[HISTORY: Adopted by the City Council of the City of DuBois 7-24-1995 by Ord. No.
1544 (Ch. 13, Part 2, of the 1995 Code). Amendments
noted where applicable.]
The purpose of this chapter is to set forth regulations governing
burglary, robbery, fire or medical alarm systems, businesses and agents
within the City, to require permits and fees therefor and to establish
fines for violation thereof.
For the purpose of this chapter, certain words and phrases shall
be construed as herein set forth, unless it is apparent from the context
that a different meaning is intended:
A communication to a public safety agency, indicating that
a crime, fire or other emergency situation warranting immediate action
by the public safety agency has occurred or is occurring.
Any person who is employed by an alarm business, either directly
or indirectly, whose duties include any of the following: selling,
maintaining, leasing, servicing, repairing, altering, replacing, removing
or installing on or in any building, structure or facility any alarm
system.
The business by any individual, partnership, corporation
or other entity of selling, leasing, maintaining, servicing, repairing,
altering, replacing, moving or installing any alarm system or causing
any alarm system to be sold, leased, maintained, serviced, repaired,
altered, replaced, moved or installed in or on any building, structure
or facility, or who respond to or monitor such alarm systems. Exemption:
the provisions of this chapter do not include a business which engages
in the manufacture or sale of an alarm system unless such business
services, installs, monitors or responds to alarm systems.
Any assembly or equipment — mechanical, electrical
or battery-operated — arranged to signal the occurrence of a
police, fire, hazard or medical emergency requiring urgent attention
and to which police or fire units are expected to respond. Exceptions:
(1) manual fire alarm pull stations are not regulated by this chapter;
and (2) residential smoke detectors that do not transmit an alarm
signal off premises are not regulated by this chapter. Devices which
are not designated or used to register alarms that are audible, visible
or perceptible outside of the protected building, structure or facility
are not included within this definition. An alarm system includes
all of the necessary equipment designed and installed for the detection
of burglary, robbery, fire, need for medical assistance or other hazard
in a single building, structure or facility or for alerting others
of the commission of an unlawful act within a building, structure
or facility, or both.
A service whereby trained employees, in attendance at all
times, receiving prerecorded voice messages from automatic dialing
devices reporting an emergency at a stated location, where such employees
have the duty to relay immediately, by live voice, any such emergency
message over a trunk line to the communications center of the police
or fire agency. They shall include monitoring systems maintained by
the alarm industry or alarm business.
Any device, bell, horn or siren which is attached to the
interior or exterior of a building, structure or facility and emits
a warning signal audible outside the building, structure or facility
and is designed to attract attention when activated by a criminal
act or other emergency requiring police agency or fire agency response.
A device which is interconnected to a telephone line and
is programmed to transmit a signal by a voice or coded message that
indicates that an emergency condition exists and the need for an emergency
response is required.
The appointed head of the City of DuBois Police Department
or his designated representative.
The City of DuBois.
A police, fire, hazard or medical emergency.
An alarm activated in the absence of an emergency, whether willfully
or by inadvertence, negligence or unintentional act, including the
malfunction of the alarm system; the intentional activation of a holdup
alarm for other than a holdup in progress; the intentional activation
of a burglary alarm for other than a burglary; the intentional activation
of a medical alarm for other than a medical emergency; or the intentional
activation of a fire alarm for other than a fire hazard to which the
police or fire agency responds. Exceptions are: an alarm caused by
the testing or repairing of telephone or electrical lines or equipment
outside the premises; acts of God, such as earthquake, flood, windstorm,
thunder or lightning; an attempted illegal entry of which there is
visible evidence; a crime in progress; or, in the case of an emergency
medical alarm, an actual medical emergency requiring police, fire
and/or medical personnel.
A false alarm shall be considered to have been caused by an
act of God when it happens by the direct, immediate and exclusive
operation of the forces of nature, uncontrolled or uninfluenced by
the power of man and without human intervention, and includes, but
shall not be limited to, false alarms caused by wind, snow, storm,
lightning, flood and power failure.
The City of DuBois Volunteer Fire Department.
To use a telephone line and equipment for transmitting a
message, either directly or indirectly, by an automatic dialing device.
A nonresident household or business located outside the corporate
limits of the City of DuBois, which has met all the obligations and
requirements of this chapter and has been issued a permit hereunder.
Written authorization granted to an applicant by the City
upon payment of the required fee.
Any person who shall be granted a permit as provided in this
chapter and his agents and representatives.
An individual, corporation, partnership, incorporated association
or similar entity.
