OPINION
Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56, plaintiff Smart SMR of New York, Inc., d/b/a Nextel Communications, (“Nextel”) moves for summary judgment on all counts of its complaint. For the reasons discussed below, plaintiffs motion.(Document # 8) is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part.
BACKGROUND.
Nextel has been authorized by the Federal Communications Commission to construct and operate a digital mobile radio system in Connecticut in order to provide wide-area digital specialized mobile radio services (“SMR Services”). Nextel commenced this action after the Zoning Commission of the Town of Stratford (the “Commission”) denied its petition for a special case permit to install a personal wireless service facility on an existing 110 foot tall steel lattice tower (the “Existing Tower”). The Existing Tower is located on a ten acre parcel, in a one-family residential zoning district (“RS-1 District”), owned by Wilma and Petro Fedorko (together, the “Fedorkos”). The Existing Tower is currently used as a windmill. Nextel entered into a lease agreement with the Fedorkos to modify the Existing Tower, by replacing the windmill rotors with a personal wireless service facility, and to place an unmanned equipment cabinet at the tower’s base which would be concealed by mature evergreen trees.
After securing the lease with the Fedorkos, Nextel applied for a special case permit from the Commission on April 18,1997. The Commission held a public hearing on May 20, 1997 to consider Nextel’s application, and it voted on the petition at a meeting held on June 9, 1997. In a letter dated June 12, 1997, Nextel was informed that the Commission had denied its petition.
Nextel now moves for summary judgment claiming that the Commission’s denial of its special case petition violated the Telecommunications Act of 1996, Pub.L. 104-104, 110 Stat. 56 (the “Telecommunications Act” or the “Act”) (Counts One-Seven and Count Ten) and the Commerce Clause (Count Eight). Nextel further argues that it was deprived of its federally guaranteed rights as protected by 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (Count Nine). Finally, Nextel alleges that the Commission’s denial was arbitrary and capricious under Connecticut state law (Count Eleven).
DISCUSSION
A court may grant summary judgment only if it determines that there is no genuine issue-of material fact based on a review of the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, admissions on file, and affidavits. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). The moving party bears the burden of demonstrating the absence of a genuine issue of material fact.
Adickes v. S.H. Kress & Co.,
This Court finds that summary judgment is appropriate because the material facts of this case are not in dispute. 1 The parties *56 have submitted the record from the Stratford Zoning Commission (“Return of Record”), including a copy of Nextel’s petition for a special case permit, the Commission’s letter to Nextel informing it that its petition was denied, the transcript of the May 20 public hearing on Nextel’s petition, the minutes of the Commission’s meeting on June 9 at which Nextel’s application was considered, and a copy of Stratford’s zoning regulations.
I. TELECOMMUNICATIONS ACT
Nextel asserts that the Commission’s denial of its petition for a special case permit violated several provisions of the Telecommunications Act. Specifically, Nextel contends that the Commission’s denial: (a) was not supported by substantial evidence contained in a written record (Counts One and Ten); (b) prohibited or had the effect of prohibiting the provision of Nextel’s personal wireless services (Count Two); (c) was wrongfully based on considerations of the environmental effects of radio frequency emissions (Count Three); (d) unreasonably discriminated against Nextel (Count Four); (e) was a wrongful entry barrier (Count Five); and (f) prohibited or had the effect of prohibiting Nextel’s ability to provide interstate or intrastate telecommunications services (Count Six).
Congress passed the Act in order to increase competition in the telecommunications industry. Although the Act does not “completely preempt the authority of state and local governments to make decisions regarding the placement of wireless communications service facilities within their borders, it does impose some limitations.”
BellSouth Mobility, Inc. v. Gwinnett County, Georgia,
A. Counts One and Ten
Pursuant to section 332(c)(7)(B)(iii), if a local zoning authority denies a request to install a personal wireless service facility, the denial must be in writing and it must be “supported by substantial evidence contained in a written record.”. The substantial evidence standard is the traditional means of reviewing agency actions.
BellSouth,
local governments may not mask hostility to wireless communications facilities with unreasoned denials that make only vague references to applicable legal standards. The procedural requirement of a written decision with articulated reasons based on record evidence forces local governments to rely on supportable neutral principles if they wish to deny a particular wireless installation.
Id. at 860. If the written decision does not set forth the zoning authority’s rationale, this “ground alone is sufficient to quash the [zoning authority’s] decision.” Id. at 859.
Here, the Commission informed Nextel that its petition had been denied in a letter dated June 12, 1997. Return of Record, Item 4. In pertinent part, the letter provides:
[t]his is to officially notify you that at a meeting of the Zoning Commission held June 9, 1997 it was voted to deny your petition for approval as a Special Case *57 under Section 20 of the Zoning Regulations as required by Section 4.1.7 in order to install a telephone exchange for wireless communications on property located in an RS-1 District, at 630 James Farm Road.
