Wireless Facilities Master Plan - Oct 2003
City of Cupertino
Wireless Facilities Master Plan
Date Resolution No. Action Taken
10/6/03 03-187 City Council adopts Wireless Facilities Master Plan, File No. CP-2000-09
The cover photograph depicts
antennas from five different
personal service wireless
facilities along State Highway
85 near Interstate Highway
280. In the foreground is a
monopole with one set of
antennas. There are two sets in
the treepole. There is another
antenna set in the background
next to the lattice tower and the
final set is mounted on the
lattice tower.
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Acknowledgements
CITY COUNCIL
Michael Chang, Mayor
Sandra James, Vice Mayor
Patrick Kwok
Richard Lowenthal
Dolly Sandoval
PLANNING COMMISSION
Angela Chen, Chairperson
Charles Corr
Marty Miller
Taghi Saadati, Vice-Chairperson
Gilbert Wong
TELECOMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
Ernest Tsui, Chairperson
Salvatore Algeri
Reginald Duhe
L. T. Guttadauro, Vice-Chairperson
Steve Ting
David Eggleston (emeritus)
STAFF
David W. Knapp, City Manager
Steve Piasecki, Director of Community Development
Ciddy Wordell, City Planner
Colin Jung, Senior Planner & Project Manager
Peter Gilli, Senior Planner
Ralph Qualls, Director of Public Works
CONSULTANT
Ted Kreines, AICP, Kreines & Kreines, Inc. - Wireless Planning Consultants
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Table of Contents
Chapter 1. INTRODUCTION ………………………………………… 3
Chapter 2. GOALS …………………………………………………… 4
Chapter 3. SUMMARY OF POLICIES ……………………………… 5
Chapter 4. BACKGROUND ………………………………………… 7
Chapter 5. LOCATIONS & STRUCTURES…………………………… 13
Chapter 6. SITING & DESIGN ……………………………………….. 18
Chapter 7. HEALTH & SAFETY ..……………………………………. 27
Chapter 8. MONITORING ……………………………………………. 30
Chapter 9. IMPLEMENTATION ……………………………………... 32
Chapter 10. GLOSSARY OF TERMS …………………………………. 35
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Chapter 1. Introduction
Personal wireless services were first introduced in the region in the early 1980’s.
The first hand-held equipment or cell phones were very heavy, and service was
unreliable and expensive. Consumer demand was small, but continued to grow
with continual technological innovation that reduced the size and weight of
phones, and improved the reliability and coverage of communications.
Increased competition from new companies entering the market have helped
drive down prices, making the phones and the cost of service more affordable for
the general public.
Rapid consumer acceptance and pervasive use of this communications
technology in the last decade have also meant a commensurate proliferation of
the personal wireless service facilities throughout this community and the
country that is often typified by the rectangular-shaped antennas mounted in
clusters on buildings, poles and towers. The rapid proliferation of these facilities
presents a unique challenge to Cupertino to protect community aesthetics and
promote safety.
Many communities throughout the United States have reacted to this
proliferation of personal wireless service facility applications by amending their
zoning ordinances to allow such facilities or creating new ordinances to regulate
their siting and design. The City of Cupertino took the later approach in 1996 by
adopting an ordinance that specifically regulated the siting and design of
personal wireless service facilities.
Since then new facility proposals have been reviewed on a case by case basis by
the City’s Planning Commission with technical expertise provided by the
Telecommunications Commission. By 1999, it had become increasingly clear to
these City decision makers that the long-term impact on the City’s visual
landscape through the growing accumulation of these facilities was not being
addressed. While the community continues to embrace wireless
communications, it will not do so at the cost of the community’s appearance.
The City Council has endorsed the preparation of a Wireless Facilities Master
Plan and has provided funding for a consultant. The City has contracted with
the consulting firm of Kreines and Kreines to provide technical expertise on the
plan preparation.
This plan, by its nature, must rely on a technical jargon that will not be easily
understood by the layperson. Please refer to the glossary in the back of the
document for an explanation of the terms.
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Chapter 2. Goals
• Protect community aesthetics and promote safety by planning for well-
sited and well-designed personal wireless service facilities that fit
unobtrusively in the Cupertino environment.
• Guide decision makers and City staff by providing a policy framework
and design guidance as they make decisions about these facilities.
• Educate the general public about personal wireless service facilities and
the community’s design expectations in order to improve their
involvement and participation in the decision making process.
• Assist the wireless companies and their representatives with information
that facilitates their facility deployment process.
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Chapter 3. Summary of Policies
Policy 4-1: Applicants shall use the best available camouflage techniques to reduce the
intrusive and obtrusive visual impacts of personal wireless service facilities to the extent
possible.
Policy 5-1 : Preferred locations for personal wireless service facilities are on existing
buildings and structures.
Policy 5-2 : Only unobtrusive personal wireless service facilities shall be considered in
residential neighborhoods.
Policy 5-3 : Development of unobtrusive cell sites in surrounding communities shall be
encouraged.
