For the purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:
"Agent"means any natural person who is employed or authorized by an alarm business or company to sell, lease, rent, install, maintain, service, repair, alter, replace or remove any alarm system.
"Alarm system"means a device or system of interconnected devices, including hardware and related appurtenances, designed to give warning of fire or activity indicative of criminal conduct or unauthorized entry upon premises protected thereby.
"Alarm system panel"means any machine or device in which two or more separate and distinct alarm systems, as specified in this chapter, may be maintained, controlled, tied-in, accommodated, or monitored.
"Alarm user"means any person on whose property, dwelling, building, structure, residence, motor vehicle, institution or any other facility an alarm system is maintained within the city. Excluded from this definition and from the coverage of this chapter are persons who use alarm systems to alert or signal persons within the premises in which the alarm system is located of a fire or an attempted unauthorized intrusion or holdup attempt. If such a system, however, employs an audible signal emitting sounds or a flashing light or beacon designed to signal persons outside the premises, such system shall be within the definition of alarm system and shall be subject to this chapter.
"Annunciator"means that part of an alarm system which communicates that fact that the system has been triggered.
"Audible annunciator"means an annunciator which gives alarm by means of a bell, siren, buzzer or similar sound-producing device mounted at some location other than entirely within a building, or which, when activated, is clearly audible at a distance of fifty feet or more outside of any building in which it is mounted.
"Chief"means the chief of police or the fire chief of the city.
"Exempt alarm system"is an alarm system owned, maintained, and monitored by any governmental law enforcement agency in furtherance of law enforcement duties.
"False alarms"means any activation of an alarm system not resulting from fire or criminal activity or unauthorized entry, upon or following which communication is made to emergency services that an alarm has been triggered. If units responding to an alarm and checking the protected premises according to standard emergency services operating procedure are unable to discover any evidence of fire or unauthorized entry or criminal activity, there shall be a rebuttable presumption that the alarm is false.
"Telephonic alarm system"means any alarm system as specified in this chapter which will activate a prerecorded telephone dialing device programmed to dial a telephone number maintained by emergency service.
"Visual annunciator"means an annunciator installed entirely on the protected premises and which gives inaudible warning by means of a flashing light or other visible signal.
(Ord. 3246 § 2, 1978; Ord. 4103 § 2, 1988)