The purpose and intent of this section is to protect the public
health, safety, general welfare and to provide wireless telecommunication
service to the community in a safe, effective and efficient manner
and establish a comprehensive set of zoning requirements for wireless
telecommunications facilities as that term is defined herein. These
regulations are intended to provide for the managed development of
wireless telecommunications facilities in a manner that recognizes
and enhances the community benefits of wireless communication technology
and reasonably accommodates the needs of citizens and applicants for
the installation of wireless telecommunications facilities in accordance
with federal and state rules and regulations. At the same time, these
regulations are intended to protect residents from those potential
adverse impacts of wireless telecommunications facilities that the
city may legally consider, evaluate, and mitigate, and are also intended
to preserve the visual character of established communities and the
natural beauty of hillsides and ridgelines.
(Ord. 5692 § 31, 2010)
A. A wireless
telecommunications facility permit is required prior to the installation
of any wireless telecommunications facility on private property and
not in the public right-of-way. Consideration of a wireless telecommunications
facility permit application shall be conducted by the director of
community development or the planning commission, as indicated below
and as shown in Table 30.48-A. Wireless telecommunications facility
permit applications will be processed based upon the classification
of antennas defined in this code. Although classifications are assigned
at project intake, a re-evaluation of antenna classifications may
occur at any point in the process including at the time of review
by the director of community development, planning commission or city
council.
1. Residential
zones (ROS, R1R, R1, R-3050, R-2250, R-1650, and R-1250): Class 1,
Class 4, Class 5, Class 6 and Class 7 applications shall be presented
to the planning commission. Class 3 antennas shall be presented to
the director of community development.
2. SR
zones: Class 1 and Class 3 antenna applications shall be presented
to the director of community development. Class 4, Class 5, Class
6 and Class 7 antenna applications shall be presented to the planning
commission.
3. Non-residential
zones (C1, C2, C3, CR, CE, CEM, CPD, CH, CA, DSP, MS, IND, IMU, IMU-R,
SFMU, P overlay, and PS overlay): Class 1, Class 3, Class 4, Class
5, Class 6 and Class 7 antennas shall be presented to the director
of community development.
4. Class
2 Antennas: Class 2 antennas (collocated antennas) shall be presented
to the same body that initially reviewed the underlying base wireless
telecommunications facility upon which the colocation is proposed.
Collocated facilities shall be a permitted use if the underlying base
facility was subject to a discretionary permit and was subject to
either an environmental impact report, mitigated negative declaration
or a negative declaration pursuant to California
Government Code Section
65850.6 and as that section may be subsequently amended. Such collocated
facilities shall require a wireless telecommunications facilities
permit, with modified review pursuant to sections 30.48.040.A and
30.48.070
5. All
classes of antennas: All antenna applications requesting heights exceeding
the height limitation of the requested zone shall be presented to
the planning commission.
6. Antennas other than Classes 1 through 7 as described in Chapter
30.70 shall be subject to consideration by the planning commission through a standards variance.
Table 30.48-A
Wireless Telecommunications Facility Permit Review Authorities
(1)(2)(3)
|
---|
|
Residential Zones (ROS, R1R, R1, R-3050, R-2250, R-1650, and
R-1250)
|
SR Zones
|
Non-Residential Zones (C1, C2, C3, CR, CE, CEM, CPD, CH, CA,
DSP, MS, IND, IMU, IMU-R, SFMU, P overlay, and PS overlay)
|
---|
Class 1 Antenna
|
PC
|
DCD
|
DCD
|
Class 2 Antenna (collocated)
|
Same as original permit for facility on which co-location will
occur
|
Same as original permit for facility on which co-location will
occur
|
Same as original permit for facility on which co-location will
occur
|
Class 3 Antenna
|
DCD
|
DCD
|
DCD
|
Class 4 Antenna
|
PC
|
PC
|
DCD
|
Class 5 Antenna
|
PC
|
PC
|
DCD
|
Class 6 Antenna
|
PC
|
PC
|
DCD
|
Class 7 Antenna
|
PC
|
PC
|
DCD
|
DCD - Director of Community Development
|
PC - Planning Commission
|
(1)
|
All classes of antennas: Applications requesting heights exceeding
the height limitation of the requested zone shall be presented to
the planning commission.