Policy 6-1 : Personal wireless service facilities should be sited to avoid visually intrusive
impacts as viewed from the public right-of-way and from residential neighborhoods.
Policy 6-2 : Personal wireless service facilities shall be appropriately scaled to fit
harmoniously with the surrounding elements of the site and neighborhood.
Policy 6-3 : Personal wireless service facilities shall be compatible with their
surroundings so that their shape, size, color, material, and texture blend with their
surroundings.
Policy 6-4: Monopoles with co-located antennas are preferred to single user monopoles if
they are less visually obtrusive than separate monopoles.
Policy 7-1 : The City reserves the right to require applicants to prepare radiofrequency
radiation assessments for personal wireless service facilities when the general public is in
reasonably close proximity to such a facility and to determine compliance with FCC
Guidelines.
Policy 7-2 : The City shall require a radiofrequency radiation assessment for the
following types of personal wireless service facilities:
• For building-mounted antennas when the building is designed for human
occupancy;
• For antennas mounted less than 10 meters (32.8 feet) above ground level;
• For all co-located antennas; (The concern is for cumulative emissions exceeding
the FCC Guidelines) and
• For residential deployment of personal wireless service facilities.
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Policy 7-3: If a network of residential-based personal wireless service facilities is
proposed, a comprehensive RFR assessment shall be done for all proposed sites.
Policy 7-4: The City recognizes that it is the responsibility of the carriers to operate its
personal wireless service facilities within the adopted federal radio frequency radiation
exposure standards over the life of its facilities, regardless of whether the City requires the
preparation of a RFR assessment or not.
Policy 7-5: When mechanical ventilation, power generators or other sources of noise are
proposed in personal wireless service facilities, the City shall ascertain whether an
acoustical analysis is necessary to determine compliance with the City’s Noise
Ordinance.
Policy 8-1: All personal wireless service facilities approved by the City will be
conditioned with a permit expiration date to create opportunities for the City and
applicant to check maintenance, check the level of radio frequency radiation emissions,
improve equipment and camouflage techniques when needed.
Policy 8-2: All personal wireless service facilities approved by the City shall be
conditioned with an abandonment provision providing for dismantling and removal of a
facility by the company and/or property owner.
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Chapter 4. Background
Federal Regulatory Authority
Master planning for personal wireless service facilities must consider the
Telecommunications Act of 1996- a broad revision of the 1934 federal statute
governing telecommunications. It is important at the local government level
because it contains language that both preserves and limits the authority of local
government to regulate personal wireless service facilities.
Section 704(a)(7)(A) states:
Except as provided in this paragraph, nothing in this Act shall limit or affect the
authority of a State or local government or instrumentality thereof over decisions
regarding the placement, construction, and modification of personal wireless service
facilities.
This same section (704) also sets forth the limitations of that local authority:
- Shall not unreasonably discriminate among providers of functionally
equivalent services.
- Shall not prohibit or have the effect of prohibiting the provision of
personal wireless services.
- Shall act on any request for authorization to place, construct, or modify
personal wireless service facilities within a reasonable period of time
after the request is filed.
- Shall put any decision to deny personal wireless service facilities into
writing, supported by substantial evidence contained in the written
record.
- Shall not regulate personal wireless service facilities on the basis of the
environmental effects of radio frequency emission to the extent that
such facilities comply with the Federal Communications Commission
Guidelines for such emissions.
Technology Overview
Wireless communications are transmitted through the air via radio waves of
various frequencies. Radiofrequency radiation is one of numerous types of
electromagnetic radiation. Cellular and Enhanced Specialized Mobile Radio
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(ESMR) operate at frequencies between 800 and 900 megahertz (MHz), and
Personal Communications Systems (PCS) operate at the 1900 MHz band.
These three technologies function similarly in that their communications systems
consist of interconnected “cell sites” or geographic areas that cover a region. In
general, cell sites tend to be smaller in size and more numerous in the cities and
larger in size and less numerous in rural areas. This happens because cities have
more people (customers) than rural and outlying areas. As more people demand
wireless communications services, wireless systems will require additional
capacity to handle calls. Capacity is added when wireless companies:
1) Change technology from analog to digital,
2) Add more cell sites.
Currently, the wireless companies are offering voice communications, paging
and text messaging and are aggressively working to improve their offerings of
data and video communications and wireless internet services over their wireless
networks. To develop the capacity to handle this large amount of information,
companies must continue to develop new technologies and undoubtedly provide
more cell sites.
Each cell site within the system contains a set of transmitting and receiving
antennas that are mounted to the ground, building, monopole or lattice tower.
All calls placed with a wireless phone are transmitted by the phone to a cell site
antenna that is connected via a land-based line to a central computer switching
system. The central switch completes the call by connecting it to a conventional
phone through a land-based line or to another wireless phone through the
nearest antenna. When a wireless caller or receiver of a call is mobile, the call is
handed off from one cell site to another cell site as the user travels through one
cell site to another.
