2020/02/13 Planning Commission Resolution
PLANNING COMMISSION RESOLUTION NO. 2020-01
A RESOLUTION OF THE PLANNING COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF ROHNERT
PARK RECOMMENDING TO THE CITY COUNCIL AMENDMENTS TO
MUNICIPAL CODE TITLE 17, ZONING TO MODIFY TELECOMMUNICATIONS
REGULATIONS
WHEREAS, City staff have filed Planning Application No. PLMC20-0003 proposing
changes to the Rohnert Park Municipal Code (“RPMC”) to amend Section 17.07.020 (Footnotes)
to add subsection E (Wireless Communication Facilities) and to delete repeal subsection F
(Communication Facilities) and replace with subsection F (Amateur Radio Service Installations;
WHEREAS, the proposed changes to Title 17 Zoning are consistent with the goals,
policies, and implementation measures in the General Plan;
WHEREAS, the proposed changes to Title 17 Zoning are attached hereto as Exhibit A;
WHEREAS, pursuant to California State Law and the Rohnert Park Municipal Code, a
public notice was published in the Community Voice for a minimum of 10 days prior to the first
public hearing;
WHEREAS, on January 23, 2020 the Planning Commission held a public hearing at which
time interested persons had an opportunity testify either in support of or opposition to the proposal;
and
WHEREAS; the Planning Commission continued the public hearing to February 13,
2020 to consider additional information provided at the January 23, 2020 meeting and to allow
an additional opportunity for interested person to testify either in support of or opposition to the
proposal.
WHEREAS; the Planning Commission has reviewed and considered the information
contained in Planning Application No. PLMC20-0003 for the proposed amendments to Title 17
Zoning of the Municipal Code.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the Planning Commission of the City
of Rohnert Park makes the following findings, determinations and recommendations with respect
to the proposed revisions to Sections 17.07.020.N – Footnotes: E (Wireless Communication
Facilities) and F (Amateur Radio Service Installations), based on the entire record of the
proceeding, including the oral and written staff reports and all oral and written testimony and
comments.
Section 1. The above recitations are true and correct.
Section 2. Findings. The Planning Commission hereby makes the following findings
concerning Sections 17.07.020 – Footnotes of the Municipal Code:
1. That the proposed amendments to the Municipal Code are consistent with the
General Plan 2020.
Criteria Satisfied. The proposed amendments to the Municipal Code are consistent
with the General Plan 2020 Goals and Policies, as follows:
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Reso 2020-01
• Goal CD-E (Preserve and enhance the visual character of scenic
corridors). By reducing potential visual clutter through camouflaging
techniques, height limitation, co-location requirement and other methods,
the telecommunications regulation implement this goal as much as
possible under the limitation for federal and state law.
• HS-23 (Prepare and disseminate information to help households prepare
for emergency situations). Telecommunications equipment are extremely
important for communication in emergencies – as demonstrated by recent
fires. The new regulations help streamline the approval process for new
facilities in a sensible fashion. Additional facilities will be helpful to the
public when seeking information in emergencies.
2. That the proposed amendment to the Zoning Ordinance will be beneficial to the
public health, safety or welfare.
Criteria Satisfied. The proposed amendments to the Municipal Code strike a
balance between the need for new telecommunication facilities and the visual impact,
and potential health and safety impacts of these facilities. The facilities are
increasingly needed for communications of the public and for communicating to the
public in emergencies. The regulations have radio frequency (RF) safety requirements
that will ensure that the facilities are compliance with FCC limits. Thorough testing is
required. The regulations require that the visual impact of new facilities are
considered. New regulatory tools are included in the code update to control where
new facilities are located. The code avoids provisions that would directly, or
indirectly limit the necessary provision of telecommunication services.
Section 3. Environmental Review
No California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) analysis is required for this
resolution. The proposed resolution is not a project under CEQA pursuant to CEQA
Guidelines section 15061(b)(3) (the activity is covered by the general rule that CEQA
applies only to projects which have the potential for causing a significant effect on the
environment), in that it can be seen with certainty that there is no possibility that the
adoption of this ordinance will result in a significant effect on the environment,
because the proposed ordinance establishes a comprehensive permitting scheme and
does not authorize any specific development or installation, and in the alternative,
pursuant to Sections 15301 (Existing Facilities, which allows alteration of existing
public or private structures, facilities, mechanical equipment, or topographical
features, involving negligible or no expansion of use), 15303 (New Construction or
Conversion of Small Structures, which allows the construction and location of new,
small facilities or structures and the installation of small new equipment and facilities
in small structures), 15304 (Minor alterations to land) and 15305 (Minor alterations in
Land Use Limitations) of the CEQA Guidelines.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Planning Commission
does hereby recommend that the City Council adopt the Findings stated hereinabove and adopt
this Amendment to the RPMC to amend Section 17.07.020 – Footnotes in the form provided in
Exhibit A.
Attachment A
E. WIRELESS COMMUNICATION FACILITIES.
1. Purpose and Intent.
a.The purpose of this section is to provide a uniform and comprehensive set of regulations
and development standards for the permitting, development, siting, installation, design,
operation, and maintenance of wireless communication and similar facilities. These
regulations are intended to prescribe clear and reasonable criteria to assess and process
applications in a consistent and expeditious manner, while reducing the impacts
associated with wireless communications facilities. This section provides standards
necessary to:
(1)Promote and protect public health and safety, community welfare, visual and
environmental resources, and the unique visual character and quality of the of the
city consistent with the goals, objectives and policies of the General Plan;
(2)Preserve and promote harmonious land uses;
(3)Provide for the orderly, managed, and efficient development of wireless
communications facilities in accordance with the state and federal laws, rules, and
regulations;
(4)Acknowledge the community benefit associated with the provision of
communication services and ensure that a broad range of wireless communication
facilities is provided to serve the community and to serve as an important part of
the City’s emergency response network;
(5)Encourage new and more efficient technology in the provision of wireless
communications facilities; and
(6)(5) Provide incentives for well-designed and well-placed facilities.
b.This section is not intended to, nor shall it be interpreted or applied to:
(1)Prohibit or effectively prohibit any personal wireless service provider’s ability to
provide personal wireless services;
(2)Prohibit or effectively prohibit any entity’s ability to provide any interstate or
intrastate telecommunications service, subject to any competitively neutral and
nondiscriminatory rules;
(3)Unreasonably discriminate among providers of functionally equivalent services;
(4)Deny any request for authorization to place, construct or modify personal wireless
service facilities on the basis of environmental effects of radio frequency emissions
to the extent that such wireless communication facilities comply with the Federal
Communication Commission’s (FCC) regulations concerning such emissions;
(5)Prohibit any collocation or modification that the City may not deny under federal or
state law; or
(6)Otherwise authorize the City to preempt any applicable federal or state law.
c.In establishing the rights, obligations and conditions set forth in this section, it is the intent
of the City to treat each applicant in a competitively neutral and nondiscriminatory
manner, to the extent required by law, and with considerations that may be unique to the
technologies, situation and legal status of each proposed use.
2.Applicability. This section applies to the operation and maintenance of all existing wireless
communication facilities and all applications and requests for approval to construct, install,
modify, collocate, relocate or otherwise deploy, operate, and maintain wireless communication
facilities in the City.
3. Exemptions.
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This section is not applicable to:
a. Wireless communication facilities owned and operated by the City or any other agency of
the state for public purposes;
b. Authorized amateur radio service facilities requiring a license issued by the FCC to
operate (i.e., a “HAM” radio transmission), including antenna structures. See Footnote F
(AMATEUR RADIO SERVICE INSTALLATIONS);
c. Any OTARD devices;
d. Wireless communication facilities installed completely indoors and intended to extend
signals for personal wireless services in a personal residence or a business (such as a
femtocell or indoor distributed antenna system); and
e. Wireless communication facilities or equipment owned and operated by CPUC-regulated
electric companies for use in connection with electrical power generation, transmission
and distribution facilities subject to CPUC General Order 131-D.
4. Permit requirements.
a. Permit Required. No wireless communications facility shall be located or modified within
the city on any property without the issuance of a permit as required by this section as set
forth in the Table E4-1 table below. Such permit shall be in addition to any other permit
required pursuant to the Municipal Code.
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Table E4-1
Telecommunications
Facility
Private Property Public Right-
of-Way Residential
Districts
Mixed Use
Districts
Commercial
Districts
Other
Districts
New
telecommunications
tower, up to 35-feet
in height above the
ground
Not Permitted
Conditional Use Permit
Encroachment
Permit,
pursuant to
Chapter
12.04.
Roof or building-
mounted facility, not
visible from a public
right-of-way or other
property
Administrative Permit
Roof or building-
mounted facility,
visible from a public
right-of-way or other
property and/or
located on a historic
structure
Conditional Use Permit
Facility with a
backup generator Conditional Use Permit Permitted
Facility with an
ancillary fuel storage
tank(s) to support
the backup power
supply
Conditional Use Permit
Encroachment
Permit,
pursuant to
Chapter 12.04
Eligible facilities
request or
application for
collocation facility
pursuant to
California
Government Code
Section 65850.61
Administrative Permit
Small Cell Facility Administrative Permit
Temporary Wireless
Facility Temporary Conditional Use Permit
Temporary Wireless
Facility for
Emergencies
Permitted
Footnote:
1. See Section 17.
a.b. For service providers, who plan to establish multiple wireless communication facilities
within the city, the service provider is encouraged to apply for approval of all facilities of
the same permit type under a master use permit application. The master use permit shall
be subject to the same permit approval requirements that would apply to a permit for a
single facility of such type, and shall be acted on by the approval authority that would
have authority to approve a permit for a single installation of such type of facility, but
Formatted: Strikethrough
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Under this approach, all proposed facilities may would be acted upon by the City on as a
single permit application. No approval shall be construed as any warranty of title.
