The purpose of this chapter is to establish predictable and
balanced regulations for the siting and screening of personal wireless
services antennas, towers, and accessory structures to accommodate
the growth of such systems within the Village of Whitesboro while
protecting the public against any adverse impacts on aesthetic resources,
avoiding potential damage to adjacent properties from tower failure
through structural standards and setback requirements, and reducing
the number of towers needed to serve the community by encouraging
collocation onto existing towers and buildings.
As used in this article, the following terms shall have the
meanings indicated:
ACCESSORY FACILITY OR STRUCTURE
An accessory facility or structure serving or being used
in conjunction with a telecommunications tower and located on the
same lot as the telecommunications tower, including utility or transmission
equipment storage sheds for cabinets.
ANTENNA
A system of electrical conductors that transmits or receives
radio frequency signals. Such signals shall include, but not be limited
to, radio, television, cellular, paging, personal communications services
(PCS) and microwave communications.
EPA
The Environmental Protection Agency.
FAA
The Federal Aviation Administration.
FCC
The Federal Communications Commission.
MICROWAVE
A method of providing telecommunications bandwidth by means
of a series of antennas, transmitters and reflectors on towers.
SATELLITE ANTENNA
Any parabolic dish, antenna or other device or equipment
of whatever nature or kind, the primary purpose of which is to receive
television, radio, light, microwave or other electronic signals, waves
and/or communications from space satellites.
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
The transmission and reception of audio, video, data and
other information by wire, radio, light and other electronic or electromagnetic
systems.
TELECOMMUNICATIONS TOWER
A structure designed to support antennas. It includes, without
limit, freestanding towers, guyed towers, monopoles and similar structures
that employ camouflage technology. It is a structure intended for
transmitting and/or receiving radio, television, cellular, paging,
personal communications services (PCS), telephone or microwave communications,
but excluding those used either for fire, police and other dispatch
communications, or exclusively for private radio and television reception
and private citizen's bands, amateur radio and other similar communications.
TOWER
Any tower, pole, windmill or other structure, whether attached
to a building, guyed or freestanding, designed to be used for and/or
for the support of any device for the transmission and/or reception
of radio frequency signals, including, but not limited to, broadcast,
shortwave, citizen's band, FM or AM television, microwave and any
wind-driven devices, whether used for energy production or not.
Notwithstanding the provisions of Chapter
295, Zoning, of the Code of the Village of Whitesboro with regards to the issuance of special use permits in order to facilitate and expedite the handling of applications for the installation or modification of telecommunication facilities, the Village of Whitesboro Zoning Board is hereby authorized to review and approve, approve with modifications or disapprove special use permits and site plans with respect to proposed installation or modification of telecommunication facilities within the Village of Whitesboro. The Zoning Board shall have the authority to impose such reasonable conditions and restrictions as are directly related to and incidental to the proposed antenna, tower or accessory use.
No telecommunication antenna, tower nor accessory facility/structure
shall hereafter be erected, changed or altered, except after obtaining
a special use permit from the Zoning Board of the Village of Whitesboro.
No special use permit or renewal thereof or modification of
a current special use permit relating to a telecommunications facility
shall be authorized by the Zoning Board unless it finds that such
telecommunications facility:
A. Is necessary to meet current or expected demands for service;
B. Conforms with all applicable regulations promulgated by the Federal
Communications Commission, the Federal Aviation Administration and
other federal agencies;
C. Is considered a public utility in the State of New York;
D. Is designed and constructed in a manner which minimizes visual impact
to the extent practical;
E. Complies with all other requirements of this chapter, unless expressly
superseded herein;
F. Is the most appropriate site among those available within the technically
feasible area for the location of a telecommunications facility;
G. When including the construction of a tower, such tower is designed
to accommodate future shared use by at least one other telecommunications
service provider. Any subsequent location of telecommunications equipment
by other service providers on existing towers specifically designed
for shared use shall not require a new or modified special permit
if there would be no increase in the height of the tower. However,
the additional equipment will require Village review.
All applicants for a tower special use permit shall make written
application to the Zoning Board. This application shall include:
A. Village supplied permit application form.
B. Proof of notification (certified mail return receipts to be given
to the Village by the applicant) of all property owners within 500
feet of the boundaries of the property on which the tower is to be
constructed.
D. Site plan application forms, including long-form EAF.
E. Site plan, in form and content acceptable to the Village, prepared
to scale and in sufficient detail and accuracy, showing at a minimum:
(1) The exact location of the proposed tower, together with guy wires
and guy anchors, if applicable.
(2) The maximum height of the proposed tower.
(3) A detail of tower type (monopole, guyed, freestanding or other).
(4) The color or colors of the tower.
(5) The location, type and intensity of any lighting on the tower.
