[HISTORY: Adopted by the Borough Council of the Borough of Hillsdale 12-27-1973 as Ord. No. 73-14 (Ch. 16A of the Revised Ordinances of 1972). Amendments noted where applicable.]
The Borough Council does hereby find and declare that:
A. 
The occupants of numerous residential, commercial and industrial establishments in the Borough of Hillsdale have found it desirable to make provision for the installation upon their premises, at their own cost and expense, of alarm systems for emergencies such as burglary, intrusion, fire, smoke, flood and like perils.
B. 
There is a growing number of private enterprises that have embarked upon the business of selling or leasing such alarm systems, entering into contract with such occupants for the installation, operation and maintenance of such alarm systems, and providing, either individually or in concert with other private business enterprises similarly engaged, for the connection of the individual alarm systems so installed by them to an alarm device or devices installed in Police Headquarters in the Borough of Hillsdale.
C. 
The proliferation of the number of private enterprises engaged in the alarm business, each with its own system and equipment, has resulted in conditions that, if not remedied, will lead to an unnecessary drain on the manpower, time, space, facilities and finances of the Borough of Hillsdale and its public safety departments and agencies, a deterioration of the quality of service to persons subscribing to alarm services and inequities among the various private enterprises engaged in the alarm business in the Borough of Hillsdale.
D. 
The public interest, therefore, requires the enactment of rules, regulations, standards and procedures to regulate and control the private alarm business in the Borough of Hillsdale to the end that:
(1) 
The municipal departments and agencies charged with the protection of public safety may efficiently and economically coordinate their functions with the various alarm services to which the public of the Borough of Hillsdale may subscribe.
(2) 
The quality of the alarm services rendered to the public may be improved and maintained at a high level.
(3) 
The private alarm enterprises retained by occupants of buildings in the Borough of Hillsdale may perform their services on a basis of standards and requirements that are fairly, equitably and impartially applicable to all such enterprises.
As used in this chapter, the hereinafter defined words and phrases shall, subject to the provisions of Chapter 1, General Provisions, of the Code of the Borough of Hillsdale, have the following meanings:
ALARM DEVICE
Any mechanism designed to actuate the alarm console.
ALARM SYSTEM
The installation in one (1) or more buildings of one (1) or more alarm devices or local alarms for the express purpose of giving visual or audible warning, or both, of an emergency such as burglary, intrusion, fire, smoke, flood or like perils.
DIAL ALARM
An alarm device that employs an automatic dialing system precoded to connect with a special telephone in Police Headquarters rather than to the alarm console.
FALSE ALARM
The actuation of an alarm system by causes other than those to which the alarm system was designed or intended to respond.
LOCAL ALARM
Any mechanism that constitutes, in whole or in part, an alarm system that is not connected with and is not designed to actuate the alarm console.[2]
[1]
Editor's Note: Amended at time of adoption of Code; see Ch. 1, General Provisions, Art. II.
[2]
Editor's Note: Original Secs. 16A-3, Alarm console, 16A-4, Issuance of license, and 16A-5, Issuance of permits, which immediately followed this section, were deleted at time of adoption of Code; see Ch. 1, General Provisions, Art. II.
A. 
No dial alarm shall be permitted unless it shall first have been:
(1) 
Registered with the Chief Law Enforcement Officer as hereinafter required.
(2) 
Approved by the Chief Law Enforcement Officer after approval thereof by the telephone company providing local service and the performance of a test alarm conducted by or on behalf of the applicant.
B. 
All dial alarms shall be coded to dial a special separate number which shall be provided by the Chief Law Enforcement Officer. No dial alarm shall be coded to dial the number of the general police switchboard of the Borough of Hillsdale.
C. 
All dial alarms shall be coded as well to notify a relative, neighbor or other third party who shall be named in the registration required by this chapter and who will respond within fifteen (15) minutes of notification.
D. 
All dial alarms shall be capable of being disconnected by the owner to permit a call to the police switchboard in the event that a false alarm occurs.
E. 
The owner of each dial alarm system shall pay to the Borough of Hillsdale an annual fee as provided in Chapter 138, Fees, to cover the cost of registration and testing, and to amortize the cost of the special telephone line or lines required in Police Headquarters, along with ancillary tape devices necessitated by these systems.
F. 
Owners of dial alarms shall be governed by the false alarm procedures and penalties set forth in this chapter.
G. 