Community Issues
1. Height. A determining factor in the location, siting and design of a personal
wireless service facility is the height of the antennas. The dish and yagi antennas
are used for line of sight transmission, and the panel antennas propagate their
radio signals directionally. The height of the antennas is important for line of
sight and coverage. Buildings, hills and trees tend to attenuate signal strength
when they intervene into the signal path. At some point an attenuated signal
becomes so faint it cannot be used. Wireless companies often seek approval for
antenna heights that are above the obstructions. Other problems may occur
when the coverage area has varying topography, which makes line of sight
transmission difficult.
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Personal wireless service facility antennas are often mounted on the roof of a
building if the building is of adequate height, that is, of at least 25 feet above
ground level (two stories). When the building is taller than 25 feet (three stories
minimum), the antennas may be side-mounted on the building wall. The
challenges occur when most of surrounding structures in a local area are low-
profile, one-story buildings and the wireless carrier must erect a new lattice
tower or monopole to mount the antennas and achieve the necessary height.
Such mounts can have obtrusive visual effects if not properly camouflaged in an
area of low-profile buildings.
2. Facility Proliferation. “How many personal wireless service facilities will be
built?” is a frequent question. To some degree the number of facilities will
depend on how popular wireless communications will be to the general
consumer, how many new companies enter the field, what types of additional
services will be offered by these companies, which affects the capacity of the cell
sites, and the willingness of the companies to invest in infrastructure.
As more personal wireless service facilities are added to increase capacity, each
facility may be shorter in height to serve a smaller area and avoid overlaps in
coverage with adjacent cell sites.
(Antennas mounted on a lattice tower. Site
located at De Anza College near Highway 85.)
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A. Consumer Demand – Most companies have already established their initial
network of cell sites (the Coverage Phase), which were designed to provide the
most coverage per facility and were established along highways and other major
transportation corridors. Most of these wireless companies have now entered a
Capacity Phase, where companies are infilling their service area with additional
facilities to fill “holes” in their coverage and add capacity to high demand areas.
Wireless communications continues to be extremely popular with the general
public. The FCC reports that there were 122.4 million wireless subscribers
nationwide at the end of 2001, up 54 percent from the end of 1999. In California,
wireless phones are even more popular with the total number of subscribers
soaring 76% to 15 million in the same time frame. In Cupertino, local high
technology companies have sought personal wireless service facility approval on
their own buildings in order to improve intra-building and inter-building
coverage for their own employees.
B. Number of Companies – There are at least eight wireless companies
operating personal wireless service facilities within the City boundaries. There
are two cellular companies, one enhanced specialized mobile radio company,
four PCS companies, and one paging company. Except for the paging company,
which operates one paging facility in the City, and one PCS company, which
shares facilities with another carrier, the other companies operate from 3 to 7
facilities within City boundaries.
C. Additional Future Services - Most of the companies envision expanding
the range of the services they offer over their wireless networks, going beyond
voice communications, paging and text messaging to include transmission of
larger quantities of data, video communications and even wireless internet
connections. The quantity of information the companies would like to transmit
far exceeds the capacity of their existing communications networks. New
technologies must be developed, including a much more highly distributed set of
personal wireless service facilities to make this vision a reality.
3. Visibility & Aesthetics. Many people find the personal wireless service
facilities to be visually unattractive. City staff and wireless companies spend a
lot of time designing facilities that are well-camouflaged, but this is becoming a
more difficult task as the best sites (least visible) are already occupied with
facilities.
Cupertino has outstanding vistas. The primary one is the nearby western
foothills, which are largely in a natural state. A City priority is to beautify its
major transportation corridors by landscaping its medians and rights-of-way,
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requiring significant private landscaping, and relating building design to the
public realm. The height and continued proliferation of facilities will likely make
them more apparent to residents in the future and potentially create more
obtrusive visual impacts than ever before.
One strategy to reduce the proliferation of facilities is to require the co-location of
facilities on a single structure, such as, a lattice tower. There is, however, an
inherent tradeoff. Accommodating many facilities on a single structure reduces
proliferation, but often causes serious visual impacts. Many antennas and
equipment concentrated on one lattice tower tend to draw more attention than
the dispersal of less visible but more numerous facilities. An example of this is
the lattice tower on the De Anza College Campus.
Policy 4-1: Applicants shall use the best available camouflage techniques to reduce the
intrusive and obtrusive visual impacts of personal wireless service facilities to the extent
possible.
4. Facility Installation in Residential Areas. Personal wireless services are
increasingly moving toward home usage. If costs continue to decline, consumers
will continue to use their “cell” phone instead of their land line phones while at
home. A small, but growing number of subscribers have gone completely
wireless, abandoning their land lines. The wireless companies follow their
subscribers’ phone usage. Ultimately, the facilities may serve every
neighborhood in the City. The deployment of personal wireless service facilities
in residential neighborhoods could have significant, obtrusive visual impacts if
not properly planned.
