This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the alarm system act.
(Ordinance 93-12, sec. 1, adopted 1994)
The purpose of this chapter is to provide minimum standards and regulations applicable to the burglar and/or fire alarm systems located within the town’s municipal boundaries, including the adoption of penalties for the violations thereof.
(Ordinance 93-12, sec. 2, adopted 1994)
The following words and phrases, when used in this act, shall have the following meanings:
Alarm system.
Any assembly of equipment, mechanical or electrical, arranged to signal audibly, visibly or electronically, to a location outside the structure(s) protected by the system, or to a monitoring station which, in turn, notifies the appropriate agency, the occurrence of an illegal entry or other activity requiring urgent attention to which the police and/or the fire department is expected to respond.
Alarm user.
The person, partnership, corporation, or any other entity in control of any building, structure or facility, or any portion thereof, which is intended to be protected by an alarm system.
Alarm user permit.
A permit, issued by the town, allowing the operation of an alarm system within the town.
Appropriate chief.
The town chief of police or the town fire marshal.
Audible alarm.
Any alarm system which is designed to emit its signal by bell, whistle, siren or other device to the immediate area near the structure(s) which it protects. An audible alarm shall be considered as such whether or not it transmits a signal to an additional location.
Automatic dialer.
Any alarm system which is designed to emit its signal directly to the police and/or fire department by means of dialing a telephone number at the police and/or fire department and giving a tape recorded message or synthesized voice message, intended to elicit a response.
False alarm.
An alarm system signal or message eliciting an urgent response by the police and/or fire department when a situation requiring such response by the police or fire does not, in fact, exist.
A. 
An alarm which has been activated as a result of testing or repair shall not be considered as a false alarm if prior notification has been given, the day of such repairs or test, to the agency which the alarm would signal.
B. 
An alarm which has been activated shall not be considered as a false alarm if the responding public safety division receives a request to cancel and such request is made to the same location as the request for service and is received prior to the dispatching of any units or equipment.
Interconnected alarm system.
An alarm system which, directly or indirectly, automatically or manually uses a telephone line to transmit an alarm or message upon activation of the alarm system, including automatic dialing devices and building alarms connected to a private central operator who then reports alarm calls to the police and/or fire department(s).
(Ordinance 93-12, sec. 3, adopted 1994)
A. 
No person shall install, operate, or allow on the premises, under his control, the operation of an alarm system unless such person first obtains a valid alarm user permit. This requirement shall be the responsibility of the owner unless the occupant of the property is different from the owner, in which case it shall be the responsibility of both.
B. 
If an alarm user has more than one alarm system protecting two (2) or more separate structures having different addresses, a separate permit shall be required for each structure. All addresses (i.e., physical location) shall be stated on the alarm user application.
C. 
No posting of the alarm user permit or the posting of any other evidence or registration shall be required.
(Ordinance 93-12, sec. 4, adopted 1994)
A. 
Applications for alarm user permits shall be made on forms provided by the chief of police or the fire marshal. The application shall include the name, mailing address, physical location address (if different from mailing) and telephone numbers, including both home and business phone numbers, of the applicant and, if the applicant is not the property owner, the name, address, and telephone number of the property owner to be serviced by the alarm, and the central station phone number(s) of applicant’s alarm company, if any.
B. 
Each application, which pertains to a residence or to a building, structure, or facility which employs less than three (3) persons, shall provide at least one other name and telephone number or a person to be contacted in case of any emergency when the user is unavailable. An alarm monitoring company name may be substituted for one of the required names if a contractual arrangement exists between the user and the monitoring company.
C. 
Each holder of an alarm user permit shall, within ten (10) days of any change of the information on the alarm user permit application, notify the town police chief and/or fire chief, in writing, of any and all changes in the information on the application.
D. 
Each application shall contain an agreement to submit to the assessment schedule provided for in subsection E of this section. Failure to agree to this provision shall be cause to deny issuance of an alarm user permit or, if one has been issued, shall be cause to revoke any such alarm user permit.
E. 
The fees charged for permits issued pursuant to this act are as set forth in the fee schedule in appendix A of this code.
F. 
The information contained in an alarm user permit application shall be securely maintained and restricted to inspection only by authorized representative(s) of the town, including, but not limited to, the chief of police and the fire marshal, town manager, town attorney and/or town code enforcement officer.
(Ordinance 93-12, sec. 5, adopted 1994; editorially amended during 1998 codification; Ordinance adopting 2023 Code)
A. 
Each permit issued by the police and/or fire department shall be issued on a calendar year basis.
B. 
Each permit holder shall obtain, from the police or fire department, a renewal form not less than thirty (30) days before the expiration of the alarm user permit.
C. 
