The purpose of this chapter is to establish design and siting
guidelines and engineering design standards for small wireless facilities
located in the public right-of-way and within utility easements on
public and private property in order to regulate the design and placement
of this infrastructure. These design and siting guidelines provide
objective aesthetic design and siting requirements that all small
wireless facilities installed within the public right-of-way and utility
easements over public and private properties must meet for approval
by the city.
(Ord. 820 § 2, 2020)
The city council finds that the reasonably regulated and orderly
deployment of small wireless facilities in the public right-of-way
is desirable as the unregulated or disorderly deployment represents
a threat to the health, welfare, and safety of the community; and
that the regulation of small wireless facilities are necessary to
protect and preserve the aesthetic character of the community and
to ensure that all wireless telecommunications facilities are installed
using the least intrusive means possible.
(Ord. 820 § 2, 2020)
This chapter applies only small wireless facilities ("SWF")
as defined in 47 CFR Section 1.6002(1).
(Ord. 820 § 2, 2020)
The abbreviations, phrases, terms and words used in this chapter
will have the meanings assigned to them in this section unless context
indicates otherwise. In the event that any definition assigned to
any phrase, term or word in this section conflicts with any federal-
or state-mandated definition, the federal- or state-mandated definition
will control.
"Accessory equipment"
means any and all on-site equipment other than the antenna(s)
associated with a wireless facility, which includes, but is not limited
to, power supply units, cables and wiring, generators, fans, air conditioning
units, electrical panels, equipment cabinets, pedestals, meters, vaults,
splice boxes and surface location markers.
"Antenna"
means that specific device for transmitting and/or receiving
radio frequency or other signals for purposes of wireless telecommunications
services. "Antenna" is specific to the antenna portion of the SWF.
"Support structure"
means the streetlight or freestanding pole upon which the
small wireless facility is located.
(Ord. 820 § 2, 2020)
The following engineering design standards apply to all small
wireless facilities:
A. Separation
of service should be provided by installing all-new electrical conduit(s)
or utilizing existing empty conduit(s) with conduit owner's expressed
consent in writing.
B. A disconnect
switch should be mounted on the pole. The bottom of the disconnect
switch should measure ten feet above grade.
C. All
the equipment, including the shroud, should be mounted to provide
seven feet of clearance from the ground.
D. For
proposed facilities on a streetlight, a hand hole should be provided
at the top of the pole to maintain fiber and electrical service for
streetlights and future attachments.
E. Pole
foundation calculations should be prepared and stamped by a California
professionally licensed engineer and should be provided to city for
review. Pole foundation calculations should account for all new and
existing pole attachments and the pole.
F. Pole
structural calculations, including seismic loads, showing the load
impacts of the SWF on city streetlight and traffic control signal
poles should be prepared and stamped by a California professionally
licensed engineer and should be provided to the city for review.
G. Design
wind velocity should be one hundred fifteen mph minimum per TIA-222
rev G, CBC-current edition, ASCE 7, as amended from time to time for
local conditions.
H. Other
reasonable requirements of the city engineer consistent with this
chapter.
(Ord. 820 § 2, 2020)
To ensure visual impacts are minimized, small wireless facilities
are required comply with the following design guidelines:
A. Installations
should conceal to the maximum extent feasible with design elements
and techniques that mimic or blend with the underlying support structure,
surrounding environment and adjacent uses with regard to appearance,
size, and location.
B. All
equipment and antenna should be shrouded and where possible located
behind any street signs located on the pole.
C. Only
one SWF is permitted per support structure.
D. A minimum
distance of one hundred fifty feet is required between small wireless
facilities.
E. Installations
should be located on poles that are located outside of the driveway
and intersection sightlines. Installations should be located on poles
that are located as close as feasible to shared property lines between
two adjacent lots and not directly in front of residences and businesses.
F. Equipment
should be located entirely on the pole in a vertical arrangement.
Exterior mounted accessory equipment should be within a single arrangement
not to exceed nine cubic feet in volume (exclusive of the concealing
elements like shrouding). Required meters and disconnect switches
that are infeasible to be shrouded for safety and/or accessibility
reasons are excluded from this shrouding guideline.