5. Application Requirements.
a. Application Required. The approval authority shall not approve any request for a permit
except upon a duly filed application consistent with this section, Chapter 12.04 of this
code (Encroachment Permits), and/or any other written rules the City or the Director may
establish from time to time in any publicly-stated format.
b. Application Content. All applications for a conditional use permit, an administrative
permit, temporary conditional use permit, or an encroachment permit must include all the
information and materials required by the Director for the application, including:
(1) Compliance with any permit application requirements, forms, checklists, guidelines,
informational handouts and other related materials that the Director finds
necessary, appropriate or useful for processing any application governed under this
section.
(2) Applicants shall ensure applications demonstrate compliance with all applicable
health and safety laws, regulations or other rules, which includes without limitation
all building codes, electric codes and all FCC rules for human exposure to RF
emissions.
(3) The City Council further authorizes the Director to establish other reasonable rules
related to permit processing as the Director deems necessary to manage the
application intake process. All such rules must be in written form and publicly
available to all applicants.
c. Applicants shall provide reports evaluating for potential interference with City
communication frequencies (e.g., HF, UHF, VHF, eight hundred mHz) in conjunction with
all applications.
d. Applications will be processed, and notices of incompleteness provided, in conformity
with state, local, and federal law. If such an application is incomplete, the Director shall
notify the applicant in writing, and specifying the material omitted from the application in
conformance with timeframes established under 47 C.F.R. 1.6003(c)(1).
e. Application fee(s) shall be required to be submitted with any application. The City
Council shall set the amount, type, and other terms of such fee(s) from time to time by
means of resolution. Notwithstanding the foregoing, no application fee shall be
refundable, in whole or in part, to an applicant unless paid as a refundable deposit.
f. Pre-Submittal Conference. Before application submittal, the applicant is encouraged to
schedule and attend a pre-submittal conference with the Director for all proposed
projects.
g. Requests for waivers from any requirement of this subsection shall be made in writing to
the Director or his or her designee. The Director may grant or deny a request for a waiver
pursuant to this subsection. The Director may grant a request for waiver for an
application requirement if it is demonstrated that, notwithstanding the issuance of a
waiver, the City will be provided all information necessary to understand the nature of the
construction or other activity to be conducted pursuant to the permit sought. All waivers
approved pursuant to this subsection shall be (1) granted only on a case-by-case basis,
and (2) narrowly-tailored to minimize deviation from the requirements of the City Code.
h. Peer and Independent Consultant Review. The Director is explicitly authorized at his/her
discretion to employ on behalf of the City an independent technical expert to review any
technical materials submitted. The applicant shall pay all the costs of said technical
review, including any administrative costs incurred by the City, and is required to make a
deposit, consistent with the City’s adopted fee schedule, at the time of application to
account for this contingency.
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6. Notice
a. General Notice Requirements. Public notice in accordance with the provisions in
Municipal Code Chapter 17.25 (Administrative and Enforcement Procedures) shall be
required for all permit applications.
b. Deemed-Approval Notice. Not more than 30 days before the applicable FCC timeframe
for review expires, and in addition to the public notice required in Section 6.a (General
Notice Requirements), an applicant for a use permit must provide a posted notice at the
project site that states the project will be automatically deemed approved pursuant to
California Government Code § 65964.1 unless the City approves or denies the
application or the applicant tolls the timeframe for review within the next 30 days. The
posted notice must be compliant with all applicable provisions in Municipal Code Chapter
17.25 (Administrative and Enforcement Procedures). The public notice required under
this section will be deemed given when the applicant delivers written notice to the
Director that shows the appropriate notice has been posted at the project site.
c. Decision Notices. Within five days after the approval authority acts on an application for a
use permit or before the FCC shot clock expires (whichever occurs first), the approval
authority or its designee shall send a written notice to the applicant. In the event that the
approval authority denies the application (with or without prejudice), the written notice to
the applicant must contain the reasons for the decision.
7. Decisions; Limited Exemptions; Appeals
a. Required Findings for Approval.
(1) Required Findings for Approval for all Facilities Requiring a Conditional Use Permit
or an Administrative Permit, except for an eligible facilities request. The approval
authority may approve or conditionally approve an application for a conditional use
permit or administrative permit submitted under this section when the approval
authority finds all of the following:
(a) The proposed facility complies with all applicable provisions of this section;
(b) The proposed wireless facility complies with all required findings for
conditional use permit approval in Municipal Code Section 17.25.014
(Findings) or administrative permit approval in Municipal Code Section
17.25.53 (Findings/conditions), or qualifies for a limited exception pursuant to
Subsection 7.c (Limited Exceptions for Personal Wireless Service Facilities);
(c) The applicant has demonstrated that its proposed wireless facility will be in
compliance with all applicable FCC rules and regulations for human exposure
to RF emissions and this information has been verified as provided for in
E(5)(h) above;
(d) The applicant has demonstrated a good-faith effort to identify and evaluate
preferred alternative locations and potentially less visually -intrusive
alternative designs for the proposed wireless facility;
(e) The applicant has provided the approval authority with a meaningful
comparative analysis that shows all preferred alternative locations and less-
intrusive alternative designs identified in the administrative record are either
technically infeasible or unavailable;
(f) The applicant has submitted a statement of its willingness to allow other
carriers to collocate on the proposed wireless communications facility
wherever technically and economically feasible; and
(g) Noise generated by equipment will not be excessive, annoying nor be
detrimental to the public health, safety, and welfare and will not exceed the
standards set forth in Chapter 17.12 and Chapter 9.44.
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b. Conditional Approvals; Denials. Subject to any applicable limitations in federal or state
law, nothing in this section is intended to limit the approval authority’s ability to
conditionally approve or deny without prejudice any application for a use permit as may
be necessary or appropriate to protect and promote the public health, safety and welfare,
and to advance the goals or policies in this section, the Municipal Code or the General
Plan. In conjunction with any denial, the approval authority shall issue a written decision
stating the reasons therefore.
c. Limited Waiver to Avoid Prohibitions on Service. In the event that an applicant claims that
strict compliance with the site location guidelines in Section 10 (Location and
Configuration Preferences) or the development standards and regulations in Sections 11-
13 (Development Standards and Regulations for all Wireless Communication Facilities,
Freestanding Wireless Communication Facilities, Building-Mounted Wireless
Communication Facilities) would prohibit or effectively prohibit the applicant’s ability to
provide personal wireless services, the approval authority may grant a limited waiver from
such requirements only to the minimum extent necessary to prevent such prohibition or
effective prohibition, provided the approval authority finds the following:
(1) The proposed wireless facility qualifies as a “personal wireless service facility” as
defined in 47 U.S.C. § 332(c)(7)(C)(ii), as may be amended or superseded;
(2) The applicant has provided the approval authority with the technical service
objective to be achieved by the proposed wireless facility;
(3) The applicant has provided the approval authority with a written statement that
contains a detailed and fact-specific explanation as to why the proposed wireless
facility cannot be deployed in in accordance with the standards in this section;
(4) The applicant has demonstrated to the approval authority that the proposed
location and design is the least non-compliant configuration that will reasonably
achieve the applicant’s technical service objective or that would avoid an actual or
effective prohibition of service
d. Appeals. Any interested person or entity may appeal any decision by the approval
authority in accordance with the standards and procedures in Municipal Code Chapter
17.25, Article XII (Appeals), except as modified by this section.below.
(1) Any person adversely affected by an administrative decision pursuant to this
chapter or a decision regarding an encroachment permit for a wireless facility
issued under chapter 12.04 may appeal such decision. The appeal will be
considered by a hearing officer appointed by the City Manager. The hearing officer
may decide the issues de novo and whose decision will be the final decision of the
City.
(2) Where the approval authority grants an application based on a finding that denial
would result in a prohibition or effective prohibition under applicable federal law,
any appeals must be filed within two (2) business days of the written decision of the
approval authority, unless the approval authority extends the time therefore. An
extension to file an appeal may not be granted where extension would result in
approval of the application by operation of law.
(3) Any appeal shall be conducted so that a timely written decision may be issued in
accordance with applicable law.
(4) Appeals from an approval will not be permitted on the basis of the environmental
effects of the radio frequency emissions of the proposed facility, unless the appeal
specifically identifies that the proposed facility does not meet regulations
established by the FCC regarding such emissions.
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(5) Unless otherwise modified by this section, appeals of decisions of the Planning
Commission shall be in accordance with Municipal Code Chapter 17.25, Article XII
(Appeals).
8. Conditions of Approval for All Wireless Communications Facilities.
In addition to all other conditions imposed by the approval authority, all permits, including
encroachment permits, shall be subject to the conditions in this section.
a. Permit Term. The permit will automatically expire 10 years from its issuance, except
where the approval authority establishes a shorter term due to specific public safety or
substantial land use reasons. Any other permits or approvals issued in connection with
any collocation, modification or other change to the permitted wireless facility, which
includes without limitation any permits or other approvals deemed-granted or deemed-
approved under federal or state law, will not extend this term limit unless expressly
provided otherwise in such permit or approval or required under federal or state law. An
administrative permit issued to authorize installation of an eligible facilities request or a
collocation facility subject to Government Code section 65850.6 shall not be deemed to
extend the term of any underlying permit for the originally permitted wireless
communication facility.
b. Permit Expiration. At the end of the term, the permit shall automatically expire, unless an
extension or renewal has been granted. A person holding a permit must either: (1)
remove the wireless facility within thirty (30) days following the permit’s expiration
(provided that removal of support structure owned by City, a utility, or another entity
authorized to maintain a support structure in the right of way need not be removed, but
must be restored to its prior condition, except as specifically permitted by the City); or (2)
at least ninety (90) days prior to expiration, submit an application to renew the permit,
which application must, among all other requirements, demonstrate that the impact of the
wireless facility cannot be reduced. The wireless facility may remain in place until it is
acted upon by the City and all appeals from the City’s decision exhausted.
c. Strict Compliance with Approved Plans. Before the permittee submits any applications to
the Building Department, the permittee must incorporate this permit, all conditions
associated with this permit and the approved photo simulations into the project plans (the
“Approved Plans”). The permittee must construct, install and operate the wireless facility
in strict compliance with the Approved Plans. Any alterations, modifications or other
changes to the Approved Plans, whether requested by the permittee or required by other
departments or public agencies with jurisdiction over the wireless facility, must be
submitted in a written request subject to the Director’s prior review and approval, who
may refer the request to the original approval authority if the Director finds that the
requested alteration, modification or other change substantially deviates from the
Approved Plans or implicates a significant or substantial land-use concern.
d. Build-Out Period. This permit will automatically expire one (1) year from the approval or
deemed-granted date unless the permittee obtains all other permits and approvals
required to install, construct and/or operate the approved wireless facility, which includes
without limitation any permits or approvals required by the any federal, state or local
public agencies with jurisdiction over the subject property, the wireless facility or its use.