It appears in residential
neighborhoods, that the best places
for personal wireless service
facilities will be on top of or
attached to light poles, traffic signal
poles or other tall structures in the
public right-of-way.
(Personal wireless facility on a light pole at
Serra Boulevard and Stanford Avenue,
Stanford, CA.)
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Other possible sites for residential deployment include: stadium light poles at
high schools, flag poles and light standards in parking lots at churches and other
non-residential uses in the neighborhoods.
In the past this was done with one company’s
antennas placed on street lights, which have met
with no public objection. The company was a
wireless internet service. Even though the
company is now out of business, their abandoned
antennas continue to dot City streets. Another
company has bought the technology and plans
on reusing the antenna network.
(Personal wireless facility at Swallow
Drive and Lorne Way, Sunnyvale, CA)
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Chapter 5. Locations & Structures
This section deals with the topic of the best locations and structures in the
community for personal wireless service facilities. The continuing demand for
personal wireless services throughout the community will escalate the
proliferation of facilities, perhaps even into the residential neighborhoods. At
risk are the visual qualities of this community: its natural vistas, the tree-lined
streets, the well-tended and attractive commercial and industrial areas. The key
challenge is to protect community aesthetics and promote safety, while
facilitating the use of this technology throughout the community.
It is not the purpose of this plan to encourage the location of every local personal
wireless service facility within the City’s boundaries. There are numerous
nearby locations in the five cities and unincorporated areas that border
Cupertino that could serve equally as well or better as potential locations.
The best locations in the community for personal wireless facilities is a function
of the land use and the presence or absence of taller structures that can accept
antennas that will not be noticed. One of the overall goals is to locate facilities
and to site and design them so they are as unobtrusive as possible. In general,
non-residential locations are better than residential locations because such
facilities are less noticeable and more accepted by the public. Also facilities with
antennas mounted on existing structures are generally preferred to facilities with
antennas mounted on new structures. Antennas mounted on existing taller
structures are usually less noticeable because the structure is already part of the
City’s visual landscape.
The City’s preference order for locations of personal wireless service facilities is:
Most Preferred Least Preferred
Existing Structures in New Structures in Existing Structures in New Structures in
Non-Residential Areas Non–Residential Areas Residential Areas Residential Areas
Policy 5-1 : Preferred locations for personal wireless service facilities are on existing
buildings and structures.
1. Existing Structures in Non-Residential Locations. The following maps and
list describe the structures that have been used or may be potentially used for
personal wireless service facilities on non-residential lands. It is meant to be as
inclusive as possible, but there may be other opportunities that will be reviewed
on a case-by-case basis.
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A. Privately-Owned Locations (Maps #1 & #3)
There are numerous taller structures on private non-residential property that
are candidate locations for personal wireless service facilities. All privately-
owned locations are depicted on Map #3, except for personal wireless service
monopoles, which are depicted on Map #1. There are two inappropriate
structures: 1) billboards-- very large, off-site advertising signs, that are legal,
nonconforming structures not permitted to expand their use, and 2) flag poles
used for the display of the American and State flags. More appropriate taller
structures are described below:
• Taller Buildings: 2+ stories in height
• Parking Lot Light Standards (not mapped)
• Utility Structures: transmission towers, taller utility poles, private
water tanks
• P.G.& E. Service Center and Power Substations
• Pylon Signs (not billboards)
• Personal Wireless Service Monopoles
• Religious Institutions
• Historic Structures (e.g. wooden water tower)
B. Publicly-Owned Locations (Map #2)
City-owned Locations
The City of Cupertino owns numerous buildings, structures and properties
throughout the community that could be potentially used for personal
wireless service facilities. They include:
One and two story buildings that have yet to be built:
• Community Hall
• Library
Existing one story buildings:
• City Hall
• Sports Center
• Quinlan Community Center
• Park & Recreation Centers
• Service Center (Corporation yard has three facilities.)
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Relatively undeveloped and vacant properties:
• Remnant properties along Mary Avenue and Highway 85
soundwall
• Parks
• Blackberry Farm Golf Course
Lands, such as lots and public rights of way that have other structures:
• Water tanks
• Traffic Signal Poles
• Electroliers (i.e., street lights)
• Public rights of way (a.k.a. streets)
Other Government-Owned Locations
Other locations owned by other government agencies may be suitable sites
for personal wireless service facilities. Each agency would decide whether its
properties would be available for lease for personal wireless service facilities.
Such facilities need permits from the City since these commercial personal
wireless service facilities do no relate directly to the government agency’s
mission.
• Santa Clara County Fire Department fire stations
• Public School District properties (building mounts, parking lot light
standards, stadium light poles)
• De Anza College Campus
• Caltrans Rights-of-Way and Service Center
2. New Structures in Non-Residential Locations. There are many non-
residential locations that lack a suitable, mounting structure for a personal
wireless service facility. And in those instances, carriers, sometimes propose a
new lattice tower, monopole or other structure to elevate the antennas. Under
these circumstances, the personal wireless service facility should be located in an
area that has the least visual impact. In considering such a visible facility, all
alternative locations should be reviewed and the best available camouflage
techniques should be applied by the carrier to the facility. (See Siting and Design
Section of Plan).
