
Plans for higher phone mast in Yorkshire Dales national park
A phone mast in the Yorkshire Dales is set to increase in height to improve mobile coverage in the area. The 15m (50ft) tower, near Low Row in Swaledale, would be extended by 5m if the proposal is approved. In plans submitted to the Yorkshire Dales National Park Authority, new antennas would be added to the mast at Gallows Top as part of the shared rural network scheme.The scheme is a government project to allow the UK's four mobile operators EE, O2, Three and Vodafone to share equipment.
According to the Local Democracy Reporting Service, the mast is already used as part of the emergency services network, with engineers proposing to move these antennas to the top of the new extension to improve signal.Teligent Telecom, which submitted the application, said the upgrade would "negate the need for an additional structure within the vicinity".
Documents stated: "It meets the criteria for sustainability; the provision of adequate telecommunications infrastructure allows people to work from home, access services, aids social inclusion and encourages investment within the national park."The extension and additional equipment have been sensitively designed and are the minimum necessary for the successful deployment of the shared rural network."The company acknowledged the increased height meant the structure would be visible across a wider area but the lattice structure would allow views through it.Teligent Telecom added: "The proposal would result in a moderate magnitude of visual change within the national park and any harm should be weighed against the considerable public benefit generated by the provision of the shared rural network rollout in this area."
Listen to highlights from North Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Record
5 hours ago
- Daily Record
Reliable UK mobile networks for shoppers, including EE and Lyca after Three issues
If you've been affected by the Three downtime and are considering looking elsewhere, these two networks have branded one of the most reliable With Three experiencing a serious outage on Wednesday, thousands of customers were left unable to make or receive calls, or send messages. The service has now been restored to "near-normal levels" according to a statement from Three, but that's still left a lot of angry customers. If the downtime has left you thinking about switching, you might be wondering which is the most reliable mobile phone network in the UK? According to Rootmetrics, an independent mobile analytics firm, EE is the most reliable network in the UK. The data comes from the second half of 2024, but sees EE as the best network overall, leading in Rootmetric's scoring. That scoring assesses reliability, accessibility, speed, data, calls, text and video, with EE sitting in the top spot and Vodafone coming in second in UK-wide performance. For those Three customers wondering how their network came out, the Rootmetrics data sees Three's scores declining slightly from the first half of 2024 in terms of overall performance, with the company in third place from the big four networks. EE summer sale EE is currently offering a range of summer deals, including unlimited data SIMs from £24 a month, the iPhone 16 from £43 a month or the Pixel 9 Pro from under £40 a month, both with 5GB data on a 24-month contract. Note that in these deals there's £30 upfront and the phone payments are spread across 36 months, separate from the SIM tariff. If those prices sound a little high, then there's another way to access EE's service through a virtual network. Lyca Mobile runs on the EE network, where you can get a 30GB data, unlimited UK calls and texts and 100 international minutes, for £9 a month on a 12-month contract. Switching is now incredibly easy, all shoppers have to do is send the word "PAC" to 65075 and the switching process will be started. Once you receive the PAC code, you'll pass that over to your new network and that's it. If you're planning to stick with Three, the company is undergoing transformation as the newly merged Vodafone Three network. That's going to bring together Three and Vodafone and should result in customers getting better network access. When Vodafone Three was announced recently, the company said that millions of customers would get a 4G speed boost "within just two weeks", but it seems that instead those customers were faced with no connectivity instead. In the longer term, Three customers will benefit from Vodafone's existing network with plans to invest £11bn in infrastructure and in the next couple of months, Three customers will be able to use Vodafone's network to boost their own connection. Currently, it hasn't been confirmed what caused the Three network problems on 25 June.


BBC News
12 hours ago
- BBC News
Dorset's best phone coverage found by bin lorries
An area's best mobile phone coverage providers have been found in a street-by-street survey by bin Council is the latest authority to use devices on waste vehicles to check signal results have been published in an online checker, where users can enter their postcode to find data for the four main council said a previous tool promoted by communications regulator Ofcom was not accurate, while mobile phone company websites could not always be relied on. Thirty-two food waste collection trucks surveyed 2,400 miles of roads, the council vehicles carried equipment from technology firm Streetwave to check coverage by EE, O2, Three and Vodafone, as well as download found less than half of the area had good signal strength, whereas Ofcom put the figure at 90%, the council said. The BBC checked data for its office in rated coverage as "likely" for all four companies, while Streetwave described the signal strength from two providers as "poor".Dorset Council's project leader Gary Littledyke said Ofcom used data from computer simulations, whereas Streetwave took a snapshot of actual signal strength on the day of said: "It's not foolproof, but it gives an indication of likelihood. We will continue to gather data during the pilot."If you go on to the coverage checker of any provider's website, it will largely tell you everything is fine, whereas we know that's not the case in Dorset."Dorset councillor Richard Biggs, in charge of economic growth, said: "We have known for many years that the mobile coverage data provided by Ofcom does not give an accurate picture for Dorset."This checker... will help us lobby the government and suppliers for better coverage in areas we know are currently struggling."Ofcom said: "We're working to overhaul our mobile coverage checker, which we will relaunch very soon with new and improved data to better reflect what people can expect."The Streetwave postcode coverage checker can be accessed via this link, while Ofcom's tool is available here. You can follow BBC Dorset on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram.


BBC News
a day ago
- BBC News
Yorkshire Dales approves ban for new properties as holiday lets
Rules to prevent new houses in the Yorkshire Dales from being used as holiday homes have been Yorkshire Dales National Park Authority (YDNPA) is proposing that any new housing must be used as the occupier's permanent to the 2021 census, around 22% of up to 13,100 homes in the park area were either vacant, holiday lets or second Twine, chairman of YDNPA, said that was an "exceptionally high level of under-occupied housing" when compared to a national average of 6%. "Everyone would recognise that house building must be done particularly sensitively in a national park [and] we've worked hard to identify and allocate land for development," he said."What our Local Plan policy for permanent occupancy means is that on sites of two or more dwellings, new homes will be restricted to principal occupancy only."This will avoid loss to the holiday market and ensure that new homes are lived in by people who can be socially and economically active in local communities, which is what we need."At a meeting at the YDNPA headquarters in Bainbridge on Tuesday, members agreed to submit the new Local Plan - which would run until 2040 - for approval to the government's Planning authority also formally adopted a set of objectives for an updated management plan, which include an aim to reduce the proportion of so-called under-occupied homes in the park to fewer than 20% by to the Local Democracy Reporting Service, it is hoped North Yorkshire Council's premium on council tax for second homes will work with the new occupancy restriction to help meet this target. The management plan aims to guide the work of all the organisations that operate in the national park during the next five Twine added: "The Yorkshire Dales National Park Management Plan is a genuine partnership plan."It sets out an ambitious – but necessary – programme of work to which many local organisations have committed their support."Whilst it rightly focuses on tackling the challenges of climate change and the continuing decline in nature, it also identifies other opportunities to foster the social and economic wellbeing of local communities, by setting out objectives for more affordable housing, hyper-fast broadband access, and support for viable farming businesses."Mr Twine said he hoped that with each five-year review, the management plan would become more embedded in the culture of all organisations working in the park. Listen to highlights from North Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.