The Director may grant one written extension to a date certain, not to exceed one (1)
additional year, when the permittee shows good cause to extend the limitations period in
a written request for an extension submitted at least 30 days prior to the automatic
expiration date in this condition.
e. Maintenance Obligations; Vandalism. The permittee shall keep the site, which includes
without limitation any and all improvements, equipment, structures, access routes, fences
and landscape features, in a neat, clean and safe condition in accordance with the
Approved Plans and all conditions in this permit. The permittee shall keep the site area
free from all litter and debris at all times. The permittee, at no cost to the City, shall
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remove and remediate any graffiti or other vandalism at the site within 48 hours after the
permittee receives notice or otherwise becomes aware that such graffiti or other
vandalism occurred.
f. Compliance with Laws. The permittee shall maintain compliance at all times with all
federal, state and local statutes, regulations, orders or other rules that carry the force of
law (“Laws”) applicable to the permittee, the subject property, the wireless facility or any
use or activities in connection with the use authorized in this permit, which includes
without limitation any Laws applicable to human exposure to RF emissions. The
permittee expressly acknowledges and agrees that this obligation is intended to be
broadly construed and that no other specific requirements in these conditions are
intended to reduce, relieve or otherwise lessen the permittee’s obligations to maintain
compliance with all Laws. In the event that the City fails to timely notice, prompt or
enforce compliance with any applicable provision in the Rohnert Park Municipal Code,
any permit, any permit condition or any applicable law or regulation, the applicant or
permittee will not be relieved from its obligation to comply in all respects with all
applicable provisions in the Municipal Code, any permit, any permit condition or any
applicable law or regulation.
g. Radiofrequency Compliance Evaluations. All facilities must comply with all applicable
standards and regulations of the FCC and any other state or federal government agency
with the authority to regulate radio frequency emissions. After completion of construction,
but prior to unattended operations of the facility, the permittee shall conduct on-site post-
installation RF emissions testing shall be performed by a qualified professional (as
identified by the City) to demonstrate actual compliance with applicable FCC limitations,
including the FCC OET Bulletin 65 RF emissions safety rules for general
population/uncontrolled radiofrequency exposure in all sectors. For this testing, the
transmitter shall be operating at maximum operating power, and the testing shall occur
outwards to a distance where the radiofrequency emissions no longer exceed the
uncontrolled/general population limit.
h. Adverse Impacts on Other Properties. The permittee shall use all reasonable efforts to
avoid any and all undue or unnecessary adverse impacts on nearby properties that may
arise from the permittee’s or its authorized personnel’s construction, installation,
operation, modification, maintenance, repair, removal and/or other activities at the site.
The permittee shall not perform or cause others to perform any construction, installation,
operation, modification, maintenance, repair, removal or other work that involves heavy
equipment or machines except during normal construction work hours authorized under
this code. The restricted work hours in this condition will not prohibit any work required to
prevent an actual, immediate harm to property or persons, or any work during an
emergency declared by the City. The Director may issue a stop work order for any
activities that violates this condition.
i. Permittee’s Contact Information. The permittee shall furnish the Director with accurate
and up-to-date contact information for a person responsible for the wireless facility, which
includes without limitation such person’s full name, title, direct telephone number,
facsimile number, mailing address and email address. The permittee shall keep such
contact information up-to-date at all times and immediately provide the Director with
updated contact information in the event that either the responsible person or such
person’s contact information changes.
j. Indemnification. The permittee shall defend, indemnify and hold harmless the City, City
Council and its commissions, agents, officers, officials, employees, and volunteers from
any and all (1) damages, liabilities, injuries, losses, costs, and expenses and from any
and all claims, demands, law suits, writs, and other actions or proceedings (“Claims”)
brought against the City or its agents, officers, officials, employees, or volunteers to
challenge, attack, seek to modify, set aside, void or annul the City’s approval of this
permit, and (2) other Claims of any kind or form, whether for personal injury, death, or
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property damage, that arise from or in connection with the permittee’s or its agents’,
Director’s, officers’, employees’, contractors’, subcontractors’, licensees’, or customers’
acts or omissions in connection with this permit or the wireless facility. In the event the
City becomes aware of any Claims, the City will use best efforts to promptly notify the
permittee and shall reasonably cooperate in the defense. The permittee expressly
acknowledges and agrees that the City shall have the right to approve, which approval
shall not be unreasonably withheld, the legal counsel providing the City’s defense, and
the property owner and/or permittee (as applicable) shall promptly reimburse City for any
costs and expenses directly and necessarily incurred by the City in the course of the
defense. The permittee expressly acknowledges and agrees that the permittee’s
indemnification obligations under this condition are a material consideration that
motivates the City to approve this permit, and that such indemnification obligations will
survive the expiration or revocation of this permit.
k. Performance Bond. Before the Building Department issues any construction permit in
connection with this permit, the permittee shall file with the City, and shall maintain in
good standing throughout the term of the approval, a performance bond or other surety or
another form of security for the removal of the facility in the event that the use is
abandoned or the permit expires, or is revoked, or is otherwise terminated. The security
shall be in the amount equal to 100% of the cost of removal of the facility. The bond or
security required by this section shall be in a form acceptable to the Director in an
amount reasonably necessary to cover the cost to remove the improvements and restore
all affected areas based on a written estimate from a qualified contractor with experience
in wireless communication facilities removal. In establishing the amount of the security,
the Building Department shall take into consideration information provided by the permit
applicant regarding the cost of removal.
l. Permit Revocation. In accordance with Municipal Code Chapter 17.25 (Administrative
and Enforcement Procedures), the approval authority may recall this permit for review at
any time due to complaints about noncompliance with applicable laws or any approval
conditions attached to this permit. At a duly noticed public hearing and in accordance with
all applicable laws, the approval authority may revoke this permit or amend these
conditions as the approval authority deems necessary or appropriate to correct any such
noncompliance.
m. Record Retention. The permittee must maintain complete and accurate copies of all
permits and other regulatory approvals issued in connection with the wireless facility,
which includes without limitation this approval, the approved plans and photo simulations
incorporated into this approval, all conditions associated with this approval and any
ministerial permits or approvals issued in connection with this approval. In the event that
the permittee does not maintain such records as required in this condition, any
ambiguities or uncertainties that would be resolved through an inspection of the missing
records will be construed against the permittee. Records may be kept in electronic
format.
n.m. Insurance. Permittee shall obtain and maintain throughout the term of the permit
commercial general liability insurance for bodily injury and property damage, including
coverage for property/premises liability and completed operations, with limits acceptable
to the Director. The relevant policy or policies shall name the City, its elected/appointed
officials, commission members, officers, representatives, agents, and employees as
additional insureds. Permittee shall use its best efforts to provide thirty (30) days’ prior
notice to the City of to the cancellation or material modification of any applicable
insurance policy.
o.n. As-Built Drawings. The permittee shall submit an as-built drawing within ninety (90) days
after installation of the facility.
p.o. Conflicts with Improvements. For any portion of a facility located within the City right of
way, the permittee shall remove or relocate, at its expense and without expense to the
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city, any or all of its facilities when such removal or relocation is deemed necessary by
the City by reason of any change of grade, alignment, or width of any right-of-way, for
installation of services, water pipes, drains, storm drains, power or signal lines, traffic
control devices, right-of-way improvements, or for any other construction, repair, or
improvement to the right-of-way.
q.p. Noninterference. Permittee shall not move, alter, temporarily relocate, change, or
interfere with any existing structure, improvement, or property without the prior consent of
the owner of that structure, improvement, or property.
r.q. Modifications. No changes shall be made to the approved plans without review and
approval in accordance with this Article.
s.r. Encourage Colocation. Where the facility site is capable of accommodating a co-located
facility upon the same site in a manner consistent with the permit conditions for the
existing facility, the permittee shall allow co-location of third-party facilities, provided the
parties can mutually agree upon reasonable terms and conditions.
t.s. Abandonment. If a facility is not operated for a continuous period of 90 days, the wireless
encroachment permit and any other permit or approval therefor shall be deemed
abandoned and terminated automatically, unless before the end of the period (i) the
Director has determined that the facility has resumed operations, or (ii) the City has
received an application to transfer the permit to another service provider. No later than
[ninety (90) days] from the date the facility is determined to have ceased operation or the
permittee has notified the Director of its intent to vacate the site, the permittee shall
remove all equipment and improvements associated with the use and shall restore the
site to its original condition to the satisfaction of the Director. The permittee shall provide
written verification of the removal of the facilities within [thirty (30) days] of the date the
removal is completed. If the facility is not removed within [thirty (30) days] after the
permit has been discontinued pursuant to this subsection, the site shall be deemed to be
a nuisance, and the City may cause the facility to be removed at permittee’s expense or
by calling any bond or other financial assurance to pay for removal. If there are two (2) or
more users of a single facility or support structure, then this provision shall apply to the
specific elements or parts thereof that were abandoned, but will not be effective for the
entirety thereof until all users cease use thereof.
u.t. Master Lease or Master License Agreement. Macro cell facilities located on public
property outside the right of way shall enter into a Master Lease Agreement (MLA) with
the City. Small cell facilities located on City-owned infrastructure in the public right-of-way
shall enter into a Master License Agreement (MLIAMILA) with the City.