|
(2)
|
All classes of antennas: An application in an historic preservation
overlay zone shall be reviewed by the historic preservation commission
in addition to the review authority named in Table 30.48-A.
|
(3)
|
Collocated antennas: Collocated wireless telecommunications
facilities shall be a permitted use provided the underlying base facility
was subject to a discretionary permit and was subject to either an
environmental impact report, mitigated negative declaration or a negative
declaration pursuant to California Government Code Section 65850.6
and as that section may be subsequently amended.
|
7. Exemption. Temporary emergency use. The director of community
development or city manager shall have the authority to approve the
placement of a wireless telecommunications facility on a temporary
basis necessary during an emergency. Said temporary permit shall contain
conditions for removal of the temporary wireless telecommunications
facility as soon as possible after the conclusion of the emergency.
(Ord. 5692 § 31, 2010; Ord. 5747 § 96, 2011; Ord. 5803 § 112, 2013; Ord. 5807 § 27, 2013)
A. For those wireless telecommunications facilities applications subject to review by the director of community development, a wireless telecommunications facility permit may be granted administratively, so long as all application requirements have been fulfilled and all of the findings required by this Chapter
30.48 have been made.
B. The review authority shall consider all evidence presented for and against the wireless telecommunications facility application. In all instances where a wireless telecommunications facility permit is granted by the review authority, the standards required by Section
30.48.110 shall be imposed. Further conditions of approval of wireless telecommunications facility permits shall be imposed as are necessary to minimize environmental, aesthetic, and public safety impacts. The review authority shall make findings of fact and determinations in writing and shall place in the mail a copy thereof, addressed to the applicant and those persons expressing an interest in the application who submitted their correct mailing addresses. A decision of the review authority shall become final 15 days following the date of the decision unless an appeal to the planning commission or the city council, as the case may be, is filed as herein provided.
(Ord. 5692 § 31, 2010; Ord. 5747 § 97, 2011)
Wireless telecommunications providers shall ensure that their
wireless telecommunications facilities do not cause interference with
reception of area television or radio operations and shall ensure
continuous compliance with federal and state requirements regarding
interference with reception of such operations.
(Ord. 5692 § 31, 2010)
Setback requirements shall be as specified with each respective
zoning district.
(Ord. 5692 § 31, 2010)
Unless the applicant demonstrates that compliance with the following
development and design standards is not reasonably feasible without
depriving applicant of its rights under state and/or federal law,
all wireless telecommunications facilities except for collocated facilities
on which the base facility meets the requirements of California Government
Code Section 65850.6 shall be planned, designed, located, erected,
operated, and maintained in accordance with the following standards:
A. General Wireless Telecommunications Facilities Standards. Wireless
telecommunications facilities shall comply with all development standards
within the applicable zoning district of the subject site.
1. All wireless telecommunications facilities and accessory wireless equipment shall comply with the applicable provisions of the city’s noise regulations as set forth in chapter
8.36 of this code.
2. Visual
impact minimization and screening standards. All wireless telecommunications
facilities shall employ camouflage design techniques to minimize visual
impacts and provide appropriate screening. Such techniques shall be
employed to make the installation, operation and appearance of the
facility as visually inconspicuous as possible, to prevent the facility
from visually dominating the surrounding area, and to hide the installation
from predominant views from surrounding properties. Depending on the
proposed site and surroundings, certain camouflage design techniques
may be deemed by the city as ineffective or inappropriate and alternative
techniques may be required. The following is a menu of potential camouflage
design techniques that should be considered based on different installation
situations.
3. Height
requirements shall be as specified within each respective zoning district
or as approved by the planning commission.
