Orange County NC Website
Approved 3113117 <br />1 David Haughney: Yes, it will. And the plots show that. I disagree with his interpretation of it. As <br />2 you can see on the plots, we don't have them pulled up right now but... <br />3 <br />4 Samantha Cabe: It's on tab 7. <br />5 <br />6 David Haughney: Green and blue colors cover the entirety of Mount Carmel Church Road now, as <br />7 compared to without the site you see a lot of gray, black, and white, which are no service and <br />8 dropped calls. No service, and very poor service. And contrary to one thing they were saying, it is <br />9 all green and blue now on Mount Carmel. They conveniently drew a yellow line along that road, <br />10 which covered up the colors. That yellow line that was on their plot was not mine; they added that. <br />11 It covers up the colors on Mount Carmel. If you look at the plot without the yellow line you will see <br />12 that green and blue, it's complete coverage up and down the road. They only provide the only <br />13 connections we need to those surrounding sites. <br />14 <br />15 Barry Katz: So you're saying that actually smaller towers won't give you the same effective <br />16 coverage that this large tower will? <br />17 <br />18 David Haughney: Not at all. They cover very small footprints. <br />19 <br />20 Barry Katz: I understand, but it would mean not putting in one but... In your research you weren't <br />21 calculating how many small towers it would take to give the coverage that this large tower did and <br />22 what the cost benefits would be, etcetera? Was that part of your consideration? Or was your <br />23 consideration merely what will you get out of this 199 -foot tower? <br />24 <br />25 David Haughney: It's always a part of our consideration because we do deploy those <br />26 technologies, and it's just not practical and feasible, and it's not applied anywhere. There's no <br />27 example of a small cell or DAS network that's been spoken up to cover a huge, 4- square mile, <br />28 rural, sparse suburban, and that's what this area is. <br />29 <br />30 Samantha Cabe: Are those types of technologies typically used in more urban areas or higher <br />31 density areas like UNC where you're using them? <br />32 <br />33 David Haughney: Yes ma'am, we are using there and other places, airports, malls, arenas, we <br />34 have an installation inside the game dome, we have another DAS installation inside Keenan <br />35 Stadium, to handle that huge amount of capacity of a converging area. It's just not practical for <br />36 this kind of large, open, rural, and kind of light suburban mix area. And that's why another provider <br />37 in the past has proposed a similar solution and it's come to my attention, I don't know if it's been <br />38 submitted but, another service provider is interested in... has noted interest in signing on to this <br />39 tower. But no service provider has... in the record whatsoever has proposed what they're talking <br />40 about for this area. <br />41 <br />42 Matt Hughes: And I believe most of what you just mentioned you covered in our previous... <br />43 <br />44 David Haughney: It is sir, I believe that most of what we're talking about is covered in both the <br />45 written and previous statements. Yes sir. <br />46 <br />47 Barry Katz: I understand. I've got a question for Mr. Harvey. The Mount Carmel Church Road, part <br />48 of it, certainly the area where the cell tower would be, is in the rural buffer? <br />49 <br />50 Michael Harvey: Yes sir. <br />OC Board of Adjustment — 12/12/16 Page 126 of 156 <br />