As used in this chapter, the following terms
shall have the meanings indicated below:
ALARM ADMINISTRATOR
A person or persons designated by the governing authority
to administer, control and review false alarm reduction efforts.
ALARM COMPANY
A business, operated by an individual, partnership, corporation
or other entity, which sells, leases, maintains, services, repairs,
alters, replaces, moves, installs or monitors an alarm system in an
alarm site.
ALARM DISPATCH REQUEST
A notification to a law enforcement agency or fire department
or medical emergency service that an alarm system signal, either manual
or automatic, has been activated at a particular alarm site.
ALARM SITE
A single fixed premises or location served by an alarm system
or systems.
ALARM SYSTEM
A device or series of devices, including but not limited
to alarm systems interconnected with a radio frequency method such
as cellular or private radio signals, which emit or transmit a remote
or local audible, visual or electronic signal indicating an alarm
condition and intended to summon the law enforcement and/or fire protection
and/or medical emergency service of the municipality. "Alarm system"
shall not include an alarm installed on a vehicle or person unless
the vehicle or personal alarm is permanently located at an alarm site.
ALARM USER
Any person, firm, partnership, corporation or other entity
who or which uses or is in control of any alarm system at its alarm
site.
AUTOMATIC VOICE DIALER
Any electrical, electronic, mechanical or other device capable
of being programmed to send a prerecorded voice message, when activated,
over a telephone line, radio or other communication system to a law
enforcement agency or fire department.
CANCELLATION
The process by which an alarm company providing monitoring
verifies with Woodstock Emergency Dispatch and the alarm user or responsible
party that a false dispatch has occurred and that there is not an
existing situation at the alarm site requiring law enforcement, fire
department and/or medical emergency response.
CONVERSION
The transaction or process by which one alarm company begins
monitoring of a previously unmonitored alarm system or an alarm system
previously monitored by another alarm company.
DURESS ALARM
A silent alarm system signal generated by the manual activation
of a device intended to signal a life-threatening situation or a crime
in progress requiring law enforcement, fire department and/or medical
emergency response.
FALSE ALARM
An alarm dispatch request to a law enforcement agency when
the responding officer finds no evidence of a criminal offense or
attempted criminal offense or a danger or damage to the alarm site
due to wind or flooding or animals or fallen trees or prolonged power
outages after having completed a timely investigation of the alarm
site. "False alarm" shall also mean an alarm dispatch request to a
fire department when the responding fire department finds no evidence
of a fire or a danger or damage to the alarm site due to acts of nature
or prolonged power outages that would warrant such alarm dispatch
request.
HOLDUP ALARM
A silent alarm system signal generated by the manual activation
of a device intended to signal a robbery in progress.
KEYPAD
A device that allows control of an alarm system by the manual
entering of a coded sequence of numbers or letters.
LAW ENFORCEMENT AUTHORITY
The Sheriff, Chief of Police, or the commissioner, superintendent
or director of a law enforcement agency or an authorized representative.
"Law enforcement authority" may also mean the fire chief or authorized
representative of the fire department.
LICENSE
A license issued to an alarm company to sell, install, monitor,
repair, or replace alarm systems by an authority having jurisdiction.
LOCAL ALARM SYSTEM
Any alarm system that annunciates an alarm system signal
only at the alarm site by an interior or exterior audio device.
MONITORING
The process by which an alarm company receives signals from
an alarm system and relays an alarm dispatch request to the municipality
for the purpose of summoning law enforcement, fire department and/or
medical emergency response to the alarm site.
ONE PLUS DURESS ALARM
The manual activation of a silent alarm signal by entering
at a keypad a code that adds one to the last digit of the normal arm/disarm
code, e.g., normal code: 1234; one plus duress code: 1235.
PANIC
An audible alarm system signal generated by the manual activation
of a device intended to signal a life-threatening or emergency situation
requiring law enforcement, fire department and/or medical emergency
response.
PERSON
An individual, corporation, partnership, association, organization
or similar entity.
SMOKE AND/OR HEAT DETECTOR
Any device which, when activated by fire or smoke, is designed
to alert to said emergency only the occupants of the building in which
the smoke and/or heat detector is located.
TAKEOVER
The transaction or process by which an alarm user takes over
control of an existing alarm system which was previously controlled
by another alarm user.