Id.
The Commission contends that its reasons for its decision to deny Nextel’s application are set forth in the hearing transcript of May 9,1997 and in the minutes of a Commission administrative session held June 9,1997. In
AT&T Wireless PCS, Inc. v. City Council of Virginia Beach,
By failing to provide reasons for its decision, the Commission places the burden on this Court to wade through the record below in an attempt to discern the Commission’s rationale. Because the Commission’s June 12 letter did no more than inform Nextel that its petition had been denied, we find that the Commission violated section 332(c)(7)(B)(iii).
See Orange County,
B. Count Two
Nextel argues that the Commission violated section 332(c)(7)(JB)(i)(II) because the denial of its petition had the effect of prohibiting the provision of personal wireless services in the northern portion of Stratford. A zoning commission’s decision does not prohibit or have the effect of prohibiting the provision of personal wireless services merely because it grants a competitor’s permit and denies the plaintiff’s permit. In
Virginia Beach,
the court interpreted section 332(c)(7)(B)(i)(II) as limiting “general bans or policies that prohibit or have the effect of prohibiting the provision of personal wireless services.”
For Nextel to prevail under section 332(c)(7)(B)(i)(II), it must be demonstrated that the Commission has a general policy against granting special case permits for personal wireless service facilities in residential areas.
Virginia Beach,
[a] telephone exchange transformer substation, sewer or water pumping station, water tank, standpipe, water supply reservoir or reservation, bus waiting room or similar public utility use with no outside storage or supplies, provided that the Zoning Commission finds that such use is necessary within the residence district in which it is located and that the proposed architecture and landscaping are in harmony with the character of the neighborhood.
Return of Record, Item 14, Stratford Zoning Regulations 8 4.1.7. Section 4.1.7 therefore requires a potential wireless service provider to apply for a special case permit for the “approval of any use not provided for or allowed by these regulations.” Return of Record, Item 14, Stratford Zoning Regulations 8 20.1.
We find that Nextel has established that the Commission unreasonably based the denial of its petition on general opposition to allowing personal wireless service facilities in RS-1 Districts. In the Commission’s brief, it *58 asserts that “[t]he fact that the Premise is located in an RS-1 district, provides a substantial and objectively justifiable basis for the denial of the Petition since the regulations do not authorize a commercial communications tower in an RS-1 district. On its face, the use is not harmonious with the district.” Def.’s Mem. at 8-9. The Commission further argues that “[t]he Zoning Regulations do not give any authorization to the Commission to locate a commercial communications tower in an RS-1 zoning district. Thus, the fact that the Plaintiff wanted to place ... its wireless antennas on the particular site in the RS-1 district provided a substantial basis for the denial.” Def.’s Mem. at 10. Contrary to the Commission’s contentions, however, the proposed placement of Nextel’s facility in an RS-1 District means only that Nextel required the Commission’s approval as set forth in the guidelines of sections 4.1.7 and 20.2.1 of the Stratford Zoning Regulations.
The Commission’s general bias against granting applications for the placement of personal wireless service facilities in residential districts was also apparent at the May 20 and June 9 meetings. During the May 20 public hearing, there was a discussion about the commercial nature of Nextel’s proposed facility between Commission member Youngquist and Gary Muciano, an architect who testified on Nextel’s behalf. Return of Record, Item 12, at 10-11. Muciano agreed with Member Youngquist that Nextel’s proposed use would be commercial. Member Youngquist expressed concern that Nextel might require additional facilities to ensure seamless coverage of its SMR Services. She stated, “So we could have one of these every two miles all through Stratford, is [that] what you’re saying? Oh, that should be fun.” Id. at 11. After Robert Bertona, a Nextel engineer explained that the town’s topography might require Nextel to install additional facilities, Member Youngquist stated, “So this is only the first of many.” Id.
At the June 9 meeting at which the Commission voted on Nextel’s petition, the minutes indicate that Member Hess “stated he feels this is a commercial venture in an RS-1 District.” Return of Record, Item 13, at 14. Member Pitcher also stated “that the windmill could be considered residential but the tower is commercial.” Id. Lastly, the planning department comments, submitted to the Commission before the May 20 public hearing, state that the “Town has no wireless master plan.... It would be preferable to limit the impacts of this use on this residential neighborhood, since the use is becoming more commercial in nature.” Return of Record, Item 8, at 1.
By generally disfavoring the approval of placing personal wireless service facilities in all residential zones, and instead of adhering to a policy whereby the Commission would consider each such petition on a case-by-case basis, we therefore find that the Commission’s policy had the effect of prohibiting the provision of personal wireless services.
