The purpose of this article is to establish general guidelines
for the siting of wireless communications towers and antennas. The
goals of this article are to:
A. Protect residential areas and land uses from potential adverse impacts
of towers and antennas;
B. Encourage the location of towers in nonresidential areas;
C. Minimize the total number of towers throughout the community;
D. Strongly encourage the joint use of new and existing tower sites
as a primary option rather than construction of additional single-use
towers;
E. Encourage users of towers and antenna to locate them, to the extent
possible, in areas where the adverse impact on the community is minimal;
F. Encourage users of towers and antennas to configure them in a way
that minimizes the adverse visual impact of the towers and antennas
through careful design, siting, landscape screening, and innovative
camouflaging techniques;
G. Enhance the ability of the providers of telecommunications services
to provide such services to the community quickly, effectively, and
efficiently;
H. Consider the public health and safety of communication towers; and
I. Avoid potential damage to adjacent properties from tower failure
through engineering and careful siting of tower structures.
As used in this article, the following terms shall have the
meanings indicated:
ALTERNATIVE TOWER STRUCTURE
Man-made trees, clock towers, bell steeples, light poles,
and similar alternative design mounting structures that camouflage
or conceal the presence of antennas or towers.
ANTENNA
Any exterior transmitting or receiving device mounted on
a tower, building or structure and use in communications that radiate
or capture electromagnetic waves, digital signals, analog signals,
radio frequencies (excluding radar signals) wireless telecommunication
signals or other communication signals.
ANTICIPATED MUNICIPAL EXPENSES
The cost of processing an application for a right-of-way
permit including, but not limited to, all professional fees such as
engineer and attorney costs to the City.
APPLICANT
A person or entity who submits an application under this
article.
APPLICATION
A written request submitted by an applicant to the City for
a permit: to locate or co-locate, or to modify, a communications facility
underground or on any existing support structure, pole, or tower;
or to construct, modify or replace a new support structure, pole or
tower or any other structure on which a communications facility will
be co-located.
BACKHAUL NETWORK
The lines that connect a providers tower site to one or more
cellular telephone switching offices and or long distance providers
or the public switched telephone network.
CABINET
A small box-like or rectangular structure used to facilitate
utility or wireless service from within the municipal right-of-way.
CO-LOCATE
To install, mount, maintain, modify, operate and/or replace
a communications facility on an existing support structure, pole,
or tower or any other structure capable of supporting such communications
facility. "Co-location" has a corresponding meaning. The term does
not include the installation of a new utility pole, tower or support
structure in the public right-of-way.
ELECTRIC DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM
The part of the electric system, after the transmission system,
that is dedicated to delivering electric energy to an end user.
EXISTING POLE
A pole that is in lawful existence within the municipal right-of-way.
FAA
The Federal Aviation Administration.
FCC
The Federal Communication Commission.
HEIGHT (ANTENNA TOWER)
When referring to a tower or other structure, the distance
measured from the lowest finished grade of the parcel to the highest
point on the tower or other structure, including the base pad and
any antenna.
MUNICIPAL RIGHT-OF-WAY
The surface of, and the space above or below, any public
street, road, lace, public way or place, sidewalk, alley, boulevard,
parkway, drive, and the like, held by the City as an easement or in
fee simply ownership. This term also includes rights-of-way held by
the County of Bergen where the City's approval is required for the
use of same pursuant to N.J.S.A. 27:16-6.
POLE
A long, slender, rounded piece of wood or metal.
POLE-MOUNTED ANTENNA
A device that is attached to a pole and used to transmit
radio or microwave signals and shall include, but not be limited to,
small cell equipment and transmission media such as femtocells, picocells,
microcells, and outside distributed antenna systems.
PREEXISTING TOWERS and PREEXISTING ANTENNAS
Any tower or antenna for which a building permit or conditional
use permit has be properly issued prior to the effective date of this
article including permitted towers or antenna that have not been constructed
so long as each approval is correct and not expired.
PROPOSED POLE
A pole that is proposed to be placed in the municipal right-of-way.
PROVIDER
A communications service provider or a wireless services
provider and includes any person that owns and/or operates within
the public row any communications facilities, wireless facilities,
poles built for the sole or primary purpose of supporting communications
facilities or towers.
RIGHT-OF-WAY AGREEMENT
An agreement that sets forth the terms and conditions for
use of the municipal right-of-way and includes, but is not limited
to, municipal franchise agreements.
RIGHT-OF-WAY PERMIT
An approval from the City setting forth applicant's compliance
with the requirements of this article.
SATELLITE ANTENNA
A reflective dish structure which is designed for the purpose
of receiving television, radio, microwave, satellite or similar signals
and serves as an accessory structure to a principal permitted structure
or use.
SURROUNDING STREETSCAPE
Existing poles within the same right-of-way which are located
within 500 feet of the proposed pole.
TOWER
Any structure that is designed and constructed primary for
the purpose of supporting one or more antennas for telephone, radio
and similar communication purposes including self-supporting lattices,
towers, guyed towers or monopole towers. The term includes radio and
television transmission towers, microwave towers, common carrier towers,
cellular telephone towers, alternative tower structures and the like.
The term includes the structure and any support thereto.
Any antenna or tower that is not operated for a continuous period
of 12 months shall be considered abandoned, and the owner of such
antenna or tower shall remove the same within 90 days of receipt of
notice from the City of Hackensack notifying the owner of such abandonment.
Failure to remove an abandoned antenna or tower within said 90 days
shall be grounds to remove the tower or antenna at the owner's expense.
If there are two or more users of a single tower, then this provision
shall not become effective until all users cease using the tower.
The City may condition the issuance of any permit to demolish or remove
a tower or antenna on the posting of an appropriate performance bond
or other suitable guarantee in a face amount of not less than 120%
of the cost (as determined by the City Engineer) of such removal,
grading and restoration to a state required under all applicable City
ordinances, including but not limited to the City Property Maintenance
Code.
Rebuilding damaged or destroyed nonconforming towers or antennas. Nonconforming towers or antennas that are damaged or destroyed may not be rebuilt without having to first obtain administrative approval or a conditional use permit and without having to meet the separation requirements specified herein. The type, height, and location of the tower on site shall be of the same type and intensity as the original facility approval. Building permits to rebuild the facility shall comply with the then-applicable building codes and shall be obtained within 180 days from the date the facility is damaged or destroyed. If no permit is obtained or if said permit expires, the tower or antenna shall be deemed abandoned as specified in §
175-14.8.