Sometimes the most appropriate design solution may be “hiding the facility in
plain sight.” This is accomplished by camouflaging the personal wireless service
facility with materials in colors, sizes, textures and proportions that blend into
the environment, without creating visual contradictions. This is discussed in
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some detail in the Siting and Design Section. Possible custom-built structures to
house or mount personal wireless service facilities include:
• City gateway or neighborhood entry features
• Church steeples
• Building entry features
• Rooftop Chimneys
• Artificial trees (treepoles)
• Artificial Rocks
• Artificial Electroliers
• Artificial Power/Telephone poles
Because there are significant topographic differences in the City, there may be
hillside locations in the City where a ground-mounted personal wireless facility
will be technically feasible and considered unobtrusive. There are currently no
such facilities located in the City.
3. Existing Structures in Residential Locations. One of the largest challenges
facing this plan will be providing wireless communications coverage to
residential areas. There are large portions of the community that have poor to
non-existent coverage because of a lack of personal wireless service facilities in
these areas, which are located in the western, southern and eastern portions of
the City. These areas are predominantly residential in character and situated at a
significant distance from non-residential properties.
The plan assumes that future deployment of personal wireless service facilities in
residential areas will occur at low antennas heights. As such, the most
unobtrusive mounting structures will likely be existing street lights, traffic
signals and utility poles and towers. There will be facility opportunities at high
schools, churches and fire stations that are located in residential neighborhoods,
but these locations are few in comparison to the number of public utility
structures. Techniques to camouflage these facilities are discussed in the Siting
and Design section of this plan.
4. New Structures in Residential Locations. Obtrusive personal wireless service
facilities that are mounted on new lattice towers or monopoles are inappropriate
in residential neighborhoods. Much of Cupertino is developed with one and
two-story dwellings and these facilities could stand out in marked visual contrast
to their surroundings. If facilities in residential areas are to be considered, the
primary goal must be to preserve the visual integrity of the residential
neighborhood. Numerous techniques exist to make personal wireless service
facilities more compatible and unobtrusive in residential areas. They are
discussed in the Siting and Design section.
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Policy 5-2 : Only unobtrusive personal wireless service facilities shall be considered in
residential neighborhoods.
5. Non-Cupertino Locations. The City of Cupertino is bordered by the cities of
Los Altos, Sunnyvale, Santa Clara, San Jose and Saratoga. In the west foothills,
Cupertino is surrounded by the unincorporated lands of Santa Clara County.
Each jurisdiction has buildings, taller structures and features, and property that
could accommodate a personal wireless service facility. In many cases, these
locations may be preferable to a Cupertino-based location if they are less
obtrusive to the surrounding area. Examples of locations include:
• Shopping centers in all surrounding cities,
• The quarries and lattice towers in the unincorporated west
foothills,
• The Hewlett Packard campus, water tank, hotel, office buildings,
hospital and lattice towers in Santa Clara along Highway 280,
• Lattice towers, Caltrans right-of-way, water tanks along Highways
85 and 280 in Sunnyvale,
• The Home Depot, office buildings, commercial buildings, high
school, and taller utility poles in San Jose,
• The taller utility poles along Prospect Road and hillside locations in
Saratoga.
Policy 5-3 : Development of unobtrusive cell sites in surrounding communities shall be
encouraged.
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Chapter 6. Siting & Design
The previous plan section suggested the interdependence of location, siting and
design in determining appropriate places for personal wireless service facilities.
Some locations will be validated through siting and design, while other locations,
such as a substation, depend less on siting and design policies and guidelines.
Siting is the relationship of the personal wireless service facility to its site and
any structures on that site. Design is the arrangement of parts, details, form,
color, etc. to achieve a desired functionality and appearance. Functionality has to
do more with the adequacy of the cell site in the wireless company’s grid of cell
sites. The wireless company is best able to determine the functionality of its cell
site. The City is more concerned with the appearance of the facility and how
well it fits into the overall context of the built environment. Sometimes the
objectives of functionality and appearance will conflict in the process of
designing a personal wireless service facility.
Policy 6-1 : Personal wireless service facilities should be sited to avoid visually intrusive
impacts as viewed from the public right-of-way and from residential neighborhoods.
Policy 6-2 : Personal wireless service facilities shall be appropriately scaled to fit
harmoniously with the surrounding elements of the site and neighborhood.
Policy 6-3 : Personal wireless service facilities shall be compatible with their
surroundings so that their shape, size, color, material, and texture blend with their
surroundings.
SITING AND DESIGN GUIDELINES
Specific siting and design guidance is provided for personal wireless service
facilities categorized by the type of equipment. In general the equipment should
be sited to blend in with their surroundings. The environmental context will
help dictate the best site and best camouflage technique(s) to use. This is not
intended to be an exhaustive survey of siting and design guidance. Wireless
companies are encouraged to provide creative solutions to facility siting and
design that meet the plan’s goals.