See County of Peona,
C. Count Three
Pursuant to section 332(c)(7)(B)(iv), the Commission cannot regulate the placement of Nextel’s proposed facility on the basis of the “environmental effects of radio fi*equency emissions.” The record does not support Nextel’s position that a discussion of the safety of emissions which allegedly took place at the June 9 hearing necessarily means that the Commission directly or indirectly based its denial on this factor. As Nextel concedes, a local authority does not violate the Act for merely inquiring into the safety of emissions from a wireless facility. PL’s Reply Mem. at 14. While Nextel was questioned about the safety of emissions at the May 20 public hearing, there is no indication that these concerns were a factor in the Commission’s decision. Indeed as plaintiff notes, at the June 9 meeting, Commission members stated that they should not use emission safety concerns as a reason for denying Nextel’s position. Georgiou Aff. ¶ 6. Accordingly, we find that the Commission did not violate section 332(c)(7)(B)(iv), and we therefore deny Nextel’s summary judgment motion on Count Three.
*59 D. Count Four
Count Four of the complaint alleges violation of section 332(c)(7)(B)(i)(I) which prohibits zoning authorities from unreasonably discriminating among providers of functionally equivalent services in the regulation of the placement, construction, and modification of personal wireless service facilities. Nextel argues that in order for it to compete with other providers, it must install a personal wireless service facility on the Existing Tower on the Fodorkos’ property to remedy gaps in its SMR Service. Nextel also asserts that the Commission unreasonably discriminated against it by granting Bell Atlantic NYNEX Mobile’s (“BANM”) petition for special case approval. On December 11, 1996, the Commission approved BANM’s application to install a personal wireless service facility on an existing billboard in Stratford located in an “MA District,” which is a light industrial district. Compl. Ex. C.
The Commission’s act of granting BANM’s application and denying Nextel’s petition is not in itself actionable.
Virginia Beach,
We find that the Commission unreasonably discriminated against Nextel because it did not have a legitimate basis for denying Nextel’s special case petition. According to section 4.1.7 of the Stratford Zoning Regulations, a personal wireless service facility must be necessary within the relevant residential district, and the proposed architecture and landscaping must be in harmony with the neighborhood’s character. Return of-Record, Item 14. Also, section 20.2.1 sets forth criteria and objectives for the Commission to consider when reviewing applications for special ease permits. Id.
Nextel’s petition is unusual because it did not involve the construction of a lattice tower on which to place its wireless service facility. Instead, Nextel merely sought to modify the Existing Tower. General aesthetic and visual concerns are therefore only an issue with regard to the modifications to the Existing Tower, and not the Existing Tower itself. Moreover, Nextel provided ample evidence indicating that its modifications to the Existing Tower would complement the neighborhood’s character, more so than did the Existing Tower’s windmill rotors. As part of its application, Nextel provided the Commission with simulated photographs of the Existing Tower with the wireless service facility as compared to the Existing Tower with windmill rotors. Return of Record, Item 1, Ex. F. The facility consists of three “whip” antennas which are approximately fifteen feet in height and three inches in diameter. According to Nextel, the whip antennas would be less visible from the surrounding neighborhood than the windmill rotors because the antennas have a sky-like finish. Nextel further asserts that the unmanned equipment cabinet which would be located at the tower’s base would be concealed by seven evergreen trees.
The Commission raised several concerns about Nextel’s proposed modifications at the May 20 and June 9 meetings, including the commercial-residential distinction and safety, visual, and aesthetic issues. As previously discussed, the Commission cannot rely on the commercial nature of Nexte'l’s facility as a substantial basis for its decision. With respect to safety, Nextel assured the Commission at the May 20 public hearing that the unmanned cabinet would be secure. Return of Record, Item 12, at. 8-9, 13. Nextel also stated that the internal telecommunications equipment works on low voltage, and therefore would not present any risk of harm.
During the June 9 meeting, Member Youngquist stated that “she feels this windmill tower is obtrusive to the area and the new proposal for the communications equipment to be obtrusive.”. Return of Record, Item 13, at 4. As mentioned above, however, *60 the visual and aesthetic concerns of the Existing Tower are not issues for the Commission because the Commission approved the construction of the Existing Tower in 1983 when it considered the Fedorkos’ application. Additionally, Nextel stated that the equipment cabinet’s exterior would be covered with material matching the Fedorkos’ house. Return of Record, Item 12, at 12. Nextel would also conceal the equipment cabinet by planting seven evergreen trees. The Commission found these exact measures acceptable when it granted BANM’s special case petition. Compl. Ex. C. Thus, the Commission’s visual and aesthetic concerns of the modifications to the Existing Tower lack a legitimate basis.
Lastly, at the June 9 meeting, Member Youngquist also stated that the truck use on the road to the Fedorkos’ property would have a “negative impact.” This concern has no legitimate basis because the Police Department found that Nextel’s proposed modifications to the Existing Tower, would not create any traffic congestion because the facility would be serviced by one serviceperson on a monthly basis. Return of Record, Item 8.
