR,
supra, 152
N.J. at 326. The Court acknowledged that the Act
nonetheless imposed two further limitations on local authority,
namely, the right to challenge the decision of a local land use
agency in federal court and the restriction that a municipality
could not prohibit the construction of telecommunications
facilities in the town, although it could continue to regulate
their location.
Id. at 326-27.
The record as developed is barren of evidence to establish
that the Board's decision had the effect of prohibiting wireless
service in the area. We recognize that in
Cellular Tel. Co. v.
Zoning Bd. of Adjustment of the Bor. of Ho-Ho-Kus,
197 F.3d 64, 70
(3d Cir. 1999), the court concluded that local zoning policies and
decisions have the effect of prohibiting wireless communication
services if they result in 'significant gaps' in the availability
of wireless services." A significant gap could be demonstrated by
evidence that "a remote user of [the] services is unable either to
connect with the land-based national telephone network, or to
maintain a connection capable of supporting a reasonably
uninterrupted communication."
Ibid. The court observed that the
Board never determined whether significant gaps in coverage
existed, and the plaintiffs had presented "substantial, unrefuted
evidence" that callers might be able to achieve a connection from
a particular location, but conversation would be difficult and
"virtually impossible for users of the hand-held portable phones
that dominate the market today."
Id. at 74.
Unlike in
Ho-Ho-Kus, which involved three different carriers,
here only one is involved. Moreover, plaintiff's evidence did not
focus on whether the denial of its application would result in
significant gaps in the availability of wireless service. Although
there was reference in the record to the Bell Atlantic tower which
the Board had previously approved, the evidence did not establish
whether the mobile telephone service through Bedminster/Route 206
corridor was poor or nonexistent. Further, we note that in
Ho-Ho-
Kus, the applicants presented experts who used an industry standard
scale of one to five to rate the quality of existing wireless
services for car phones and hand-held phones in the Borough.
Id.
at 73-74.
At oral argument, counsel for the applicant and counsel for
the Board each recognized that the evidence before the Board did
not focus on whether significant gaps in coverage existed. Each
expressed that a remand might be appropriate to determine whether
the denial of plaintiff's application constituted an act of
prohibition. The court in
Ho-Ho-Kus cautioned that "as the
Telecommunications Act itself dictates, local officials must always
ensure that neither their general policies nor their individual
decisions prohibit or have the effect of prohibiting personal wire
services."
Id. at 70.
In light of the deficiencies in the record regarding whether
the denial of this application results in substantial gaps of
coverages, we conclude the appropriate resolution is to remand the
matter to the Board so plaintiff and other interested parties may
offer expert testimony concerning this issue. We think it better
to take a cautious approach to insure that the Board's decision did
not conflict with the Telecommunications Act.
We add one final thought. Just as the court in
Ho-Ho-Kus
cautioned, even if the Board finds significant gaps in existing
service, "the providers still bear the burden of proving that the
proposed facility is the least intrusive means of filling those
gaps with a reasonable level of service."
Id. at 76.
The matter is affirmed in part and remanded to the Board for
further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Footnote: 1 1 This case, however, involves construction of a separate
tower facility.
Footnote: 2 2The underlined portion of this provision incorporates L.1997
c.145, effective June 30, 1997.