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1. Antennas
• Antennas near the ground in hilly locations should be screened by
existing vegetation. If vegetation is sparse, additional landscaping
may be planted that is similar to the surrounding vegetation or
native to the area.
• Antennas should be painted and textured to match the background
view or foreground view whichever will make the antennas less
obtrusive. If the background is the sky, the preference is a flat gray
color.
• Antennas may be screened with radio wave transparent materials
that have been designed and fabricated to match elements normally
viewed in the immediate environment.
• Typically the least obtrusive placement on a building is a flush
mounting on some roof-top equipment, structure, penthouse or
building wall. A secondary location is a central place on the roof
where the roofline can cut off angles of view, making the antennas
less visible. The least desirable roof mount is a vertical protrusion
at or near the parapet where the antennas are likely to be the most
visible.
• For lattice towers, the most successful antennas siting/design
solutions are: 1) the top hat design, where a short, rectangular
framework of steel is erected on top of the tower and the antennas
are mounted to this framework extension, and 2) the leg-mounted
design, where the antennas are mounted on the legs of the tower
above the ground level.
(Personal wireless
service facility using a
lattice tower at the
extension of California
Oak Way and the Union
Pacific Railroad tracks.)
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• Select antennas of a shape and size that are in proportion to the
mounting surface, and mount them flush against the structure.
• On a monopole, antennas should be mounted flush to the shaft or
in vertical alignment with the shaft. Some of the newer monopoles
have been designed to accommodate more than one set of antennas
and their city approvals conditioned with a co-location
requirement. The antennas should be enclosed in a screening
cylinder if this reduces the obtrusiveness of the facility.
• A new antennas rack configuration on an existing monopole should
only be considered if the monopole can be adapted with adequate
tree-type camouflage.
• The antenna shape and mounting orientation guideline may be
relaxed if the antenna is of such a small size that its presence would
not be noticed by the general public. An example of this is the
former wireless internet antenna suspended from the cross arm of
an electrolier.
• Antennas may be mounted on top of a pole-type structure (e.g.,
light pole, traffic signal pole, power/telephone pole, golf course
net pole, etc.) if the pole is 30 feet or less in height. The antennas
(Personal wireless
facility at Swallow Drive
and Lorne Way,
Sunnyvale, CA)
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should be vertically aligned with the pole and shall not exceed 20%
of the height of the pole.
2. Co-Located Antennas
Policy 6-4: Monopoles with co-located antennas are preferred to single user
monopoles if they are less visually obtrusive than separate monopoles.
• In general co-located antennas mounted on the same monopole,
lattice tower or building roof should be less visually obtrusive than
separate personal wireless service facilities.
• All of the siting and design guidelines applicable to a single set of
antennas apply to co-located antennas as well.
• Building rooftops suitable for numerous co-located antennas
should be retro-fitted with larger equipment screens or extensions
of the roof element that are architecturally compatible with the
building.
3. Cables
• Cable runs along the ground should generally be undergrounded
unless such undergrounding would adversely affect the health of
nearby mature trees.
• If the cable runs are located above ground, they should be
camouflaged from public view. Cables should not be routed along
exterior surfaces unless they are camouflaged with materials that
integrate with the design of the structure.
• In lattice towers, cables should be bundled together and routed
along the legs or cross members of the lattice tower.
(Depicted are cables
enclosed in a conduit
that runs along the leg of
a lattice tower located
above the Monta
Vista electrical
substation in Cupertino,
CA.)
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4. Equipment Cabinets & Enclosures
• On developed sites, the best location for equipment cabinets is an
interior building space or a pad in an underground parking garage
if available. Secondary locations include the roof and ground level
parking areas. Roof-mounted equipment should be adequately
screened. Ground level equipment enclosures should not remove
City-required parking spaces or landscaped areas.
• Ground level enclosures should be tall enough to screen the
equipment and match the building materials of other onsite
structures whenever possible.
• Screening landscaping should also match existing, onsite
landscaping if appropriate.
• For lattice towers, siting the equipment beneath the lattice tower
legs is one of the preferred locations.
• For utility pole-type mounts, equipment cabinets may be mounted
on the shaft if they are small enough in size to integrate with the
appearance of the structure.
(Personal wireless service facility on a utility pole located on Foothill Blvd. next
to Monta Vista Park, Cupertino, CA.)
23
• Larger equipment cabinets should be sited in underground
vaults in the public right of way. The best locations are the street
and the sidewalk areas. In general the vaults should avoid
landscaped areas and street trees.
• Larger equipment cabinets should also be sited in the rear yards of
adjacent residences. Equipment cabinets should not be visible
above the fence line. Wireless companies will need to negotiate
land leases and easements with affected property owners.
5. Lattice Towers & Monopoles.
• New lattice towers are not allowed by the City because of their
obtrusiveness and because monopoles satisfactorily serve the same
purpose of elevating the antennas with fewer visual impacts.