The police and fire communications rooms and other rooms
which house communications equipment.
The City of DuBois Police Department.
Legal document authorizing a person the right to sell, install
and service an alarm system within the City of DuBois.
A resident household or business of the City of DuBois, which
has met all the obligations and requirements of this chapter and has
been issued a permit hereunder.
Any person who purchases, leases, contracts for or otherwise
obtains an alarm system or contracts for the servicing or maintenance
of an alarm system from an alarm business.
A.Â
A permit and/or license shall be governed by the following requirements
on and after the effective date of this chapter:
(1)Â
An alarm system permit shall be required for each structure having an alarm system or multiple alarm systems. Subsection D of this section regarding alarm system permits shall apply.
(2)Â
A building permit shall be required for the installation of an alarm
system, unless the system is battery-powered.
(3)Â
An annual professional alarm license shall be required for persons selling, installing or servicing alarm systems within the City. Subsection C of this section regarding professional alarm licenses shall apply.
(4)Â
The alarm system permit and professional alarm license fees shall
be established by the City. The building permit fee shall be established
through the adoption of the Pennsylvania Uniform Construction Code
by the City.
[Amended at time of adoption of Code revisions (see Ch. 1,
General Provisions, Art. II)]
(5)Â
Exceptions:
(a)Â
The owner or occupant of the structure is exempt from an alarm
system permit and professional alarm license when installing an alarm
system, provided that: the purpose of the audible alarm is to notify
the occupants of the structure of an emergency situation; the audible
alarm does not sound outside the structure (no external speakers);
the internal signal emitted by the audible alarm does not exceed 90
decibels at the property line; and the alarm signal device, when activated,
notifies only the owner or occupant when they are not on the premises.
(b)Â
The City shall be issued an alarm system permit, where applicable,
and shall be exempt from any alarm system permit fees.
B.Â
Prohibited equipment.
(1)Â
Exterior alarms. On and after the effective date of this chapter,
owners or users of exterior audible alarms must equip such exterior
audible alarms with a timing mechanism that will disengage the exterior
audible alarm after a maximum of 15 minutes, except for water-flow
alarms. Exterior audible alarms without such a timing mechanism shall
be unlawful in the City and must be disconnected by the owner or user
within 60 days from the effective date of this chapter.
(2)Â
Automatic dialing devices. On and after the effective date of this
chapter, no automatic dialing devices may be keyed to the police and
fire communications center.
C.Â
Professional alarm license.
(1)Â
On and after the effective date of this chapter, no one except an
alarm supplier, holding a valid professional alarm license (hereinafter
referred to as "license") from the City or its designee, shall sell,
install or service any alarm system within the City.
(2)Â
The City shall issue a license to an alarm supplier meeting the requirements
of this section upon the filing of the required application and payment
of a fee. The fee for such license shall be in an amount as established,
from time to time, by resolution of the City Council.
(3)Â
Each license shall be an annual license and bear the signature of
the Police Chief. A copy of the license shall be physically displayed
upon each of the premises using the alarm system and shall be available
for inspection by the police or by an authorized code inspector. A
license is not required where no alarm system permit is required.
(4)Â
The alarm supplier applying for a license shall furnish the Chief
an insurance certificate on an annual basis confirming that the alarm
supplier has in force general liability insurance coverage in an amount
not less than $300,000 for each occurrence. The alarm supplier who
self-insures such coverage shall furnish the evidence of financial
ability.
(5)Â
No corporation, sole proprietor, partner, joint venturer, trustee,
executor, administrator, employee, fiduciary or stockholder with a
5% or greater interest in a corporation (except a corporation whose
stock is publicly traded and registered with the Securities and Exchange
Commission or with a state securities commission) applying for a license
shall have been convicted of a felony or pleaded nolo contendere to
a felony charge or indictment.
(6)Â
Alarm suppliers shall demonstrate a working knowledge of the burglar,
fire or supervisor alarm systems that they sell and shall be authorized
by the manufacturer of the alarm equipment to sell, install and maintain
the same.
(7)Â
A license shall be revoked or renewal denied when:
(a)Â
The alarm supplier fails to meet the requirements necessary
to obtain a license.
(b)Â
The license fee is not paid.
(c)Â
The Chief of Police, Fire Chief or their designee has reason
to believe the alarm supplier's installations are the cause of false
alarms.
(d)Â
The alarm supplier fails to provide emergency service as required
by this chapter.