9. Permit Extension. If a permit has not expired at the time an application is made for an extension,
the Director may administratively extend the term of the permit for a subsequent 10-year term
upon verification of continued compliance with the findings and conditions of approval under
which the application was originally approved, as well as any other applicable provisions of the
Municipal Code that are in effect at the time the permit extension is considered.
10. Location and Configuration Preferences.
a. Purpose. The purpose of this section is to provide guidelines to applicants and the
reviewing authority regarding the preferred locations and configurations for wireless
communication facilities in the City, provided that nothing in this section shall be
construed to permit a wireless communication facility in any location or configuration that
it is otherwise prohibited by this section.
b. Review of Location and Configuration. The reviewing authority shall consider the extent
to which a proposed wireless communication facility complies with these preferences and
whether there are feasible alternative locations or configurations to the proposed facility
that are more preferred under this section. If the location or configuration of a proposed
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facility qualifies for two or more categories of preferred locations or configurations, it shall
be deemed to belong to the least preferred category.
c. Collocation. New facilities should be collocated with existing facilities whenever feasible.
Where feasible, applicants are encouraged to collocate with other facilities such as light
standards, and other utility structures where the collocation will minimize the overall
visual impact. The applicant shall take reasonable measures to co-locate their wireless
communication facilities on existing towers or with or within existing ancillary support
equipment facilities prior to applying for new communication facility sites.
d. Order of Preference—Configurations. The order of preference for the configuration for
wireless communication facilities on public property outside the right of way or on private
property from most preferred to least preferred is:
(1) Collocations on roofs already containing roof-mounted wireless communication
facilities;
(2) New installations on existing roofs;
(3) Collocations with existing building-mounted wireless communication facilities,
which includes light standards and other utility structures;
(4) New installations on existing buildings, which includes light standards and other
utility structures;
(5) Collocations with existing wireless communication facilities on an existing pole or
utility pole;
(6) Collocations with existing wireless communication facilities on electric transmission
towers;
(7) Collocations with existing freestanding wireless communication facilities;
(8)(1) New installations on an existing pole or utility pole;
(9)(1) New installation on a new pole or utility pole;
(10)(8) New installations on existing electric transmission towers; and
(9) New freestanding wireless towers.
For small cell facilities in the right of way, the order of preference is:
(1) New iInstallations on an existing pole or utility pole;
(2) New iInstallation on a new pole or utility pole;
e. Order of Preference—Location. The order of preference for the location of wireless
communications facilities from most preferred to least preferred is:
(1) City-owned property or structures outside the public rights-of-way;
(2) City-owned property and the public rights-of-way adjacent to non-residential zoning
districts;
(3) The Public Institutional (PI) zone;
(4) Industrial zones;
(5) Commercial zones;
(6) Mixed-use zones;
(7) Open spaces;
(8) Public rights of way adjacent to residential zoning districts.; and
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(9) Residential zones.
f. Accessory Equipment. Except for pole-mounted small cell facilities in the public right of
way, iIn order of preference from most preferred to least preferred, accessory equipment
for wireless communications facilities shall be:
(1) Within a building or structure
(2) Located underground
(3) In a rear yard if not readily visible from surrounding properties and the roadway,
and
(4) On a screened roof top area or structure.
(5) Any other location.
11. Development Standards and Regulations for all Wireless Communication Facilities.
a. Basic Requirements. The design and development standards set forth in this section
apply to all wireless communications facilities no matter where they are located. Wireless
communications facilities shall be designed and maintained so as to minimize visual,
noise, and other impacts on the surrounding community and shall be planned, designed,
located, and erected in accordance with the design and development standards in this
section.
b. Antennas. Antenna elements shall be flush mounted, to the extent reasonably feasible.
All antenna mounts shall be designed so as not to preclude possible future collocation by
the same or other operators or carriers. Antennas shall be situated as to reduce visual
impact without compromising their function. Whip antennas need not be screened.
c. Colors and materials. All antennas, poles, towers, or equipment, including ancillary
support equipment, shall have a non-reflective finish and shall be painted or otherwise
treated to match or blend with the primary background and minimize visual impacts.
Antennas attached to a building shall be painted or otherwise treated to match the
exterior of the building or the antenna's background color. All ground-mounted equipment
shall be covered with a clear anti-graffiti type material of a type approved by the Director
or shall be adequately secured to prevent graffiti.
d. Signage; Advertisements.
(1) All wireless communication facilities must include signage that accurately identifies
basic contact and facility/site information. The applicant/operator shall notify city of
any changes to the information submitted within thirty days of any change,
including change of the name or legal status of the owner or operator. This
information shall include, but is not limited to the following:
(a) Identity, including name, address, and telephone number, and legal status of
the owner of the facility including official identification numbers and FCC
certification, and if different from the owner, the identity and legal status of the
person or entity responsible for operating the facility;
(b) Name, address and telephone number of a local contact person for
emergencies; and
(c) Type of service provided. Identification signs, including emergency phone
numbers of the utility provider, shall be posted at all communication facility
sites.
(2) Wireless communication facilities may not bear any other signage or
advertisements unless expressly approved by the City, required by law or
recommended under FCC or other United States governmental agencies for
compliance with RF emissions regulations.
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e. Lighting. No wireless communications facility may include artificial lighting unless either
specifically required by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) or other government
agency. Legally required lightning arresters and beacons shall be included excluded
when calculating the height of facilities such as telecommunications towers, lattice
towers, and monopoles.
f. Noise.
(1) Each wireless communications facility shall be operated in such a manner so as to
minimize any possible disruption caused by noise.
(2) Backup generators shall only be operated during periods of power outages and
shall not be tested on weekends, holidays, or between the hours of 5:00 p.m. and
7:00 a.m.
(3) Each wireless communications facility shall comply with the applicable noise
requirements contained in Chapters 9.44 and 17.12.
(4) Any equipment, including, but not limited to, air conditioning units, that may emit
noise that would be audible from beyond three feet from the wireless
communications facility in the case of a facility located in the right-of-way, or in the
case of other facilities the facility’s property line, shall be enclosed or equipped with
noise attenuation devices to the extent necessary to ensure compliance with
applicable noise limitations under the Rohnert Park Municipal Code.
g. Security. Each wireless communications facility shall be designed to be resistant to, and
minimize opportunities for, unauthorized access, climbing, vandalism, graffiti and other
conditions that would result in hazardous situations, visual blight, or attractive nuisances.
The approval authority may require the provision of warning signs, fencing, anti-climbing
devices, or other techniques to prevent unauthorized access and vandalism when,
because of their location or accessibility, a facility has the potential to become an
attractive nuisance. Site security measures must be designed to enhance concealment to
the maximum extent possible, such as installing equipment within an enclosure designed
to mimic a trash-can corral rather than within a chain link fence.
h. Backup Power Sources.
(1) All backup power supplies (e.g., generators) shall be located within an equipment
enclosure.
(2) The approval authority shall not approve any diesel generators or other similarly
noisy or noxious generators in or within 250 feet from any residence; provided,
however, the approval authority may approve sockets or other connections used for
temporary connection to backup generators.
(3) The City strongly disfavors backup power sources mounted on the ground or on
poles within the public rights-of-way.
i. Future Collocations and Equipment. To the extent feasible, all new wireless
communication facilities should be designed and sited in a manner that accommodates
potential future collocations and equipment installations that can be integrated with the
proposed wireless facility or its associated structures with no or negligible visual changes
to the outward appearance.
j. Utilities. All cables and connectors for telephone, primary electric and other similar
utilities must be routed underground in conduits large enough to accommodate future
collocated wireless communication facilities. Meters, panels, disconnect switches and
other associated improvements must be placed in inconspicuous locations to the extent
possible. The approval authority shall not approve new overhead utility lines or service
drops merely because compliance with the undergrounding requirements would increase
the project cost.
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k. Electromagnetic and Radiofrequency Radiation. The applicant shall provide certification
by a duly licensed engineer that the proposed facility will at all times comply with all
applicable health requirements and standards pertaining to electromagnetic and/or radio
frequency radiation established by the FCC.
l. Interference. Interference with city communication systems is prohibited. All proposed
facility applications shall include reports, as required by the Department of Public Safety,
to evaluate for potential interference (e.g., HF, UHF, VHF, eight hundred mHz).
m. Compliance with Laws. All wireless communication facilities must be designed and sited
in compliance with all applicable:
(1) Federal, state and local laws, regulations, rules, restrictions and conditions, which
include without limitation regulations established by the FCC, FAA, CPUC, the
California Building Standards Code, and the Municipal Code;
(2) Applicable requirements in the Rohnert Park General Plan and any applicable
specific plan; and
(3) Any conditions or restrictions in any permit or other governmental approval issued
by any public agency with jurisdiction over the facility.
n. Modification. At the time of modification of a wireless communications facility, existing
equipment shall, to the extent feasible, be replaced with equipment that reduces visual,
noise, and other impacts, including, but not limited to, undergrounding the equipment and
replacing larger, more visually intrusive facilities with smaller, less visually intrusive
facilities.
o. City Council ResolutionDesign Guidelines. All new wireless facilities and collocations,
modifications, or other changes to existing wireless facilities must conform to any design
and development standards adopted by resolution of the City Council.
p. Administrative Application Requirements and Design Guidelines. The Director may
develop and from time-to-time amend application forms and requirements and develop
administrative design guidelines, provided that such guidelines are consistent with the
generally applicable development standards and any facility-specific development
standards in this section, in order to supplement and clarify the standards in this section
for City staff, applicants and the public. The Director shall publish such guidelines in
advance of their effective date.