• A monopole should be sited among other tall vertical structures or
elements to reduce its obtrusiveness, such as, among a cluster of
buildings, grove of trees, or within a power substation.
• Monopoles should be approximately the same or smaller
diameter as other vertical elements in the surrounding
environment. The “slim line” monopoles have dramatically
decreased the needed diameter of such poles, but co-location of
additional antennas is problematic.
(Slim line monopole among the
cedars. Note the cable trays to
the right are above ground to
better protect the tree roots.
Monopole is located near the
terminus of Portal Avenue at
Highway 280, Cupertino, CA.)
24
• Monopoles should be colored to match their foreground or
background elements. If the sky is the background or
foreground element then the monopole should be painted a flat
gray color.
• Intrusive and obtrusive monopoles should be camouflaged as
artificial trees. Since such artificial trees appear more authentic
when placed next to real trees, the planting of larger trees near
the monopole may be a project requirement.
• The artificial tree should be of a form similar to the
surrounding trees to which it is being visually integrated, and
be constructed of materials that retain a natural appearance for
the life of the personal wireless service facility.
• The artificial tree should not be significantly taller than the
surrounding vertical elements (i.e., buildings, trees, structures,
etc.)
(Treepole style antenna
mount located on San
Tomas Expressway near its
intersection with Hamilton
Avenue, Campbell, CA.)
25
Other Structure Mounts.
There is a host of other types of structures that are not buildings, lattice towers or
monopoles that may be suitable for elevating antennas and around which a
satisfactory personal wireless service facility can be built. This category includes:
power/telephone poles, electroliers, taller pylon signs (except billboards), golf
course net poles, etc. Some of these structures may not be structurally suitable to
carry such wireless facilities, so the City will allow the wireless companies to
fabricate suitable replacement structures. In other cases where a structure does
not exist, the City may allow wireless companies to design and fabricate a
custom-built facility that will fit into its surroundings. Additions or changes to
city-owned utility structures will require the review and approval of the City
Public Works Department.
6. Replacement Structures
• If the wireless company needs to fabricate a new structure to
replace one that is not suitable for antenna mounting, then the new
structure shall approximate the size, height, shape, colors and
dimensions of the existing structure in order to fit the new structure
into the visual landscape. Replacement public structures will need
the approval of the City Public Works Department.
• Replacement structures should accommodate internalized cable
runs.
(Personal wireless service
facility antenna/parking
light standard pole in a
shopping center off
Highway 680, Pleasanton,
CA.)
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Chapter 7. Health & Safety
Radio Frequency Radiation (RFR)
Background. There is an ongoing debate among scientists and the general public
as to the health risks associated with exposure to RFR from personal wireless
service facilities. The City of Cupertino has commissioned its wireless facilities
master plan technical consultant, Kreines and Kreines, to prepare a paper
investigating the federal government’s regulation of RFR emissions from
personal wireless service facilities and the City of Cupertino’s scope of authority
to review health and safety issues involving RFR.
This paper, titled: “White Paper: City of Cupertino Scope of Authority to Review
Health and Safety Issues Involving Radio Frequency Radiation (including
Radiation of Co-located Facilities)” and dated October 31, 2001 is incorporated by
reference into this Plan. A copy may be obtained from Cupertino Community
Development staff.
The white paper concludes that the City does not have the authority to regulate
personal wireless service facilities on the basis of RFR, nor does the City have the
authority to set exposure standards for RFR emissions from personal wireless
service facilities, which has been pre-empted by the Telecommunications Act of
1996. The Telecommunications Act is very clear that the City may not deny an
application for a personal wireless service facility because of RFR if the facility
meets the FCC Guidelines for RFR exposure. The prohibition applies only to
personal wireless service facilities.
The adopted federal RFR exposure standards are embodied in FCC Guidelines
published on August 1, 1996 and titled: “Guidelines for Evaluating the
Environmental Effects of Radiofrequency Radiation.” The FCC-adopted
standards are the 1991 Institute of Electronics and Electrical Engineers (IEEE)
standards that were subsequently adopted by the American National Standards
Institute (ANSI) and became known as ANSI/IEEE C95.1-1992 in combination
with a stricter National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurement
(NCRP) standard that NCRP set in 1986.
According to the white paper, if the City suspects that RFR standards are being
exceeded, it is doubtful that the City has the police powers over a violation of the
FCC Guidelines by a personal wireless service facility. An FCC Guide titled: “A
Local Government Official’s Guide to Transmitting Antenna RF Emission Safety:
Rules, Procedures, and Practical Guidance,” published in June 2000, suggests
that if a violation is suspected, the local government first contact the facility
operator, and if it still has questions about compliance, the local government
should contact the FCC.
