A. No
pay telephone shall be installed, located, or maintained on unimproved
property.
B. Any existing pay telephone which is located or maintained in violation of subsection
A shall be removed within 90 days after the effective date of this ordinance. Notwithstanding the previous sentence, any pay telephone which is the subject of a written contract authorizing its installation which was entered into prior to the enactment of this ordinance and which contains provisions for termination shall be removed by the first date after enactment of this ordinance on which permissive termination of the written contract by either party could take effect, if either party elected to terminate, or within 90 days after the effective date of this ordinance, whichever occurs later.
C. Any
pay telephone which is installed, located, maintained, or operated
in violation of this section is hereby declared to be a public nuisance.
(SCC 0982 § 1, 1995; SCC
1578 § 30, 2015)
Any pay telephone which is used as an instrumentality for or
contributes substantially by its presence to any of the following
conditions is hereby declared to be a public nuisance:
A. Selling
or giving away controlled substances (as defined in Division 10 of
the California
Health and Safety Code); soliciting, agreeing to engage
in, or engaging in any act of prostitution; or other criminal activity;
B. Consumption
of alcoholic beverages on nearby outdoor public or private property
except where outdoor consumption of alcoholic beverages is specifically
authorized pursuant to a license issued by the Department of Alcoholic
Beverage Control;
C. Loitering
on nearby public or private property; or
D. Excessive
noise.
As used in this section, "loitering" shall mean remaining on
any property under such circumstances that a reasonable person would
conclude that the person who remains on the property does not have
a purpose connected with the usual and ordinary use to which such
property is put, does not have bona fide intent to exercise a constitutional
right, and is causing public inconvenience or annoyance.
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(SCC 0982 § 1, 1995; SCC
1578 § 31, 2015)
A. Whenever the department head determines that any pay telephone constitutes a public nuisance as defined in Section
16.18.1201 or
16.18.1202, the department head may commence proceedings to abate the nuisance. The abatement proceedings shall conform to Articles V, VII and X of this chapter, except as specified in this Article.
B. No proceedings to abate a public nuisance as defined in Section
16.18.1202 shall be commenced unless the department head first has made a reasonable effort to work with the property owner where the pay telephone is located or the pay telephone vendor to eliminate the conditions described in Section
16.18.1202 by voluntary measures, such as blocking incoming calls, adding lighting, changing the telephone's location on the parcel, making the telephone temporarily inoperative, or temporarily removing the telephone.
(SCC 0982 § 1, 1995; SCC
1578 § 32, 2015)
If the public nuisance to be abated is one defined in Section
16.18.1202:
A. The hearing notice required by Section
16.18.502 shall specify that abatement shall consist of removal of the pay telephone, and that no pay telephone shall be installed on the same parcel, or on any contiguous parcel owned by the same property owner, to replace the removed telephone for a period of one year from the date of removal; and
B. Any
decision of the Hearing Officer ordering abatement shall specify that
no pay telephone shall be installed on the same parcel, or on any
contiguous parcel owned by the same property owner, to replace the
removed telephone for a period of one year from the date of removal.
(SCC 0982 § 1, 1995; SCC
1578 § 33, 2015)
All notices shall also be sent to the vendor of the pay telephone,
if known to the department head.
(SCC 0982 § 1, 1995)
The department head shall maintain, and make available upon request, a list of locations where installation of pay telephones is prohibited pursuant to Section
16.18.1204.
(SCC 0982 § 1, 1995)