(6) The property boundaries. (A copy of a property survey must also be
provided.)
(7) Proof of the landowner's consent if the applicant will not own the
property. (A copy of a lease agreement must also be provided if the
applicant will not own the property.)
(8) The location of all structures on the property and all structures
on any adjacent property within 50 feet of the property lines, together
with the distance of these structures from the tower.
(9) The names of adjacent landowners.
(10)
The location, nature and extent of any proposed fencing and
landscaping or screening.
(11)
The location and nature of proposed utility easements and access
road, if applicable.
(12)
Building elevations of accessory structures or immediately adjacent
buildings.
F. Before and after propagation studies prepared by a qualified radio
frequency engineer (signed and sealed by a professional engineer registered
in the State of New York), demonstrating existing signal coverage,
contrasted with the proposed signal coverage resulting from the proposed
telecommunications facility.
G. A search ring prepared by a qualified radio frequency engineer (signed
and sealed documents by a professional engineer registered in the
State of New York) and overlaid on an appropriate background map demonstrating
the area within which the telecommunications facility needs to be
located in order to provide proper signal strength and coverage to
the target cell. The applicant must be prepared to explain to the
Zoning Board why it selected the proposed site, discuss the availability
or lack of availability of a suitable structure within the search
ring which would have allowed for a collocated antenna(s), and to
what extent the applicant explored locating the proposed tower in
a more intensive use district. Correspondence with other telecommunications
companies concerning collocation is part of this requirement.
H. The applicant's engineer shall certify that any such telecommunications
tower and accessory equipment attached thereto meet or exceed applicable
wind load requirements as prescribed by the applicable State of New
York Uniform Building Code.
I. The Zoning Board, upon reviewing the application, may request reasonable
additional visual and aesthetic information as it deems appropriate
on a case-by-case basis. Such additional information may include,
among other things, enhanced landscaping plans, line-of-sight drawings
and/or visual simulations from viewpoints selected by the Zoning Board.
Line-of-sight drawings and visual simulations are mandatory for applications
in residential and agricultural zoning districts.
The following criteria will be considered by the Zoning Board
prior to the approval/denial of a request for a tower special use
permit; the criteria listed may be used as a basis to impose reasonable
conditions on the applicant:
A. Siting preferences.
(1) The Zoning Board may require that the proposed telecommunications
facility be located in an alternate technologically feasible and available
location. A guideline for the Village's preference, from most favorable
to least favorable districts/property, is as follows:
(a)
Property with an existing structure suitable for collocation.
(b)
C-2 Districts.
[Amended 11-8-2021 by L.L. No. 2-2021]
(d)
Planned Development Districts.
(2) A telecommunications facility which is proposed to be located on
land owned by the Village of Whitesboro will be given priority consideration
for approval of a special use permit by the Zoning Board regardless
of the zoning district within which it is located.
[Added 4-28-2008 by L.L. No. 4-2008]
B. Aesthetics. Telecommunications facilities shall be located and buffered
to the maximum extent which is practical and technologically feasible
to help ensure compatibility with surrounding land uses. In order
to minimize any adverse aesthetic effect on neighboring residences
to the extent possible, the Zoning Board may impose reasonable conditions
on the applicant, including the following:
(1) The Zoning Board may require a monopole or guyed tower (if sufficient
land is available to the applicant) instead of a freestanding tower.
Monopoles are a preferred design.
(2) The Zoning Board may require reasonable landscaping consisting of
trees or shrubs to screen the base of the tower and/or screen the
tower to the extent possible from adjacent residential property. Existing
on-site trees and vegetation shall be preserved to the maximum extent
possible.
(3) Landscaping. Landscaping shall mitigate the visual impacts of a communication
tower. Where adequate vegetation is not present, tower facilities
shall be landscaped with a landscape buffer that effectively screens
the view of the tower compound. The use of existing vegetation shall
be preserved to the maximum extent practicable and may be used as
a substitute for or in supplement towards meeting landscaping requirements.
(a)
Landscape buffers shall be a minimum of 10 feet in width and
located outside the fenced perimeter of the tower compound.
(b)
A row of trees a minimum of eight feet tall (planted height)
and a maximum of 20 feet apart shall be planted around the perimeter
of the fence.
(c)
A continuous hedge at least 30 inches high at planting and capable
of growing to at least 36 inches in height within 18 months shall
be planted in front of the tree line referenced above.
(d)
All landscaping shall be of the evergreen variety and conform
with landscape standards and approved by the Zoning Board.
(e)
If existing foliage is to be used as buffer, it must be labeled
and incorporated into site plan and approved through the Zoning Board.
(4) The Zoning Board can request additional site plan requirements, such
as specially designed towers, additional screening, greater setbacks
and improved landscaping to address aesthetic concerns.