Renewal of an alarm user permit shall be accomplished by completing and signing the renewal form and returning it to the police department or the fire department, with the appropriate renewal fee(s), prior to the expiration of such permit. The signature shall certify the accuracy of the information and shall be signed by the alarm system user or any person listed on the application currently on file.
D. 
All alarm user permits shall be valid from the date of issuance through December 31 of the calendar year in which they are issued.
E. 
The fee for renewal shall be the amounts specified in the fee schedule in appendix A of this code.
(Ordinance 93-12, sec. 6, adopted 1994; Ordinance adopting 2023 Code)
A. 
No alarm user permit shall be issued or renewed for any alarm system which can be activated by a failure in the electrical current from the utility. Systems shall be equipped with a secondary power source which shall hold the alarm readiness for a minimum of one hundred twenty (120) minutes or shall be rendered inoperable by such power interruption.
B. 
No alarm user permit shall be issued or renewed for any audible alarm or automatic dialer alarm system designed to detect an intrusion or a fire which does not have an automatic cutoff which discontinues the alarm signal within fifteen (15) minutes after activation.
C. 
No alarm user permit shall be issued or renewed for any new installation of an automatic dialer alarm system.
D. 
All equipment shall meet standards as set forth by the State of New Mexico and the appropriate chiefs and the applicants may be required to submit evidence of the reliability and suitability of the equipment to be installed.
E. 
The chief of police or fire marshal may require that repairs or adjustments be made whenever said chief or marshal has determined that such are necessary to assure proper operation. The user’s permit shall be suspended if such repairs or adjustments are not made within the time allowed by said chief or marshal. Such time period shall be reasonable given the circumstances but cost shall not be a valid factor in failing to repair or adjust by the permitted time.
(Ordinance 93-12, sec. 7, adopted 1994)
A. 
Whenever an alarm is activated, requiring an emergency response to the location, a police officer or firefighter, who responded to the alarm address, shall inspect the areas protected by the system and shall determine whether the emergency response was, in fact, required as indicated by the alarm system.
B. 
If the inspecting police officer or firefighter determines the signal to be a false alarm, the police officer or firefighter shall make a report of the false alarm to their respective chief. A warning citation will be issued to the holder of the permit.
C. 
If two (2) false alarms are received in any twenty-four (24) hour period from the same location, it shall be presumed that any subsequent alarm received is also a false alarm. The user’s permit will be temporarily suspended until such time as any of the parties specified in the alarm permit responds satisfactorily to the appropriate chief as to the reason for the false alarms.
(Ordinance 93-12, sec. 8, adopted 1994)
A. 
Each false alarm response shall constitute a separate false alarm, whether or not police or fire response is elicited. Any response to a false alarm to a town address, by another agency in lieu of response by town agencies, as a result of mutual aid or automatic response agreements, shall constitute a false alarm.
B. 
Upon installation of the alarm, the alarm holder will have a sixty (60) day grace period for training employees, and no false alarms shall be assessed during this grace period. Thereafter, service fees shall be assessed, by the appropriate chief or his designee, in the amount set forth in the fee schedule in appendix A of this code.
1. 
No person, who is either the holder of an alarm user permit or responsible for said alarm system operation, shall negligently allow said alarm to register seven (7) or more false alarms within a calendar year. Any person who does shall pay a service fee in the amount set forth in the fee schedule in appendix A of this code, for residential or commercial structures, plus their permit(s) shall be canceled and they shall no longer be allowed to have an active system.
(Ordinance 93-12, sec. 9, adopted 1994; Ordinance adopting 2023 Code)
A. 
An alarm user permit shall be reviewed for revocation, by the appropriate chief or his designee, for any of the following reasons:
1. 
Any false alarms in excess of seven (7) false alarms in a calendar year;
2. 
Failure to remit the service fee required by section 8.04.090 of this chapter within thirty (30) days of receipt of invoice;
3. 
Falsification of any information on an application for issuance or renewal of an alarm user permit;
4. 
Failure to notify the appropriate chief of changes in permit information as required by section 8.04.050 of this chapter.
B. 
After review, the appropriate chief may recommend, to the town manager, revocation of the alarm user permit for up to one year. The town manager shall approve or disapprove the recommendation and notify the permit holder accordingly.
(Ordinance 93-12, sec. 10, adopted 1994)
The issuance of any permit(s), in conjunction with this chapter shall not constitute acceptance, by the town, of any liability to maintain any equipment, to answer alarms, or for anything in connection therewith. The town specifically reserves the right to not respond to an alarm received from an alarm system which does not hold a valid alarm user permit or which has been revoked.
(Ordinance 93-12, sec. 12, adopted 1994)
Whoever violates any section of this chapter shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, punishable by a fine of not more than five hundred dollars ($500.00) and/or imprisonment of not more than one hundred seventy-nine (179) days, in addition to the fees specified above in the specific sections.
(Ordinance 93-12, sec. 13, adopted 1994)