A ‘FURORE’ has erupted over plans for a new telecommunications tower which locals have branded “visually intrusive”.

EE (UK) Limited is seeking conditional permission to erect a 17.5-metre-high telecoms mast on land north of Bushes Wood and east of Parmoor Lane, in Frieth.

The brown “pole type” mast will be part of the Home Office-led Emergency Services Network (ESN) to address “gaps in network coverage”, according to council documents.

READ MORE: Leisure centre swimming pool to be replaced after 'subsidence'

ESNs are critical communications systems for police, fire and rescue, ambulance services and a range of other users from local authorities to utility services, according to a government website.

The structure will be mounted on a concrete base within a fenced compound. The fencing will have “screen planting” on three sides.

The mast will bear two satellite dishes and antennas at the top will be concealed within a “shroud”. There will also be a ground-mounted dish at the base.

Ancillary equipment cabinets and a back-up power generator are also planned.

Cllr Chris Whitehead called in the application. He said Hambleden Parish Council and locals feel the mast “would be visually intrusive on the landscape”.

READ MORE: Garden you can ‘EAT and HEAR’ could be coming to Wycombe

“If a public consultation had been held, the interested parties would have been able to help identify potential sites, and we wouldn’t have the furore that we have now,” he said.

The parish council said it ‘strongly objects’ to the application. Adding: “The proposed site is a highly inappropriate location.”

More than 40 other objections have been submitted.

The nearest existing telecommunications mast is in Fining Wood.

The matter is due for debate during a West Buckinghamshire Area Planning Committee, on Tuesday, February 2.

We’ve launched a new Facebook group for local news junkies, politics fans and everyone who wants to keep up to date with the latest issues affecting Frieth. Please join the conversation over at Buckinghamshire Politics