12. Development Standards and Regulations for all Wireless Communication Facilities Located
Outside of the Public Right-of-Way.
a. Basic Requirements. In addition to the requirements in Subsection 11 (Development
Standards and Regulations for all Wireless Communication Facilities), all new wireless
communication facilities located outside of the public right-of-way that are not an eligible
facilities request or a colocation facility subject to California Government Code Section
65850.6 must conform to the requirements in this subsection.
b. Macrocell Facility Separation and Location Requirements. Macrocell facilities must be
separated as follows:
Minimum Distance from a Macrocell Facility to a:
Macrocell Facility on the Same Parcel* Macrocell Facility on Another Parcel
50 feet 1,000 feet
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* Applicants must demonstrate that a new facility will not interfere with existing facilities
nearby and must be visually compatible with nearby facilities.
c. Maximum Number of Macrocell Facilities Per Parcel. A maximum of four macrocell
facilities may be installed on a parcel.
d. Concealment. Wireless communication facilities must incorporate concealment elements,
measures and techniques that blend the equipment and other improvements into or
screen the facilities from the natural and/or built environment in a manner consistent
and/or compatible with the uses germane to the underlying zoning district and existing in
the immediate vicinity. Concealment methods may include:
(1) A facility mimicking a native tree species or a rock outcrop in an open space or
hillside location where other natural elements exist to provide effective
camouflaging and/or concealment;
(2) Locating a facility on a building’s roof, possibly in conjunction with a parapet, a
tower, or a similar architectural element, to obscure its appearance from the
adjoining public right-of-way(s);
(3) Painting and/or covering a building-mounted facility to match the appearance of the
building.
e. Landscaping.
(1) All new macrocell facilities and any ground mounted wireless facilities not in the
public right-of-way must include a landscape plan when proposed to be placed in a
landscaped area. The landscape plan must include existing vegetation, vegetation
proposed to be removed or trimmed, and identification of proposed landscaping by
species type, size, and location. All plants proposed must be fire safe, native and/or
drought-resistant. Landscape plans shall include site features, such as use of
vegetation or rock outcrop, designed to screen such facilities from public view or
from view of adjacent properties.
f. Parking; Access. Any equipment or improvements constructed or installed in connection
with any wireless communication facilities must not reduce any parking spaces below the
minimum requirement for the subject property. Whenever feasible, wireless
communication facilities should use existing parking and access rather than construct
new parking or access improvements. Any new parking or access improvements should
be the minimum size necessary to reasonably accommodate the proposed use. New
parking or access improvements shall be prohibited in the Open Space for Agriculture
and Resource Management and Open Space for Environmental Conservation districts.
g. Accessory Equipment. Accessory equipment located within the front or side yard shall be
located to be screened by landscaping and placed in close proximity to existing above
ground utilities (such as electrical tower or utility poles), light poles, trees of comparable
height, water tanks, and other areas where the ground mounted facility will not detract
from the image or appearance of the city.
13. Development Standards for Freestanding Wireless Communication Facilities Located Outside of
the Public Right-of-Way.
a. Basic Requirements. In addition to the requirements in Subsection 11 (Development
Standards and Regulations for all Wireless Communication Facilities) and Subsection 12
(Development Standards and Regulations for all Wireless Communication Facilities
Located Outside of the Public Right-of-Way), all new freestanding wireless
communication facilities located outside of the public right-of-way that are not an eligible
facilities request or a colocation facility subject to California Government Code Section
65850.6 must conform to the requirements in this subsection.
b. Monopoles and Towers.
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(1) All monopoles and towers shall be concealed or screened to reduce their visual
presence.
(2) Monopoles concealed by artificial foliage (i.e., tree monopole, monopine, etc.) must
match the appearance of natural tree species that appears in the city.
c. Tower-Mounted Equipment. All tower-mounted equipment must be mounted as close to
the vertical support structure as possible to reduce its overall visual profile. Applicants
must mount non-antenna, tower-mounted equipment (including, but not limited to, remote
radio units/heads, surge suppressors, and utility demarcation boxes) directly behind the
antennas to the maximum extent feasible. All tower-mounted equipment, cables and
hardware must be painted with flat colors subject to the approval authority’s prior
approval.
d. Ground-Mounted Equipment; Shelters. All ground-mounted equipment must be
concealed underground or within an existing or new structure, opaque fences, or other
enclosures subject to the approval authority’s prior approval. Ground mounted enclosures
shall incorporate concealment elements to blend the ground-mounted equipment and
other improvements into the natural and/or built environment.
e. Height.
(1) All freestanding wireless communication facilities shall be of a minimum functional
height. The maximum heights for these facilities in different locations throughout
the city area as follows:
In a District with a Maximum
Height of 35 feet
In a District with a Maximum Height that Exceeds 35 feet
Adjacent to a Residential Zone Adjacent to Other Zones
35 feet1,2 65 feet1,3 75 feet3
Footnotes:
1. Facilities located adjacent to residentially zoned properties shall be setback at a ratio of two horizontal feet for
every one-foot in height and shall not be readily visible from the nearest residentially zoned property.
2. Facilities may exceed by eight feet the maximum permitted height in the underlying zoning district by conditional
use permit
3. Facilities that exceed 35 feet in height require conditional use permit approval.
f. Setbacks.
(1) All freestanding wireless communication facilities shall be setback from any
property line by a minimum of twenty-five feet or the zone’s required setback,
whichever is greater.
(2) Towers and antennas shall be setback at a ratio of two horizontal feet for every one
foot in height and shall be screened and/or concealed from the nearest residentially
zoned property.
g. Screening. All freestanding wireless communication facilities shall be sited to be
screened by existing development, topography, or vegetation, to the extent feasible.
Ground mounted facilities are encouraged to be located within buildings, underground, or
in areas where substantial screening by existing buildings or vegetation can be achieved.
14. Development Standards and Regulations for Building-Mounted Wireless Communication
Facilities.
a. Basic Requirements. In addition to the requirements in Subsection 11 (Development
Standards and Regulations for all Wireless Communication Facilities) and Subsection 12
(Development Standards and Regulations for all Wireless Communication Facilities
Located Outside of the Public Right-of-Way), all new building-mounted wireless
17
communication facilities that are not an eligible facilities request or a colocation facility
subject to California Government Code Section 65850.6 must conform to the
requirements in this section.
b. Preferred Concealment Techniques. All applicants should, to the extent feasible, propose
wireless communication facilities that are completely concealed and architecturally
integrated into the existing facade or rooftop features with no visible impacts from any
publicly accessible areas at ground level (examples include, but are not limited to,
antennas behind existing parapet walls or facades replaced with RF-transparent material
and finished to mimic the replaced materials). Alternatively, when integration with existing
building features is not feasible, the applicant should propose completely concealed new
structures or appurtenances designed to mimic the support structure’s original
architecture and proportions (examples include, but are not limited to, cupolas, steeples,
chimneys, and water tanks). Facilities must be located behind existing parapet walls or
other existing screening elements to the maximum extent feasible.
c. Facade-Mounted Equipment. When wireless communication facilities cannot be placed
behind existing parapet walls or other existing screening elements, the approval authority
may approve facade-mounted equipment in accordance with this section. All facade-
mounted equipment must be concealed behind screen walls and mounted as flush to the
facade as practicable. The approval authority may not approve “pop-out” screen boxes
unless the design is architecturally consistent with the original building or support
structure. The approval authority may not approve any exposed facade-mounted
antennas, including but not limited to exposed antennas painted to match the facade. To
the extent feasible, facade-mounted equipment must be installed on the facade(s) along
the building frontage that is the least prominent or publicly visible.
d. Rooftop-Mounted Equipment.
(1) Rooftop-mounted equipment must be screened from public view with concealment
measures that match the underlying structure in proportion, quality, architectural
style and finish. The approval authority may approve unscreened rooftop
equipment only when it expressly finds that such equipment is effectively
concealed due to its low height and/or setback from the roofline.
(2) Rooftop-mounted equipment must be setback from the nearest roof edge(s) by a
minimum of ten feet or distance equivalent to the facility’s height, whichever is
greater.
e. Height.
(1) Building mounted wireless communication facilities shall generally not exceed
fifteen feet above the maximum height for that zoning district.
(2) Antennas mounted on the side of a building shall not extend above the top of the
building parapet or eave line.
15. Development Standards and Regulations for Wireless Communication Facilities Located in the
Public Right-of-Way.
a. Basic Requirements. In addition to the requirements in Subsection 11 (Development
Standards and Regulations for all Wireless Communication Facilities), all new and
substantially changed wireless communication facilities located within the public right-of-
way and that are not an eligible facilities request or a colocation facility subject to
California Government Code Section 65850.6 must conform to the requirements in this
section.
b. Antennas.
(1) Utility Poles. The maximum height of any antenna mounted to an existing utility
pole shall not exceed 24 inches above the height of an existing utility pole, nor shall
any portion of the antenna or accessory equipment mounted on a pole be less than
18
18 feet above any drivable road surface, except for safety shut-off switches, utility
meters and associated conduit. The height limitation for antennas in this section
may be exceeded only to the minimum necessary to comply with required electrical
code safety clearances or applicable safety regulations. All installations on utility
poles shall fully comply with the California Public Utilities Commission general
orders, including, but not limited to, General Order 95, as may be revised.
(2) Street Light Poles. The maximum height of any antenna mounted to a street light
pole shall not exceed seven feet above the existing height of a street light pole in or
adjacent to a non-residential zoning district and shall not exceed three feet above
the existing height of a street light pole in or adjacent to any other zoning district.
Any portion of the antenna or equipment mounted on such a pole shall be no less
than 18 feet above any drivable road surface.
c. Poles.
