H.R. 2289 – A Congressional Bill To Preempt Local Authority and Waive Environmental and Historic Review for Cell Tower Expansion

H.R. 2289 – A Congressional Bill To Preempt Local Authority and Waive Environmental and Historic Review for Cell Tower Expansion

“These bills represent an unprecedented federal intrusion into established local decision-making processes, favoring large broadband, telecommunications, wireless, and cable companies at the expense of residents and taxpayers. These bills strip local governments of the ability to effectively manage the infrastructure built on local streets and in neighborhoods, while imposing no reciprocal obligations on providers.”

The American Public Power Association of not-for-profit, community-owned utilities submitted a letter in opposition to H.R. 278 which is now included in the text of H.R. 2289 opposing the strict 90-day shot clocks, “deemed granted” approvals, unclear denial standards, and fee limitations. The Association is advocating to preserve local control of the pole attachment process for public power utilities. 

Here’s What H.R. 2289 Would Do

1. Preemption of Local Control

2. Environmental and Historic Review Rollbacks

H.R. 2289 effectively removes review under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and the National Historic Preservation Act (NHPA) for “eligible facilities requests,” allowing many modifications and expansions of existing wireless infrastructure to proceed without environmental and historic review.

3. Missed Deadlines and Automatic Approvals

The bill imposes extremely short deadlines for processing cell tower and wireless facility applications and automatically approves (“deems granted”) applications if a city misses them. That means building, electrical, encroachment, environmental, and zoning reviews all must be completed within the same short window. Local governments cannot pause or slow applications, even during high-volume periods.

4. Limits on Local Fees

Cities and counties may charge only direct processing costs, not fair market rates or fees for long-term oversight or public impact.

5. Expanded Pre-emption for RF Health and Environmental Effects

“No State or local government… may regulate the operation, placement, construction, or modification of personal wireless service facilities on the basis of the environmental effects of radio frequency emissions, to the extent that such facilities… comply with the Commission’s regulations.”
—H.R. 2289 

What This Means:
The Bill states localities cannot consider cell tower RF radiation environmental impacts- which includes human health effects—as long as the wireless facility meets outdated FCC limits for allowable cell tower RF radiation exposure. This preemption applies to both placement and operation, eliminating one of the last remaining avenues for community control.

Opposition to Preemption by Local Governments

H.R. 2289 is essentially the same bill as H.R. 3357 that was proposed in 2023. It was halted due to widespread opposition, especially from local governments.

“As the level of government closest to the people, we oppose heavy-handed federal overreach into local land use, permitting, and franchise negotiation decisions. Congress has historically recognized these rights in Sections 224, 253, and 332 of the Telecommunications Act. These authorities are critical to conduct responsible stewardship of public property, protect public safety, and preserve the rights of residents as consumers of broadband services and neighbors to the infrastructure that makes connectivity possible.”