G. All
accessory equipment must be designed to not be visible to the maximum
extent possible. When evaluating compliance with this section, the
city engineer will consider whether other more preferred designs are
technically feasible and other more appropriate sites potentially
available. All applicants for a SWF permit must propose accessory
equipment designs according to the following preferences, ordered
from most preferred to least preferred:
1. Underground
installation;
2. Pole-mounted
installation (equipment should be located within poles whenever possible);
3. Ground-mounted
installation:
a. Ground-mounted installation of equipment will not be permitted, unless:
(i) the applicant demonstrates that pole-mounted or underground accessory
equipment is not technically feasible and that no other site options
reasonably exist that would support a SWF, or (ii) the city specifically
finds that ground-mounted installation of equipment would be more
aesthetically desirable and consistent with the objectives of these
guidelines than underground or pole-mounted installation of accessory
equipment.
b. Ground-mounted equipment may only be permitted in locations that
do not obstruct pedestrian or vehicular traffic and if the city engineer
finds that the above-ground equipment would not unreasonably interfere
with the public's ability to use the right-of-way for uses that include
without limitation travel, social, expressive uses and/or aesthetic
values.
c. The city engineer may condition approval based on new or enhanced
landscaping to conceal ground-mounted equipment.
H. All
cables, wires and other connectors should be routed through conduits
within poles whenever possible, and all external conduits, conduit
attachments, cables, wires, and other connectors must be concealed
from public view.
I. All
SWF must include signage that accurately identifies the equipment
owner/operator, the site name or identification number and a toll-free
number to the owner/operator's network operations center. SWF may
not bear any other signage or advertisements unless expressly approved
by the city, required by law or recommended under existing and future
FCC or other United States governmental agencies for compliance with
radio frequency emissions regulations. Radio frequency notification
signs should be placed where appropriate, and not at pedestrian eye
level unless required by the FCC or other regulatory agencies.
J. Ground-mounted
electric meters are prohibited.
K. Wireless
facilities and all accessory equipment and transmission equipment
must comply with all noise regulations and must not exceed, either
individually or cumulatively, the applicable noise level standards
in Crescent City Municipal Code.
L. Pole
heights must be minimized and in no case may the maximum height of
any facilities exceed thirty-five feet. Pole height is measured from
the top of the foundation, which should be flush with the ground,
to the top of the pole or top of the antenna, whichever is greater.
M. Small
wireless facilities are required to incorporate reasonable and appropriate
site security measures, such as locks and anti-climbing devices, to
prevent unauthorized access, theft or vandalism. All SWF must be constructed
from graffiti-resistant materials. The city engineer may require additional
concealment elements as the city engineer finds necessary to blend
the security measures and other improvements into the natural and/or
built environment. The city engineer will not approve barbed wire,
razor ribbon, electrified fences or any similar security measures.
N. Wireless
facilities must not interfere with access to a fire hydrant, fire
station, fire escape, water valve, underground vault, valve housing
structure or any other public health or safety facility.
O. No
person may install, use or maintain any facilities (in whole or in
part) that rest upon, in or over any public right-of-way, when such
installation, use or maintenance: (1) endangers or is reasonably likely
to endanger the safety of persons or property; or (2) when such site
or location is used for public utility purposes, public transportation
purposes or other governmental use; or (3) when such facilities unreasonably
interfere with or unreasonably impede the flow of pedestrian or vehicular
traffic, including any legally parked or stopped vehicle, ingress
into or egress from any residence or place of business, use of poles,
posts, traffic signs or signals, hydrants, mailboxes, permitted sidewalk
dining, permitted street furniture and/or other objects permitted
at or near the location where the wireless facilities are located.
(Ord. 820 § 2, 2020)
An applicant proposing to attach to a streetlight in the public
right-of-way must comply with the following design standards:
A. Equipment
should be painted, treated or finished to match existing streetlight
pole aesthetics and materials in finish and color that are in the
immediate vicinity of the proposed pole(s).
B. The
antenna should be mounted at the top of the streetlight pole where
the arm extends from the pole where feasible.
C. The
top of the antenna if top-mounted should be no higher than forty-eight
inches above the top of the existing pole.
D. All
antennas should be shrouded. Antenna shroud should have an outer diameter
of fifteen inches or less and measure no more than five cubic feet
in size. The shroud should be no more than four feet tall, including
antenna, radio head, mounting bracket, and all other hardware necessary
for a complete installation.
E. Antenna
shroud should be no more than thirty percent greater in diameter than
the streetlight it is attached to and the transition between the pole
and the shroud should be tapered.
F. All
cables, wires, and other connectors should be hidden within the base
and shaft of the streetlight. Where this is not feasible, the equipment
should be installed in an underground vault.
(Ord. 820 § 2, 2020)