(1) Only pole-mounted antennas shall be permitted in the public right-of-way. All other
telecommunications towers shall be prohibited, and no new pole installations for
the purpose of installing a wireless facility shall be permitted that are not replacing
an existing pole.
(2) Pole height and width limitations:
(a) All poles shall be designed to be the minimum functional height and width
required to support the proposed antenna installation and meet FCC
requirements. Poles and antennas and similar structures shall be no greater in
diameter or other cross-sectional dimensions than is necessary for the proper
functioning of the facility.
(b) Notwithstanding the above, no facility shall be located on a pole that is less
than 26 feet in height.
(c) Pole-mounted equipment must be mounted as close to the pole as possible to
reduce its overall visual profile, and shall not exceed six cubic feet in
dimension.
(3) If an applicant proposes to replace a pole in order to accommodate the facility, the
pole shall match the appearance of the original pole to the extent feasible, unless
another design better accomplishes the objectives of this section. Such
replacement pole shall not exceed the height of the pole it is replacing by more
than seven feet.
(4) If a limited waiver pursuant to Section 7.c is granted for placement of new poles in
the right-of-way, new poles shall be designed to resemble existing poles in the
right-of-way, including size, height, color, materials and style, with the exception of
any existing pole designs that are scheduled to be removed and not replaced,
unless another design better accomplishes the objectives of this section. Such new
poles that are not replacement poles shall be located no closer than 90 feet to an
existing pole.
d. Space Occupied. Facilities shall be designed to occupy the least amount of space in the
right-of-way that is technically feasible.
e. Location.
(1) Each component part of a facility shall be located so as not to cause any physical
or visual obstruction to pedestrian or vehicular traffic, inconvenience to the public’s
use of the right-of-way, or safety hazards to pedestrians and motorists.
(2) A facility shall not be located within any portion of the public right-of-way interfering
with access to fire hydrants, fire stations, fire escapes, water valves, underground
vaults, valve housing structures, or any other vital public health and safety facility.
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(3) Pole-mounted equipment, above-ground accessory equipment, or walls, fences,
landscaping or other screening methods shall be setback a minimum of 18 inches
from the front of a curb.
(4) All pole-mounted equipment and required or permitted signage must face toward
the street or otherwise placed to minimize visibility from adjacent sidewalks and
structures.
(5) Where feasible, aAll new wires needed to service the wireless communications
facility must be installed within the width of the existing utility pole so as to not
exceed the diameter and height of the existing utility pole. If it is not feasible to
install wiring inside of the utility pole due to the pole material, wires shall be
installed in a manner that minimizes the use of visible wiring, minimizes bulk and
avoids the spooling of excess cable.
f. Accessory Equipment. With the exception of the electric meter, which shall be pole-
mounted to the extent feasible, all accessory equipment shall be located underground to
the extent feasible. When above-ground is the only feasible location for a particular type
of accessory equipment and when such accessory equipment cannot be pole-mounted,
such accessory equipment shall be enclosed within a structure, and shall not exceed a
height of five feet and a total footprint of 15 square feet, and shall be screened and
camouflaged to the fullest extent possible, including the use of landscaping or alternate
screening. Required electrical meter cabinets shall be adequately screened and
camouflaged.
g. Concealment. All wireless communication facilities in the right-of-way must be concealed
to the maximum extent feasible with design elements and techniques that mimic or blend
with the underlying support structure, surrounding environment and adjacent uses. In
addition, wireless communication facilities in the rights-of-way may not unreasonably
subject the public use, for any purpose including expressive or aesthetic purposes, to
inconvenience, discomfort, trouble, annoyance, hindrance, impediment or obstruction.
h. Americans with Disabilities Act Compliance. All facilities shall be built and located in
compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and any applicable state law
accessibility standards.
i. Documentation. The applicant shall provide documentation satisfactory to the Director
establishing compliance with this section.
16. Temporary Wireless Communication Facilities.
a. General Requirements for Temporary Wireless Communication Facilities. Except as
provided in Section 16.b (Temporary Wireless Communication Facilities for
Emergencies), the requirements, procedures and standards in this subsection shall be
applicable to all applications for a temporary conditional use permit for a temporary
wireless facility.
(1) Applications for Temporary Wireless Communication Facilities. The Director shall
not approve any temporary wireless facility subject to a temporary conditional use
permit except upon a duly filed application and any other written application
requirements or procedures the Director may publish in any publicly-stated format.
An application must include the information required by Section 17.25.041
(Application) and the following additional information:
(a) A site plan that shows the proposed temporary wireless facility and its
equipment, physical dimensions and placement on the proposed site relative
to property lines and existing structures; and
(b) An RF compliance report demonstrating compliance with applicable FCC
regulations.
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(2) Review of Temporary Wireless Communication Facilities. Temporary conditional
use permit applications for temporary wireless communication facilities are subject
to the review process described in Section 17.25.043 (Decision/appeal).
(3) Required Findings for Temporary Wireless Communication Facilities. The Director
may approve or conditionally approve a temporary use permit for a temporary
wireless facility only when the Director finds all of the following:
(a) The facility meets the findings required for all temporary conditional use
permits listed in Section 17.25.042 (Findings/conditions);
(b) The proposed temporary wireless facility will not exceed 50 feet in overall
height above ground level;
(c) The proposed temporary wireless facility will be placed as far away from
adjacent property lines as possible, or otherwise in a location that will be least
likely to cause adverse impacts on adjacent properties; and
(d) Any excavation or ground disturbance associated with the temporary facility
will not exceed two feet below grade;
(e) The proposed temporary wireless facility will be compliant with all generally
applicable public health and safety laws and regulations, which includes
without limitation compliance with maximum permissible exposure limits for
human exposure to RF emissions established by the FCC;
(f) The proposed temporary wireless facility will not create any nuisance or
violate any noise limits applicable to the proposed location;
(g) The proposed temporary wireless facility will be identified with a sign that
clearly identifies the (i) site operator, (ii) the operator’s site identification name
or number and (iii) a working telephone number answered 24 hours per day,
seven days per week by a live person who can exert power-down control over
the antennas;
(h) The proposed temporary wireless facility will be removed within 30 days after
the Director grants the temporary use permit, or such longer time as the
Director finds reasonably related to the applicant’s need or purpose for the
temporary wireless facility (but in no case longer than 90 days); and
(i) The applicant has not been denied a use permit for any permanent wireless
facility in the same or substantially the same location within the previous 365
days.
(4) Appeals for Temporary Wireless Communication Facilities. The appeal of
temporary conditional use permit determinations for temporary wireless
communication facilities are subject to the review process described in Section
17.25.043 (Decision/appeal).
b. Temporary Wireless Communication Facilities for Emergencies. Temporary wireless
communication facilities may be placed and operated within the City without a temporary
use permit only when a duly authorized federal, state, county or City official declares an
emergency within a region that includes the City in whole or in part. Any temporary
wireless communication facilities placed pursuant to this section must be removed within
15 days after the date the emergency is lifted. Any person or entity that places temporary
wireless communication facilities pursuant to this section must send a written notice that
identifies the site location and person responsible for its operation to the Director as soon
as reasonably practicable.
17. Eligible Facility Requests and Collocation Facility Requests Pursuant to California Government
Code Section 65850.6.
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a. Applicability. This subsection applies to all collocations or modifications to an eligible
facilities request.
b. Approval Required. An eligible facilities request shall be subject to the Director’s
approval, conditional approval or denial without prejudice pursuant to the standards and
procedures contained in this subsection.
c. Other Regulatory Approvals. Approval granted under this subsection shall remain subject
to any and all lawful conditions or requirements associated with such other permits or
regulatory approvals from the City and state or federal agencies.
d. Application Requirement. The City shall not approve any eligible facilities request except
upon a duly filed application consistent with this section and any other written rules the
City or the Director may establish from time to time consistent with applicable federal law.
The applicant shall provide a written statement that explains in plain factual detail the
basis under which the proposed project qualifies as an eligible facilities request. As part
of this written statement the applicant must also explain in detail and provide evidence
that: (a) the support structure qualifies as an existing tower or existing base station; and
(b) the proposed collocation or modification does not cause a substantial change, as
defined in 47 C.F.R. 1.6100(b)(7), to an eligible support structure. Bare conclusions
without factual support shall not meet the requirements of this subsection. An application
for a wireless communications collocation facility under California Government Code
Section 65850.6(a) shall be processed in the same manner as an application for an
eligible facilities request is processed, except that where the process requires justification
for the approval of an eligible facilities request, the applicant shall instead provide the
justification for a collocation facility under California Government Code Section
65850.6(a), and shall also describe or depict the wireless communications collocation
facility as built and the proposed colocation facility at full build-out, including, but not
limited to, all antennas, antenna support structures, and accessory equipment.
e. Pre-Submittal Conference. Before application submittal, applicants are encouraged to
schedule and attend a pre-application meeting with the Director for all proposed
modifications submitted for approval.
f. Administrative Review. The Director shall administratively review an application for an
eligible facilities request and act on such an application without prior notice or a public
hearing within the time periods required pursuant to applicable FCC regulations, including
47 C.F.R. 1.6001(c)(3).
g. Required Findings for approval of an eligible facilities request. The approval authority
shall approve or conditionally approve an application submitted for an eligible facilities
request when the approval authority finds that the proposed project qualifies as an
eligible facilities request, and does not result in a substantial change to an eligible
support structure, as set forth in 47 C.F.R. 1.6100(b)(7).
h. Required Findings for approval of an collocation facility under 65850.6. The approval
authority shall approve or conditionally approve an application submitted for a collocation
facility under 65850.6 if:
(1) The wireless telecommunications collocation facility that will host the proposed
collocation facility:
(a) Was approved after January 1, 2007, by discretionary permit;
(b) Was approved subject to an environmental impact report, negative
declaration, or mitigated negative declaration;
(2) The proposed colocation facility incorporates all required mitigation measures in
the applicable environmental document for the wireless telecommunications
colocation facility; and
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(3) The proposed colocation facility complies with all conditions of approval in the
original wireless telecommunications collocation facility permit, including all
standards for height, location, bulk, size and types of wireless telecommunication
facilities allowed for a colocation facility.
i. Supplemental Conditions of Approval. In addition to all other conditions set forth in
subsection 8, all approvals for an eligible facility request shall be subject to the following
supplemental conditions set forth in this subsection:
(1) Permit Term. The City’s grant or grant by operation of law of a permit for an eligible
facilities request constitutes a federally-mandated modification to the underlying
permit or other prior regulatory authorization for the subject tower or base station.