B. For Building and Structure Mounted Installations.
1. Screening
materials shall be matched in color, size, proportion, style, and
quality with the exterior design and architectural character of the
building or structure and the surrounding visual environment.
2. Facility
components, including all antenna panels, may be mounted either inside
the building or structure, or behind the proposed screening elements,
or on the exterior face of the building or structure.
3. All
antenna panels and accessory wireless equipment mounted on the exterior
of the building or structure shall be painted or otherwise coated
to match the predominant color of the mounting building or structure.
4. When
required by the city, antenna panels shall be located and arranged
on the building or structure so as to replicate the installation and
appearance of the equipment already mounted to the building or structure.
C. For Monopole Installations.
1. Monopole
installations shall be situated so as to utilize existing natural
or man-made features including topography, vegetation, buildings,
or other structures to provide the greatest amount of visual screening.
2. All
antenna components and accessory wireless equipment shall be treated
with exterior coatings of a color and texture to match the predominant
visual background and/or existing architectural elements so as to
visually blend in with the surrounding development. Subdued colors
and non-reflective materials that blend with surrounding materials
and colors shall be used.
3. The
director of community development may require additional measures
designed to camouflage a wireless telecommunications facility, including
but not limited to converting the monopole to a Class 7 antenna, thereby
placing the facility entirely within a vertical screening structure.
Suitable architectural features include but are not limited to: clock
towers, bell towers, icon signs, light-houses, or windmills. All facility
components, including the antennas, shall be mounted inside said structure.
4. The
camouflage design techniques employed shall result in an installation
that either will blend in with the predominant visual backdrop or
will disguise the facility.
D. For Miscellaneous Installations.
1. A
monorock and or monoshrub installation will be considered properly
screened provided that it is located in a setting that is compatible
with the proposed screening method. For a monoshrub, other vegetation
comparable to that replicated in the proposed screen shall be prevalent
in the immediate vicinity of the wireless telecommunications facility
site and the addition of new comparable living vegetation may be necessary
to enhance the monoshrub screen. For a monorock, the proposed screen
shall match in scale and color other rock outcroppings in the general
vicinity of the proposed site. A monorock screen may not be considered
appropriate in areas that do not have natural rock outcroppings.
2. Class
2 antenna installations shall use screening methods similar to those
used on the existing wireless telecommunications facilities. Use of
other appropriate screening methods may be considered.
3. Class
3 antenna installations of less than 30 days duration may not require
screening to reduce visual impacts depending on the setting of the
proposed site. If screening methods are determined to be necessary,
the appropriate screening methods will be determined though the wireless
telecommunications facilities permit process.
E. For accessory Wireless Equipment. All accessory wireless equipment
associated with the operation of any wireless telecommunications facilities
shall be screened. The following is a menu of potential screening
techniques that should be utilized based on the type of installation:
1. Accessory
wireless equipment for building mounted facilities may be located
underground, inside the building, or on the roof of the building that
the facility is mounted on, provided that both the equipment and screening
materials are painted the color of the building, roof, and/or surroundings.
All screening materials for roof-mounted facilities shall be of a
quality and design that is architecturally integrated with the design
of the building or structure.
2. Accessory
wireless equipment for freestanding facilities, not mounted on a building,
may be visually screened by locating the equipment within a nearby
building or in an underground vault. For above ground installations
not within a building, screening shall consist of walls, landscaping,
or walls combined with landscaping to effectively screen the facility
at the time of installation. All wall and landscaping materials shall
be selected so that the resulting screening will be visually integrated
with the architecture and landscaping of the surroundings.
3. All
accessory wireless equipment shall be placed and mounted in the least
visually obtrusive feasible location.
F. Additional Design Regulations for All Antennas.
1. All
camouflaged wireless telecommunications facilities shall be designed
to visually and operationally blend into the surrounding area in a
manner that achieves compatibility with the community. The wireless
telecommunications facility shall also be appropriate for the specific
site (i.e., it should not “stand out” from its surrounding
environment, such as a faux tree standing along in a field or standing
at a greater height (five feet or more) than other trees on the site).