Without a legitimate basis for its decision, we find that the Commission unreasonably discriminated against Nextel.
See Town of Easton,
II. COMMERCE CLAUSE
In Count Eight of the complaint, Nextel contends that the Commission violated the Commerce Clause by discriminating against and placing an undue burden on interstate commerce. U.S. Const, art. I, § 8, cl. 3;
see South-Central. Timber Dev., Inc. v. Wunnicke,
There is no evidence in the record that suggests Stratford’s zoning regulations benefitted in-state economic interests and burdened out-of-state economic interests. Id. Stratford’s zoning regulations are therefore nondiseriminatory and will be valid unless “the burden imposed on [interstate] commerce is clearly excessive in relation to the putative local benefits.” Id. (citation omitted). Plaintiff does not articulate how the Commission’s denial of its special case petition operated to confer local benefits, such as if the Commission had granted permits of instate personal wireless service providers to the exclusion of national or out-of-state applicants. Because the Commission’s denial of Nextel’s petition did not impose a burden on interstate commerce that is clearly excessive in relation to the supposed local benefits, we find that the Commission did not violate the Commerce Clause. Accordingly, plaintiff’s summary judgment motion on Count Eight is denied.
III. SECTION 1983
Count Nine of the complaint alleges deprivation of Nextel’s federally guaranteed rights in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1983. To state a claim under section 1983, a plaintiff must prove that the defendant, acting under the color of state law, deprived the plaintiff of a right secured by the Constitution and laws of the United States.
West v. Atkins,
If a plaintiff’s cause of action is not based on a Constitutional violation, the plaintiff must assert the violation of a federal right, and not merely a federal statutory violation.
Blessing v. Freestone,
A cause of action under section 1983 is not available to aggrievéd plaintiffs if “the federal statute at issue implicitly or explicitly precludes a § 1983 action.”
Town of Easton,
In
Town of Easton,
the court analyzed whether a personal communications services provider could base its section 1983 claim on alleged violations of the Telecommunications Act.
' Because we agree with the court’s reasoning in
Town of Easton,
we find that a section 1983 elaim-is available to Nextel. As a local zoning board, the Commission acted under the color of state law.
Id.
n. 4;
see Atkins,
IY. CONNECTICUT STATE LAW ,
Count Eleven of the complaint alleges that the Commission’s denial of Nextel’s petition for a special case permit was arbitrary and capricious under Connecticut law. When reviewing the decision of a local zoning authority, this Court must determine if the agency acted unreasonably, arbitrarily or illegally, or abused its discretion.
Ottochian v. Freedom of Information Comm’n,
When considering Nextel’s application for a special case permit, the Commission was required to determine whether the proposed use of the Existing Tower conformed to the requirements in section 4.1.7 of the Stratford Zoning Regulations.
See A.P. & W. Holding Corp. v. Planning and Zoning Board of Milford,
V. REMEDIES
Based on the Commission’s arbitrary and capricious denial of Nextel’s special ease petition, this Court declares that the denial as set forth in the June 12 letter is null and void. The Commission is also ordered to approve Nextel’s special ease petition “under such terms and conditions as the [commission] might reasonably prescribe.”
Mobil Oil Corp. v. Zoning Comm’n,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, plaintiffs summary judgment motion (Document # 8) is GRANTED on Counts One, Two, Four, and Ten, (Telecommunications Act), Nine (section 1983), and Eleven (Connecticut state law). We also DENY plaintiff’s summary judgment motion on Counts Three (Telecommunications Act) and Eight (Commerce Clause). 2
An injunction is hereby entered ordering the Commission to grant Nextel’s application for a special ease permit within twenty (20) days. The Clerk of the Court is directed to enter judgment in Nextel’s favor.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The Commission submitted a Local Rule 9(c)(2) statement setting forth the material facts as to which it contends there exist genuine issues tó be tried. Contrary to the Commission's assertion, the substance of the Commission's 9(c)(2) slatement relates'only “to interpretation of the legal standards involved and not the material facts themselves.”
Sprint Spectrum L.P. v. Town of Easton,
. We decline to rule on the merits of Counts Five and Six of Nextel’s complaint alleging violations of sections 332(c)(3) and 253(a) of the Telecommunications Act because we find that Nextel is entitled to relief for the violations of section 332(c)(7), and neither section 332(c)(3) nor section 253(a) would provide Nextel with any relief different than that to which it is entitled under section 332(c)(7). Moreover, neither party addressed these claims in their summary judgment papers. For similar reasons, we decline to address the merits of Count Seven which asserts that the Commission frustrated the purpose behind the Telecommunications Act and the rules and regulations promulgated by the Federal Communications Commission.