The City’s grant or grant by operation of law of such approval does not extend the
permit term, if any, for any underlying permit, or other underlying prior regulatory
authorization. Accordingly, the term for any permit issued for an eligible facilities
request shall be coterminous with the underlying permit or other prior regulatory
authorization for the subject tower or base station.
(2) Accelerated Permit Terms Due to Invalidation. In the event that any court of
competent jurisdiction invalidates any portion of Section 6409 of the Middle Class
Tax Relief and Job Creation Act of 2012 or any FCC regulation that interprets
Section 6409 such that federal law would no longer mandate approval for eligible
facilities requests, all permits for eligible facility requests shall automatically expire
one year from the effective date of the judicial order, unless the decision would not
authorize the termination of previously approved eligible facility request permits or
the Director grants an extension until the end of the original permit term upon
written request from the permittee that demonstrates good cause for the extension,
which includes, without limitation, extreme financial hardship or that permit
invalidation is prohibited under other applicable state or federal law. A permittee
shall not be required to remove its improvements approved under the invalidated
approval when it has submitted an application for an appropriate permit for those
improvements before the one-year period ends.
(3) No Waiver of Standing. The City’s grant or grant by operation of law of an approval
for an eligible facilities request does not waive, and shall not be construed to waive,
any standing by the City to challenge Section 6409 or any FCC rules that interpret
Section 6409 of the Middle Class Tax Relief and Job Creation Act of 2012.
18. Supplemental Conditions for Small Cell Facilities. In addition to the conditions provided in
subsection 8 of this section and any supplemental conditions imposed by the approval authority,
all permits for a small cell facility shall be subject to the following condition, unless modified by
the approval authority:
a. No waiver of standing. The city’s grant of a permit for a small cell facility does not waive,
and shall not be construed to waive, any standing by the city to challenge any FCC
orders or rules related to small cell facilities, or any modification to those FCC orders or
rules.
19. Operation and Maintenance Standards.
a. All wireless communication facilities must comply at all times with the following operation
and maintenance standards. All necessary repairs and restoration shall be completed by
the permittee, owner, or operator within five business days, unless the condition of the
facility is considered by the Director to be a public safety emergency. In the case of a
public safety emergency then the time limit to complete repairs and restoration is 48
hours. The time period shall commence:
(1) After discovery of the need by the permittee, owner, operator or any designated
maintenance agent; or
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(2) After permittee, owner, operator, or any designated maintenance agent receives
notification from a resident or the Director.
b. All facilities, including, but not limited to, telecommunication towers, poles, accessory
equipment, lighting, fences, walls, shields, cabinets, artificial camouflage, and the facility
site shall be maintained in good condition, including ensuring the facilities are reasonably
free of:
(1) General dirt and grease;
(2) Chipped, faded, peeling, and cracked paint;
(3) Rust and corrosion;
(4) Cracks, dents, and discoloration;
(5) Missing, discolored, or damaged artificial foliage, or other camouflage;
(6) Graffiti, bills, stickers, advertisements, litter, and debris;
(7) Vandalism;
(8) Broken and misshapen structural parts; and
(9) Any damage from any cause.
Any damage from any cause shall be repaired as soon as reasonably possible so as to
minimize occurrences of dangerous conditions or visual blight. Graffiti shall be removed
from any facility or equipment as soon as practicable, and in no instances more than
forty-eight hours from the time of notification by the city.
c. All trees, foliage, or other landscaping elements approved as part of the facility shall be
maintained in good condition at all times in accordance with the approved landscape
plan, and the permittee, owner and operator of the facility shall be responsible for
replacing any damaged, dead or decayed landscaping as promptly as reasonable
possible. No amendment to any approved landscaping plan may be made until it is
submitted to and approved by the Director or designee.
d. Monopoles concealed by foliage must be maintained over time to provide for the
continuing concealment of the facility. Replacement leaves and branches must match the
color and architecture of the existing foliage.
e. The permittee shall replace its facilities, after obtaining all required permits, if
maintenance or repair is not sufficient to return the facility to the condition it was in at the
time of installation.
f. Each facility shall be operated and maintained at all times in compliance with applicable
federal regulations, including FCC radio frequency emissions standards.
g. Each facility shall be operated and maintained to comply at all times with the noise
regulations of this section and shall be operated and maintained in a manner that will
minimize noise impacts to surrounding residents. Except for emergency repairs, any
testing and maintenance activities that will be audible beyond the property line shall only
occur between the hours of 7:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. on Monday through Friday,
excluding holidays, unless alternative hours are approved by the Director. Backup
generators, if permitted, shall only be operated during periods of power outages, and
shall not be tested on weekends or holidays, or between the hours of 10 p.m. and 7 a.m.
on weekday nights. At no time shall equipment noise from any source exceed an exterior
noise level of sixty dB at the property line.
h. Each facility shall not interfere with city communication systems.
i. If a flagpole is used for camouflaging a wireless communications facility, flags shall be
flown and shall be properly maintained at all times.
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j. Each owner or operator of a facility shall routinely inspect each site to ensure compliance
with the standards set forth in this section and the conditions of approval.
20. Cessation of Use or Abandonment.
a. A wireless communications facility is considered abandoned and shall be promptly
removed as provided herein if it ceases to provide wireless communications services for
90 or more consecutive days.
b. The operator of a facility shall notify the City in writing of its intent to abandon or cease
use of a permitted site or a nonconforming site (including unpermitted sites) within 30
days of ceasing or abandoning use. For facilities to be located on public property, this
removal requirement, and appropriate bonding requirement, shall be included within the
terms of the lease. For facilities to be located on private property, since the subject
property owner may be held responsible for removal of the equipment, the terms of
private leases are encouraged to include the equipment removal as a provision of the
lease.
21. Removal and Restoration, Permit Expiration, Revocation or Abandonment.
a. Permittee’s Removal Obligation. Upon the expiration date of the permit, including any
extensions, earlier termination or revocation of the permit or abandonment of the facility,
the permittee, owner or operator shall remove its wireless communications facility and
restore the site to its natural condition except for retaining the landscaping improvements
and any other improvements at the discretion of the City. Removal shall be in accordance
with proper health and safety requirements and all ordinances, rules, and regulations of
the City. The facility shall be removed from the property within 30 days, at no cost or
expense to the City. If the facility is located on private property, the private property
owner shall also be independently responsible for the expense of timely removal and
restoration.
b. Failure to Remove. Failure of the permittee, owner, or operator to promptly remove its
facility and restore the property within 30 days after expiration, earlier termination, or
revocation of the permit, or abandonment of the facility, shall be a violation of the
Municipal Code, and be grounds for:
(1) Prosecution;
(2) Calling of any bond or other assurance required by this section or conditions of
approval of permit;
(3) Removal of the facilities by the City in accordance with the procedures established
under the Municipal Code for abatement of a public nuisance at the owner’s
expense; and/or
(4) Any other remedies permitted under the Rohnert Park Municipal Code.
c. Removal of Facilities by City. In the event the City removes a facility in accordance with
nuisance abatement procedures or summary removal, any such removal shall be without
any liability to the City for any damage to such facility that may result from reasonable
efforts of removal. In addition to the procedures for recovering costs of nuisance
abatement, the City may collect such costs from the performance bond posted and to the
extent such costs exceed the amount of the performance bond, collect those excess
costs in accordance with the Rohnert Park Municipal Code. Unless otherwise provided
herein, the City has no obligation to store such facility. Neither the permittee nor the
owner nor operator shall have any claim if the City destroys any such facility not timely
removed by the permittee, owner, or operator after notice, or removed by the City due to
exigent circumstances.
22. Definitions. For the purposes of this section, the following words, phrases, and terms shall have
the meanings set forth herein. Words not defined shall be given their common and ordinary
meaning.