2. No
wireless telecommunications facilities shall be allowed on or in any
building or structure, that is listed or eligible for listing on any
federal, state or local historical register or city-approved survey
or in any federal, state or local historic district, unless it is
determined by the director of community development that the wireless
telecommunications facility will have no adverse effect on the historic
character of the building, structure or historic district, or its
eligibility for historic designation. At the discretion of the director,
a public hearing before the historic preservation commission may be
required to determine that a proposed facility will not have any adverse
effect.
3. In cases where the wireless telecommunications facility site is visible from a freeway or a major arterial roadway, as identified in the general plan, the wireless telecommunications facility shall be designed and located in such a manner as to avoid adverse impacts on traffic safety. Such locations shall use design methods such as, but not limited to, type of facility, camouflaging, screening and landscaping. No portion of any wireless telecommunications facility shall extend into the public right-of-way without any and all permits required pursuant to chapter
12.08 of this code.
4. Facade
mounted antennas shall be architecturally integrated into the building
design and otherwise made as unobtrusive as possible. Antennas may
be required to be located entirely within an existing or newly created
architectural feature so as to be completely screened from view. Any
newly-created architectural features must be located, proportioned
and designed to be properly integrated into the building design. Facade
mounted antennas shall not extend more than 24 inches out from the
building face, and no cables or antenna mounting brackets or any other
associated equipment or wires shall be visible above, below, or to
the side of the antennas.
5. All
wireless telecommunications facilities shall be designed to minimize
the visual impact to the greatest extent feasible by means of placement,
screening, landscaping with native species, whenever feasible, and
camouflage, and to be compatible with existing architectural elements,
building materials and other site characteristics. The applicant shall
use the least visible antennas possible to accomplish the coverage
objectives.
6. Colors
and materials for facilities shall be non-reflective and chosen to
minimize visibility. Wireless telecommunications facilities, including
accessory wireless equipment, shall be painted or textured using colors
to match or blend with the primary background. All equipment cabinets
visible to the public shall be treated with a graffiti-resistant coating.
7. No
signs, striping, graphics or other attention getting devices are permitted
on a transmission tower or ancillary facilities except for warning
and safety signage with a surface area of no more than three square
feet per sign. Such signage shall be affixed to a fence or ancillary
facility and the number of signs is limited to no more than two unless
a greater number is required by law.
8. Roof
mounted antennas shall be constructed at the minimum height possible
to serve the operator’s service area and shall be set back as
far from the edge of the building as possible or otherwise screened
to minimize their visibility.
9. In
cases where the wireless telecommunications facility site is proposed
to be located in a city park, the wireless telecommunications facility
shall be designed and located in such a manner as to avoid adverse
visual impacts. Such locations shall use design methods such as, but
not limited to, type of facility, camouflaging, screening and landscaping.
10. The use of chain link fences for security of equipment is permitted
only if the fence is fully screened by landscaping that is maintained
by the permittee and is not otherwise prohibited in this title 30.
Slats do not satisfy the requirement for screening. Every wireless
telecommunications facility and antenna support structure shall be
protected against unauthorized climbing or other access by the public.
Barbed wire fencing or razor wire fencing is prohibited.
11. Each wireless telecommunications facility shall be identified by
a permanently installed plaque or marker, no larger than four inches
by six inches, clearly identifying the addresses, email contact information,
and 24-hour local or toll-free contact telephone numbers for both
the permittee and the agent responsible for the maintenance of the
wireless telecommunications facility. Such information shall be updated
in the event of a change in the permittee, the agent responsible for
maintenance of the wireless telecommunications facility, or both.
12. Antenna lighting shall be prohibited in all zones. Beacon lights
shall not be permitted unless required by the Federal Aviation Administration
and, if so, shall be included when calculating the height of the facility.
Beacon lights shall be of a type that minimizes downward illumination.