VERIFY
An attempt, by the alarm company or its representative, to
contact the alarm site by telephonic or other electronic means, whether
or not actual contact with a person is made, before requesting law
enforcement, fire department and/or medical emergency dispatch, in
an attempt to avoid an unnecessary alarm dispatch request.
ZONES
Subdivisions into which an alarm system is divided to indicate
the general location from which an alarm system signal is transmitted.
[Amended 9-10-2012 by L.L. No. 2-2012; 12-17-2013 by L.L. No. 2-2013]
A. The
Alarm Administrator shall:
(1) Designate a manner, form and telephone number(s) for the communication
of alarm dispatch requests.
(2) Issue a unique cancellation code to the reporting central station
upon receipt of a signal from an alarm system to the alarm dispatch
center.
B. The
Alarm Administrator shall establish a procedure to record such information
on alarm dispatch requests necessary to permit the Alarm Administrator
to maintain records, including but not limited to the following information.
The responding law enforcement officer shall relay this information
at the time of clearance to emergency dispatchers, who shall then
record said information on the call record.
(1) Identification of the alarm site;
(2) Date and time the alarm dispatch request was received;
(3) Date and time of law enforcement officer arrival at the alarm site;
(5) Name of alarm user or representative on premises, if any;
(6) Identification of the responsible alarm company, if known;
(7) Whether unable to locate the address; and
(8) Cause of the alarm system signal, if known.
C. The
Alarm Administrator shall establish a procedure for the notification
to the alarm user of a false alarm. Options include, but are not limited
to, the law enforcement officer leaving a door hanger with a Notice
of False Alarm at the alarm site and forwarding a copy of such notice
to the Alarm Administrator (see Appendix C). [Appendix C shall be
kept on file at the Town Clerk's office.] The notice shall include
the following information:
(1) The date and time of law enforcement response to the false alarm;
(2) The identification number of the responding law enforcement officer;
and
(3) A statement urging the alarm user to ensure that the alarm system
is properly operated, inspected, and serviced in order to avoid false
alarms and resulting fines.
D. If,
in the judgment of the Alarm Administrator, an alarm system is not
being used or maintained in a manner that ensures proper operation
and suppresses false alarms, the Alarm Administrator may require a
conference with the alarm user and the alarm company responsible for
the repair of the alarm system to review the circumstances of each
false alarm.
[Amended 11-18-2008 by L.L. No. 2-2008; 9-10-2012 by L.L. No. 2-2012; 12-17-2013 by L.L. No. 2-2013]
A. An
alarm user shall be subject to warnings and fines depending on the
number of false alarms emitted from an alarm system within a calendar
year beginning January 1 and ending December 31 based upon the following
schedule:
(1) First false alarm: warning.
(2) Second false alarm: fine of $25.
(3) Third false alarm: fine of $50.
(4) Fourth false alarm: fine of $75.
(5) Fifth false alarm: fine of $100.
(6) Each additional false alarm: fine of $250.
B. Notice
of fines shall be sent by certified mail from the Alarm Administrator
to the property owner of the site of the false alarm. Fines shall
be payable to the Town of Woodstock. If fines are not paid to the
Town within 30 days of the date of the notice, the Town shall reserve
the right to no longer respond to intrusion alarms emitted from the
site of the false alarm.
C. If
the alarm is cancelled prior to law enforcement arriving at the alarm
site, this shall not be considered a false alarm for the purpose of
warning or fines.
D. If
the law enforcement officer responding to the false alarm determines
that an on-site employee of the alarm company directly caused the
false alarm, this shall not be considered a false alarm for the purpose
of warning or fines.
[Amended 9-10-2012 by L.L. No. 2-2012; 12-17-2013 by L.L. No. 2-2013]
A. The responding law enforcement officer shall leave notice to the alarm user after each false alarm and shall provide a copy of such Notice of False Alarm to the Alarm Administrator. The notice shall conform to the stipulations contained in §
7-6C of this chapter and shall include the schedule of fines for each false alarm.
B. The
Alarm Administrator shall notify the alarm user in writing and the
alarm company, if known.
Any and all liability and consequential damage
resulting from the failure to respond to an alarm system signal is
hereby disclaimed and governmental immunity as provided by law is
retained. Law enforcement, fire department and/or medical emergency
response may be based on factors such as availability of police, fire
and/or medical emergency units, priority of calls, weather conditions,
traffic conditions, emergency conditions and staffing levels.