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COMMUNICATIONS TOWER: NOT A 'PUBLIC UTILITY'.
Earl Township v. Reading Broadcasting, Inc., 770 A 2d 794 (Pa.
Commw. March 29, 2001).
Note: Appeal Denied Owner of proposed tower for television broadcasting and wireless communication
service claimed to be exempt from local zoning regulations as a "public
utility". The court ruled that private corporations providing wireless
communication services are not generally considered 'public utilities'
and are subject to zoning regulations. Under the PUC Code, providers
of mobile domestic cellular radio telecommunications services, even
though regulated by the FCC, are excluded from the definition of public
utility. In this case, a television broadcaster, transmitting paging
and radio telephone signals as part of its television broadcasting signals,
claimed to be a "common carrier" and therefore a Public utility under
the Township's zoning ordinance. The court found that the proposed use
was not a public utility for the purpose of zoning regulations because
its principal business was television broadcasting.
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