13. Wireless telecommunications facilities sited on mountainous terrain as defined in Section
16.08.270 shall blend with the surrounding existing and man-made environment to the maximum extent possible and a finding is made that no other location is reasonably legally or technically feasible.
G. Maintenance.
1. All
graffiti on any components of the wireless telecommunications facility
shall be removed promptly.
2. All
landscaping required for the wireless telecommunications facility
shall be maintained at all times and shall be promptly replaced if
not successful.
3. If
a flagpole is used for camouflaging a wireless telecommunications
facility, flags shall be flown and shall be properly maintained at
all times. The use of the United States flag shall comply with the
provisions of the United States Flag Code, 4 U.S.C. § 6
et seq.
4. All
wireless telecommunications facility sites shall be kept clean and
free of litter.
5. All
equipment cabinets shall display a legible sign clearly identifying
the addresses, email contact information, and 24-hour local or toll-free
contact telephone numbers for both the permittee and the agent responsible
for the maintenance of the wireless telecommunications facility. Such
information shall be updated in the event of a change in the permittee,
the agent responsible for maintenance of the wireless telecommunications
facility, or both.
(Ord. 5692 § 31, 2010; Ord. 5747 § 98, 2011; Ord. 5803 § 113, 2013)
A. At
all times, the permittee shall ensure that its wireless telecommunications
facilities shall comply with the most current regulatory and operational
standards including, but not limited to, radio frequency emissions
standards adopted by the FCC and antenna height standards adopted
by the Federal Aviation Administration. The permittee shall obtain
and maintain the most current information from the FCC regarding allowable
radio frequency emissions and all other applicable regulations and
standards and, at the following indicated times, shall file a report
with the director of community development indicating whether the
permittee is in compliance with such standards, advising the director
of community development of any regulatory changes that require modifications
to the wireless telecommunications facilities, and advising the director
of community development of the measures taken by the permittee to
comply with such regulatory changes as follows: (1) prior to the commencement
of the installation of the wireless telecommunications facility, (2)
every year, on the anniversary of the submittal of the initial compliance
report, and (3) upon any proposed increase of at least 10% in the
effective radiated power or any proposed change in frequency use.
Both the initial and update certifications shall be subject to review
and approval by the city. At the director of community development’s
sole discretion, a qualified independent radio frequency engineer,
selected by and under contract to the city, may be retained to review
said certifications for compliance with FCC regulations. All costs
associated with the city’s review of these certifications shall
be the responsibility of the permittee, which shall promptly reimburse
city for the cost of the review.
B. Public
access to a wireless telecommunications facility shall be restricted.
Security measures shall include fencing, screening, and security signage,
as deemed appropriate by the director of community development.
C. Safety
lighting or colors, if prescribed by the director of community development
or other approving agency including, but not limited to, the Federal
Aviation Administration may be required for antenna support structures.
Safety lights shall be of a type that minimizes downward illumination.
(Ord. 5692 § 31, 2010; Ord. 5747 § 99, 2011)
For violations and revocation, see Chapter
30.64.
(Ord. 5692 § 31, 2010)
Upon assignment or transfer of an authorization to operate a
wireless telecommunications facility or any of the rights under said
authorization, the owner or operator shall, within 30 days, provide
written notice to the director of community development of the date
of transfer and the identity of the transferee.
(Ord. 5692 § 31, 2010; Ord. 5747 § 100, 2011; Ord. 5803 § 114, 2013)
For application filing and filing fees, see Chapter
30.40.
(Ord. 5692 § 31, 2010)
For public hearing and notice, see Chapter
30.61.
(Ord. 5692 § 31, 2010)
For appeals procedure, see Chapter
30.62.
(Ord. 5692 § 31, 2010)
No wireless telecommunications facility permit application which
has been denied in whole or in part shall be filed again within six
months from the date of such denial except upon proof of changed conditions
or by permission of the director of community development.
(Ord. 5692 § 31, 2010; Ord. 5747 § 101, 2011)
For duration of wireless telecommunications facilities permits, see Chapter
30.41.
(Ord. 5692 § 31, 2010)