(8)Â
Every alarm supplier that installs one or more alarm systems in the
City shall make service available directly or through an agent on
a twenty-four-hours-per-day basis seven days a week to repair in a
timely manner such devices and to correct malfunctions as they occur.
Any person using an alarm system shall make arrangements for service
to be available for such device on a twenty-four-hours-per-day, seven-days-per-week
basis.
(9)Â
Every alarm supplier, who after the effective date of this sells
or leases an alarm system in the City, shall furnish operating instructions
and manual to the buyer or lessee.
D.Â
Alarm system permit.
(1)Â
The user's fee for an alarm system permit shall be obtained by or
on behalf of the owner of the premises upon which the alarm system
is installed prior to the installation of the alarm. The fee for such
permit will be in an amount as established, from time to time, by
resolution of the City Council.
(2)Â
The alarm system permit shall bear the signature of the Police Chief
and be valid for one year from that issue date or until revoked by
the Chief. The permit shall be physically present upon the premises
using the alarm system and shall be available for inspection by the
Chief or by an authorized code inspector.
(3)Â
The alarm system permit shall contain the address of the property,
the name of the business (if applicable), the name of the owner, tenant
or agent responsible for the property, the alarm supplier or other
entity responsible for maintaining the system (if applicable), the
type of alarm (fire, burglary, holdup, medical), at least two alternate
emergency numbers of persons to be contacted to secure the property,
and any additional information as may be determined to be necessary.
It shall be the owner's responsibility to amend the foregoing information
whenever the information changes during the life of the permit.
(4)Â
Users who fail to obtain an alarm permit within 60 days after the
alarm system is activated, or within 60 days after the effective date
of this chapter, shall, in addition to the permit fee, be liable to
pay a late charge penalty in an amount as established, from time to
time, by resolution of the City Council for each calendar month or
part thereof that the permit is not obtained.
[Amended at time of adoption of Code revisions (see Ch. 1,
General Provisions, Art. II)]
(5)Â
It shall be unlawful for a property owner, lessee of property or
a person otherwise occupying a premises within the City of DuBois
to put an alarm device into operation on his premises or to allow
an alarm device to be put into operation on his premises without first
obtaining an alarm device permit from the Police Department.
Every alarm supplier selling, leasing or furnishing to any user,
or a user who privately installs an alarm system which is located
on premises within the City, shall:
A.Â
Be permitted to install only equipment that is listed by Underwriters'
Laboratories, Incorporated, as being electrically safe. Wiring for
the alarm system must conform with all applicable municipal codes.
B.Â
Be required to cause each alarm system installed to be provided with
standby battery power, which shall automatically and immediately take
over in the event of a power failure without initiating an alarm except
for a trouble signal.
C.Â
Be required to install equipment in such a way as to neutralize electrical
surges on the alarm system.
D.Â
Be required to deactivate any alarm system within a reasonable period
of time when multiple false alarms are received.
E.Â
The sensory mechanism used in connection with an alarm device must
be adjusted to suppress false indications of fire or intrusion, so
that the alarm device will not be activated by impulses due to transient
pressure change in water pipes, short flashes of light, wind noises
(such as the rattling or vibrating of doors or windows), vehicular
noise adjacent to the premises or other forces unrelated to genuine
alarm situations.
F.Â
Application for a permit for the installation of an alarm system
and subsequent installation of such a system pursuant to a permit
issued or the continuance of the use of any alarm system already installed
at the effective date of this chapter shall constitute consent by
the owner or lessee thereof and authorization for the inspection of
any such installation and/or operation by the Police Chief or his
representative.
G.Â
All such entries upon the premises where an alarm system is installed,
and all such inspections of the installation and operation of alarm
systems, shall be at reasonable times and upon reasonable notice,
except in emergency situations.
H.Â
Each alarm business, alarm agent or permittee shall display to the
Police Chief, when requested, the record of inspection or repair of
an installed alarm system.
I.Â
Each permittee shall maintain each alarm system in good working order,
providing the necessary service to prevent false alarms, to prevent
malfunctions endangering persons or property, and to prevent other
malfunctions.
J.Â
Each permittee shall cause each alarm system to be inspected regularly
by a representative of the company with a service contract or other
person qualified to inspect and service such equipment, at least once
every six months. Inspections shall be complete enough to detect any
likely malfunctions and may include testing of the equipment. No alarm
system, however, shall be tested with a resulting transmission of
the alarm to the public safety communications center of the City unless
the City is so notified in advance. The person making the inspection
shall provide a written report to the permittee, and the report shall
be kept on hand for 12 months, subject to being shown to any representative
of the Police Department of the City when requested during business
hours.