(5) The Zoning Board may require the applicant to show that it has made
good-faith efforts to collocate on existing towers or other available
and appropriate structures and/or to construct new towers near existing
towers in an effort to consolidate visual disturbances.
(6) Towers should be designed and sited as to avoid, whenever possible,
application of FAA lighting and painting requirements. Towers shall
not be artificially lighted except as required by the Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA). Towers shall be of a nonreflective finish in
a noncontrasting blue, gray or black finish. The color should be selected
so as to minimize the equipment's visibility. Any lights which may
be required by the FAA shall not consist of strobe lights, unless
specifically mandated by the FAA.
(7) No tower shall contain any signs or advertising devices. A small
sign on the fencing shall be plated to identify the ownership of the
facility and a telephone number for emergencies. Warning signs with
respect to tower shall also be permissible.
(8) The applicant must submit a copy of its policy regarding collocation
with other potential future applicants on the proposed tower. Such
policy must allow collocation.
C. Radio-frequency effect. The Zoning Board may impose a condition on
the applicant that the communications antennas be operated only at
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) designated frequencies and
power levels and/or Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) technical
exposure limits, and that the applicant provide competent documentation
to support that maximum allowable frequencies, power levels and exposure
limits for radiation will not be exceeded.
D. Traffic, access and safety.
(1) A road turnaround and one parking space shall be provided to assure
adequate emergency and service access. Maximum use of existing roads,
public or private, shall be made. The use of public roadways or road
rights-of-way for the siting of a tower's or antenna's accessory structures
is prohibited.
(2) All towers and guy anchors, if applicable, shall be enclosed by a
fence not less than eight feet in height or otherwise sufficiently
protected from trespassing or vandalism.
(3) The applicant must comply with all applicable state and federal regulations,
including, but not limited to, FAA and FCC regulations.
E. Removal of tower. The applicant shall agree to remove the tower if
the telecommunications facility becomes obsolete or ceases to be used
for its intended purpose for 12 consecutive months. The Zoning Board
shall require the applicant to provide a demolition bond (in an amount
determined by the Zoning Board based on the cost of removal) for purposes
of removing the telecommunications facility in case the applicant
fails to do so as required above. The applicant shall submit estimated
costs for removal to the Zoning Board.
F. Structural safety. During the application process and every three
years after construction of the tower, the applicant/owner shall provide
to the Codes Enforcement Officer a certification from a qualified,
professional engineer, certifying that the tower meets applicable
structural safety standards.
G. Inspection. The Village may, at any time, inspect any telecommunications
tower, antenna, or other facility to ensure its structural integrity.
If, upon such inspection, the Village's duly designated inspector
determines that the facility is not structurally sound and that such
facility constitutes a danger to persons or property, then upon notice
being provided to the owner of the facility and/or the property upon
which it is located, the owner(s) shall have 30 days to properly repair
such facility. Failure to properly repair the facility within the
said 30 days shall constitute cause for the removal of the facility
at the owner's expense.
H. Insurance and hold harmless agreement. The applicant shall provide
the Village with proof of liability insurance in an amount not less
than $1,000,000 per occurrence and naming the Village of Whitesboro
as an additional insured, which protects against losses due to personal
injury or property damage resulting from the construction, operation,
or collapse of the tower, antenna or accessory equipment. In addition
to the insurance required, the person applying for a permit shall
agree to execute and deliver to the Village Clerk of the Village of
Whitesboro an indemnification and hold harmless agreement in which
the person applying for the permit agrees to save and hold the Village
of Whitesboro, its Board, agents or employees harmless from any and
all liabilities of any kind or nature whatsoever which may arise as
a result of the person being issued a permit as described herein,
including, but not limited by, enumeration, reasonable attorneys'
fees and court costs incurred by the Village in defending against
any claim. Such hold harmless agreement shall be executed prior to
the issuance of the permit.
I. Liability insurance. Liability insurance in an amount not less than
$1,000,000 shall be maintained by the owner and operator of the facility
until such facility is dismantled and removed from the parent site.
Failure to maintain insurance coverage shall constitute a violation
of this chapter and grounds for revocation of conditional use approval.
Proof of same shall be supplied to the Zoning Board upon application
for permit.
Any facility receiving a tower special use permit that subsequently
does not meet the requirements of that permit shall have its permit
revoked, and the tower shall be removed within 90 days of notification
by the Village.
Telecommunications facilities fees shall be as follows:
A. Tower special use permit: $2,500 application fee (includes site plan
fee); plus any additional costs for outside consultants incurred by
the Village for review of propagation studies, search ring and analysis,
collocation possibilities, or the structural planned specification
for the construction of the tower, or any other review deemed necessary
by Village officials.
B. Building permit fee: $250 base fee (examination of plans and review);
plus $10 per $1,000 value of total verified construction cost.