If any dial alarm shall hereafter be found to be dialing the general Police Headquarters number rather than the special telephone number reserved for dial alarms, the occupant of the building or other person in whose name the telephone is listed shall be sent a notice, in writing, by the Chief Law Enforcement Officer requiring compliance with the terms of this chapter. If the occupant or telephone subscriber shall fail within thirty (30) days after receipt of said notice to comply, he or she shall be liable to a penalty as provided in Chapter 226, Penalties.
H. 
The contents of any recorded message from a dial alarm must be intelligible and in a format approved by the Chief Law Enforcement Officer. No such message shall be transmitted more than three (3) times as a result of a single stimulus of the mechanism. Messages shall not exceed fifteen (15) seconds, and the time gap between delivery shall be approximately ten (10) seconds.
I. 
The sensory mechanism of dial alarms shall be adjusted so as to suppress false indications and not to be actuated by impulses due to pressure changes in water pipes, short flashes of light, wind, noises, rattling or vibration of doors or windows or other forces unrelated to general alarms.
J. 
All components of dial alarms shall be maintained by the owner in good repair. When evidence exists that there has been failure to comply with the operational requirements of this chapter, the Chief Law Enforcement Officer is then authorized to demand that such device be disconnected until such time as compliance with such requirements is reestablished.
[1]
Editor's Note: Amended at time of adoption of Code; see Ch. 1, General Provisions, Art. II.
No person shall install, operate or maintain any alarm system unless the alarm system has been registered with the Chief Law Enforcement Officer as follows:
A. 
Alarm system connected to alarm console. The alarm system of each permittee shall be deemed registered at such time as the permit therefor is issued.
B. 
Dial alarm system. Am alarm system employing the dial alarm shall be deemed registered when the annual dial alarm fee is remitted to the Borough and the system has been approved by the Chief Law Enforcement Officer.
C. 
Local alarm system.
(1) 
A local alarm system shall be deemed registered when the occupant of the building in which it is installed shall have filed with the Chief Law Enforcement Officer a registration form, which shall include, among other data, the location of the device, the name of the installer of said device, the type of device, provisions relating to false alarms and testing procedures, a list of persons to be contacted in the event of an alarm and other information as may be required by the Chief.
(2) 
No further or renewed registration shall be required for a local alarm system unless and until there has occurred any material change in the information previously submitted with respect to such local alarm system. It shall be the duty of the occupant of a building served by a local alarm system, within ten (10) days after a change in information previously submitted to the Borough shall have occurred, to file a supplemental or revised registration containing accurate current information with respect to the data required by the registration form.
(3) 
No charge shall be made for the filing of any local alarm registration or any amended, revised or supplemental local alarm registration.
[1]
Editor's Note: Amended at time of adoption of Code; see Ch. 1, General Provisions, Art. II.
In the case of a false alarm, the Chief Law Enforcement Officer shall cause an investigation to be made and keep a record of said alarm on file. For the first and second false alarm in any given calendar year, a warning shall be issued; for the third or subsequent false alarm in the same calendar year, a penalty as provided in Chapter 226, Penalties, shall be paid to the Borough of Hillsdale.
[1]
Editor's Note: Amended at time of adoption of Code; see Ch. 1, General Provisions, Art. II.
Each owner or lessee of an alarm system shall be responsible on a twenty-four-hour-per-day basis for service to equipment owned or lease by him or her. Malfunctioning equipment shall be disconnected until repaired.
[1]
Editor's Note: Amended at time of adoption of Code; see Ch. 1, General Provisions, Art. II.
Whenever, under the provisions of this chapter, the Chief Law Enforcement Officer or any authorized representative he or she may have designated is empowered to make a decision with respect to the installation, operation and maintenance of any alarm equipment, or with respect to the issuance or denial of any application relating thereto, any person aggrieved by said decision may, within ten (10) days following said decision, file a written appeal therefrom with the Borough Clerk and with the Chief Law Enforcement Officer, whereupon the Borough Council shall promptly conduct a hearing and affirm, modify or reverse the decision appealed from.
[1]
Editor's Note: Amended at time of adoption of Code; see Ch. 1, General Provisions, Art. II.
The Chief Law Enforcement Officer may from time to time promulgate rules and regulations supplementing this chapter in order to provide for recordkeeping and efficient management of said system; provided, however, that the said rules and regulations, or any revisions thereof, shall not take effect until first approved by resolution of the Borough Council.[2]
[1]
Editor's Note: Amended at time of adoption of Code; see Ch. 1, General Provisions, Art. II.
[2]
Editor's Note: Original Sec. 16A-13, Penalties, which immediately followed this section, was deleted at time of adoption of Code; see Ch. 1, General Provisions, Art. II. For current penalty provisions, see Ch. 226, Penalties.