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a. “Accessory equipment” means any equipment associated with the installation of a
wireless communications facility, including, but not limited to, cabling, generators, air
conditioning units, electrical panels, equipment shelters, equipment cabinets, equipment
buildings, pedestals, meters, vaults, splice boxes, and surface location markers.
b. “Antenna” means that part of a wireless communications facility designed to radiate or
receive radio frequency signals or electromagnetic waves for the provision of services,
including, but not limited to, cellular, paging, personal communications services (PCS)
and microwave communications. Such devices include, but are not limited to, directional
antennas, such as panel antenna, microwave dishes, and satellite dishes; omnidirectional
antennas; wireless access points (Wi-Fi); and strand-mounted wireless access points.
c. “Approval authority” means the City official, commission, or governing entity responsible
for review of permit applications and vested with the authority to approve or deny such
applications. The approval authority for a conditional use permit is the Planning
Commission or, on appeal, the City Council. The approval authority for an administrative
permit or temporary use permit is the Director, or on appeal, the Planning Commission,
unless the administrative permit is for an eligible facilities request or approval for
collocation pursuant to California Government Code Section 65850.6, in which case the
appeal shall be considered by the City Manager.
d. “Base station” means “base station” as defined in 47 C.F.R. Section 1.6100(b)(2), as
may be amended.
e. “Building-mounted” means mounted to the side or façade, but not the roof, of a building
or another structure such as a water tank, pump station, church steeple, freestanding
sign, or similar structure.
f. “Cellular” means an analog or digital wireless telecommunications technology that is
based on a system of interconnected neighboring cell sites.
g. “Collocation” means the same as defined by the FCC in 47 C.F.R. Section 1.6100(b)(2)
as may be amended.
h. "Communication facility" means an unstaffed facility, generally consisting of antennas,
and equipment cabinet or structure, and related equipment, which receives and/or
transmits electromagnetic waves, light waves, radio frequencies or other types of signals.
i. “CPCN” means a “Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity” granted by the
CPUC or its duly appointed successor agency pursuant to California Public Utilities Code
§§ 1001 et seq., as may be amended.
j. “CPUC” means the California Public Utilities Commission established in the California
Constitution, Article XII, § 5, or it’s duly appointed successor agency.
k. “Director” means the Director of the Development Services Department of the City of
Rohnert Park, or the Director’s designee.
l. “Eligible facilities request” means the same as defined by the FCC in 47 C.F.R. Section
1.6100(b)(3), as may be amended.
m. “Eligible support structure” means the same as defined by the FCC in 47 C.F.R. Section
1.6100(b)(4), as may be amended.
n. "Equipment cabinet" means a cabinet or structure used to house equipment associated
with a wireless, hard wire, or cable communication facility.
o. “Existing” means the same as defined by the FCC in 47 C.F.R. Section 1.6100, as may
be amended, which provides that a constructed tower or base station is existing for
purposes of the FCC’s Section 6409 regulations if it has been reviewed and approved
under the applicable zoning or siting process, or under another state or local regulatory
review process, provided that a tower that has not been reviewed and approved because
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it was not in a zoned area when it was built, but was lawfully constructed, is existing for
purposes of this definition.
p. “FCC” means the Federal Communications Commission or its duly appointed successor
agency.
q. “FCC Shot Clock” means the reasonable time frame within which the City generally must
act on a given wireless application as set forth in 47 C.F.R. section 1.6003, as may be
amended.
r. “Light Standard” means a raised light source, supported by a concrete, metal, or wood
pole, located on the edge of a sidewalk, street, and/or pathway.
s. “Macrocell facility” is any proposed personal wireless service facility that does not meet
the definition of a “small wireless facility,” as defined in 47 C.F.R. 1.6002(l), and that
does not meet the definition of an eligible facilities request under 47 C.F.R. Section
1.6100(b)(3).
t. “Modification” means any change to an existing wireless communications facility that
involves any of the following: collocation, expansion, modification, alteration,
enlargement, intensification, reduction, or augmentation, including, but not limited to, a
change in size, shape, color, visual design, or exterior material. Modification does not
include repair, replacement, or maintenance if those actions do not involve a change to
the existing facility involving any of the following: collocation, expansion, modification,
alteration, enlargement, intensification, reduction, or augmentation.
u. “Monopole” means a structure consisting of a single pole used to support antennas or
related equipment and includes a monopine, monoredwood, and similar monopoles
camouflaged to resemble trees or other objects.
v. “OTARD device” means any antenna or mast meeting the requirements set forth in 47
C.F.R. §§ 1.4000(a)(1)(i)–(iv).
w. “Personal wireless services” means the same as defined in 47 U.S.C. Section
332(c)(7)(C)(i), as may be amended.
x. “Personal wireless service facility” means a facility that is used to provide personal
wireless services.
y. “Pole” means a single shaft of wood, steel, concrete, or other material capable of
supporting the equipment mounted thereon in a safe and adequate manner and as
required by provisions of the Municipal Code.
z. “Public right-of-way or “right-of-way” means any public street, public way, public alley or
public place, laid out or dedicated, and the space on, above or below it, and all
extensions thereof, and additions thereto, under the jurisdiction of the City.
aa. “RF” means radio frequency or electromagnetic waves between 30 kHz and 300 GHz in
the electromagnetic spectrum range.
bb. “Roof-mounted” means mounted directly on the roof of any building or structure, above
the eave line of such building or structure.
cc. "Service provider" means any authorized provider of personal wireless services to end
users.
dd. “Site” means the same as defined by the FCC in 47 C.F.R. Section 1.6100(b)(6), as may
be amended, which provides that for towers other than towers in the public rights-of-way,
the current boundaries of the leased or owned property surrounding the tower and any
access or utility easements currently related to the site, and, for other eligible support
structures, further restricted to that area in proximity to the structure and to other
transmission equipment already deployed on the ground.
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ee. “Small cell facility” shall have the same meaning as “small wireless facility” in 47 C.F.R.
1.6002(l), or any successor provision (which is a personal wireless services facility that
meets the following conditions that, solely for convenience, have been set forth below):
(1) The facility—
(i) is mounted on a structure 50 feet or less in height, including antennas, as defined in 47
C.F.R. Section 1.1320(d), or
(ii) is mounted on a structure no more than 10 percent taller than other adjacent
structures, or
(iii) does not extend an existing structure on which it is located to a height of more than
50 feet or by more than 10 percent, whichever is greater;
(2) Each antenna associated with the deployment, excluding associated antenna
equipment (as defined in the definition of antenna in 47 C.F.R. Section 1.1320(d)), is no
more than three cubic feet in volume;
(3) All other wireless equipment associated with the structure, including the wireless
equipment associated with the antenna and any pre-existing associated equipment on
the structure, is no more than 28 cubic feet in volume;
(4) The facility does not require antenna structure registration under 47 C.F.R. Part 17;
(5) The facility is not located on Tribal lands, as defined under 36 C.F.R. Section
800.16(x); and
(6) The facility does not result in human exposure to radiofrequency radiation in excess of
the applicable safety standards specified in 47 C.F.R. Section 1.1307(b).
ff. “Substantial change” means the same as defined by the FCC in 47 C.F.R. Section
1.6100(b)(7), as may be amended
gg. “Telecommunications tower” or "tower" means any structure built for the sole or primary
purpose of supporting any FCC-licensed or authorized antennas and their associated
facilities, including structures that are constructed for personal wireless services
including, but not limited to, private, broadcast, and public safety services, as well as
unlicensed wireless services and fixed wireless services such as microwave backhaul,
and the associated site. This definition does not include utility poles.
hh. “Temporary wireless communication facilities” means portable wireless communication
facilities intended or used to provide personal wireless services on a temporary or
emergency basis, such as a large-scale special event in which more users than usual
gather in a confined location or when a disaster disables permanent wireless
communication facilities. Temporary wireless communication facilities include, without
limitation, cells-on-wheels (“COWs”), sites-on-wheels (“SOWs”), cells-on-light-trucks
(“COLTs”) or other similarly portable wireless communication facilities not permanently
affixed to site on which is located.
ii. “Transmission equipment” means the same as defined by the FCC in 47 C.F.R. Section
1.6100(b)(8), as may be amended, which defines that term as equipment that facilitates
transmission for any FCC-licensed or authorized wireless communication service,
including, but not limited to, radio transceivers, antennas, coaxial or fiber-optic cable, and
regular and backup power supply. The term includes equipment associated with wireless
communications services including, but not limited to, private, broadcast, and public
safety services, as well as unlicensed wireless services and fixed wireless services such
as microwave backhaul.
jj. “Utility pole” means a pole or tower owned by any utility company that is primarily used to
support wires or cables necessary to the provision of electrical, phone or other utility
services. A tower is not a utility pole.
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kk. “Wireless” or “Wireless services” means personal wireless service, as defined in 47
U.S.C. Section 332(c)(7)(C)(i).
ll. “Wireless communication facility” or “Wireless telecommunication facility” means any
facility constructed, installed, or operated for personal wireless service, as defined in 47
U.S.C. Section 332(c)(7)(C)(i), and includes, but is not limited to, antennas or other types
of equipment for the transmission or receipt of such signals, telecommunications towers
or similar structures supporting such equipment, related accessory equipment, equipment
buildings, parking areas, and other accessory development. “Wireless
telecommunications facility” specifically excludes the following:
(1) A facility that qualifies as an amateur station as defined by the FCC, 47 C.F.R. Part
97, of the Commission’s Rules, or its successor regulation.
(2) Any OTARD device.
(3) Portable radios and devices including, but not limited to, hand-held, vehicular, or
other portable receivers, transmitters or transceivers, cellular phones, CB radios,
emergency services radio, and other similar portable devices as determined by the
Director.
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New footnote in Section 17.07.20:
F. AMATEUR RADIO SERVICE INSTALLATIONS.
1. Purpose. The purpose of this section is to regulate amateur radio service facilities subject to
licensing by the FCC, in a manner consistent with FCC regulation 47 C.F.R. section 97.15
and California Government Code section 65850.3. The city finds that regulation of the size,
location, height and screening of antennas is necessary for the preservation of the health, safety
and welfare of the community. More stringent regulation of antennas is necessary in residential
areas compared to nonresidential areas in order to preserve the appearance of the community.
2. Amateur radio service facilities requiring a license issued by the FCC to operate (i.e., a
“HAM” radio transmission), including antenna structures, shall be considered a permitted use,
provided there is no more than one antenna structure on a single parcel and the antenna
structure does not exceed the maximum building height limits of the zoning district.
3. Exceeding the maximum height limits of the applicable zoning district, or having more than
one antenna structure, shall be permitted upon first obtaining a use permit. A use permit may
be granted by the Planning Commission upon a demonstration by the applicant that:
a. That the antenna structures, including antennas, guy wires, support structures and
accessory equipment shall be located, sized and designed so as to minimize the amount
of the antenna that is visible from surrounding properties, public streets and all public
rights-of-way, recognizing that complete screening may not be possible; and
b. That the proposed height or number of installations will not pose a public safety hazard;
and
c. That issuance of a use permit is necessary to reasonably accommodate the desire for
communication using the amateur radio service, and this desire cannot be sufficiently
accommodated by a single antenna structure meeting the height limits of the applicable
zoning district.