A.Â
The permittee shall be notified, in writing, by the public safety
agency of each and every false alarm activated in the absence of an
emergency, whether willful or by inadvertence, negligence or unintentional
act, including the malfunction of the alarm system to which the police
or fire agency responds. Each twenty-four-hour period during which
such an alarm occurs shall constitute a separate offense, and each
offense shall accumulate over a twelve-month period, as follows:
B.Â
When the fourth and subsequent false alarm occurs, the public safety
agency shall, within 20 days from the date of the false alarm, notify
the permittee that a false alarm charge is due and payable and the
amount thereof. Such notice shall be forwarded by certified mail to
the permittee at his last known address. Failure of the public safety
agency to mail notice of assessment of the false alarm charge within
20 days from the occurrence of a false alarm shall preclude the City
from assessing a false alarm charge for said false alarm.
C.Â
A false alarm charge shall be due and payable at the office of the
City 25 days from the date of the mailing of the assessment of the
charge. The City shall be exempt from payment of all fees.
D.Â
Failure of the permittee to pay a false alarm charge on or before the due date shall constitute a violation of this chapter and shall subject said person to the penalties set forth in § 110-6 hereof.
E.Â
If doubt exists as to the cause of the false alarm, the Chief of
Police or his designee shall make a decision regarding the circumstances
of the activation.
F.Â
Multiple alarms received by the police or fire agency before the
system can be deactivated within a reasonable period of time shall
be considered a single alarm.
G.Â
For purposes of this section, alarms will not be considered false
and no penalty fee shall be imposed if:
(1)Â
Corrective measures are instituted within 72 hours after the alarm
has been transmitted and written proof of repairs is given to the
Police Chief.
(2)Â
A person who accidentally causes a false alarm immediately calls
the affected department of the City in time to prevent a response
of personnel and equipment to the premises.
A.Â
Should any person fail to pay the false alarm charges, as required under § 110-5 of this chapter, such failure shall constitute a violation of this chapter and such unpaid charges may be collected as fines by suit or summary proceeding brought in the name of the City before any Magisterial District Judge of this commonwealth having jurisdiction. Such proceedings for such violations and for collection of such fees imposed herein and unpaid may be commenced by warrant or by summons, at the discretion of the Magisterial District Judge before whom such proceedings are begun. Each 24 hours' period during which failure to comply continues shall constitute a separate violation of the terms of this chapter.
B.Â
Any person who is convicted of a violation shall be subject to prosecution
and, upon conviction, shall be liable for a fine of not less than
$100 nor more than $1,000 plus costs of prosecution and, in default
of payment thereof, may be sentenced and committed to imprisonment
for a period not exceeding 90 days.
[Amended at time of adoption of Code revisions (see Ch. 1,
General Provisions, Art. II)]
C.Â
The City shall be exempt from all penalties under this chapter.
A.Â
The issuance of any permit under this chapter shall not constitute
acceptance by the City of any liability to maintain any equipment,
to answer alarms nor otherwise render the City liable to any person
for any loss or damage relating to the alarm system or procedure.
B.Â
In the event the owner of such premises is a person other than the
permit applicant, as in the instance of a lessee or other user not
the owner of the premises on which the alarm is installed, such permit
application shall constitute an indemnification agreement by the applicant
to hold harmless: any such police officer or firefighter; the Police
Department or the Fire Department; and the City, as appropriate, from
any and all damages whatsoever claimed by the lessor or owner of the
premises on which the alarm is installed.
Administration and enforcement of this chapter shall be a function
of the code administration agency and the police agency and shall
include the following:
A.Â
Authority to accept or reject a permit application or revoke a permit
because of a misrepresentation or false statement contained in any
application for a permit, failure to correct any deficiencies in equipment
or operation of an alarm device connected to the central receiving
station after due notice, or not meeting other conditions and specifications
of this chapter.
B.Â
Authority to order the disconnection of an alarm device to the central
receiving station for a violation of this chapter or failure to pay
any of the appropriate fees.
Any applicant or permit holder shall have a right of appeal
under this chapter. An appeal may be taken when the City empowered
to make a decision regarding an installation, operation or maintenance
of an alarm device for which a permit has been requested and is denied,
or upon which a permit has been issued and a revocation of said permit
has occurred. Such an appeal, when filed, shall be in writing and
filed within 10 days following such decision. The appeal shall be
filed with the City Council making the decision. The City Council
shall promptly conduct a hearing to affirm, modify or reverse the
decision appealed from. The decision of the City Council shall be
final.