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While the City has no authority to regulate or enforce police powers on RFR, it
appears the City may review and monitor RFR for compliance with FCC
Guidelines. In fact the FCC Guide previously mentioned states:
“… this document recognizes that, as a practical matter, state and local governments
have a role to play in ensuring compliance with FCC’s limits, and it provides guidance to
assist you in effectively fulfilling that role. The twin goals of this document are: (1) to
define and promote locally-adaptable procedures that will provide you, …, with adequate
assurance of compliance, while (2) at the same time, avoiding the imposition of
unnecessary burdens on either the local government process or the FCC’s licensees.
Review of RFR Emissions for Compliance with Federal Standards. As a
general rule, the applicant should bear the entire cost associated with measuring,
recording, reporting and monitoring RFR emissions associated with personal
wireless service facilities. Based on previous RFR reports, it is likely that most
facilities will not exceed FCC RFR Guidelines; however, the City should establish
some standards for assessment to ensure FCC Guidelines are meet.
Policy 7-1: The City reserves the right to require applicants to prepare radiofrequency
radiation assessments for personal wireless service facilities when the general public is in
reasonably close proximity to such a facility and to determine compliance with FCC
Guidelines.
Policy 7-2: The City shall require a radiofrequency radiation assessment for the following
types of personal wireless service facilities:
• For building-mounted antennas when the building is designed for human
occupancy;
• For antennas mounted less than 10 meters (32.8 feet) above ground level;
• For all co-located antennas; (The concern is for cumulative emissions exceeding
the FCC Guidelines) and
• For residential deployment of personal wireless service facilities.
The RFR reporting must consider potential exposure, as well as, actual exposure.
For example, a report that measures ground level RFR exposure of residents in
their homes may not take into account the potential of residents adding second
stories to their homes and possibly bringing themselves in closer proximity to the
transmitting antennas.
Policy 7-3 : If a network of residential-based personal wireless service facilities is
proposed, a comprehensive RFR assessment shall be done for all proposed sites.
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Policy 7-4 : The City recognizes that it is the responsibility of the carriers to operate its
personal wireless service facilities within the adopted federal radio frequency radiation
exposure standards over the life of its facilities, regardless of whether the City requires the
preparation of a RFR assessment or not.
NOISE
Some of the wireless communication companies require mechanical ventilation
to keep their equipment operating within an acceptable temperature range and
generators to provide power or backup power in the event of a power outage.
All of this equipment are potential noise sources and must comply with the
City’s Community Noise Ordinance.
Policy 7-5 : When mechanical ventilation, power generators or other sources of noise are
proposed in personal wireless service facilities, the City shall ascertain whether an
acoustical analysis is necessary to determine compliance with the City’s Noise
Ordinance.
HAZARDOUS MATERIALS
Hazardous materials that are typically used in personal wireless service facilities
may include such materials as Gallium Arsenide (a carcinogen), sulfuric acid in
batteries, diesel fuel for generators and compressed gases. The quantities found
at these facilities are usually not large and do not present a serious threat to life
or property.
All such facilities require building permit review, which includes review by the
Fire Department of Santa Clara County that administers the City’s hazardous
materials ordinance. That ordinance addresses the identification, containment,
storage and monitoring of hazardous materials. Fire Department personnel also
has specialized equipment, training and personnel to deal with hazardous
material releases.
FALLING MATERIALS
Antennas mounted at taller heights and the artificial branches and foliage found
on a treepole are subject to strong winds, which may cause breakage and a
potential falling material hazard to persons and property at the ground level.
The City requires a building permit for all mounted antennas and treepoles.
Specific structural analysis for treepoles is also required. At the building permit
stage, applicants should be prepared to provide for the artificial tree branches: 1)
an analysis of wind resistance factors, testing for material strength and stiffness,
and a description of the environmental effects related to solar degradation and
fatigue.
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Chapter 8. Monitoring
Wireless communications is a high growth industry subject to rapid innovation
and technological change. The City should keep abreast of the growth and
changes as wireless communications become even more pervasive and
integrated into society and our community life. In the future, how the
equipment functions, how it looks, and where it is located will probably change
and the City must prepare itself to react to change, set standards and plan for the
future infrastructure of wireless communication.
Since many personal wireless service facilities have been approved by the City
before the preparation of this master plan, many may not meet the City’s current
guidelines and standards. Periodic review, if legally possible, would benefit the
City and the applicant if needed to update the installed equipment. Presently,
any modifications to a facility require some type of City approval.
Periodic reviews can be accomplished by placing an expiration date on the City’s
discretionary approvals. The City permit will then need to be “renewed” after a
certain period of time by the applicant, which creates an opportunity for the City
and the applicant to check maintenance, make beneficial modifications, not only
because of advances in equipment technology, but also advances in
camouflaging techniques.
The City has been placing 5-year expiration dates on most facility approvals.
Some of these will expire in the next few years. Carriers are responsible for
monitoring the expiration dates of their City approvals and applying for time
extensions in a timely manner. The City has the right to revoke permits that
have expired and terminate the use. Staff should monitor its facility approvals to
ensure that future approvals are likewise conditioned and that expirations are
“caught” and re-permitted as necessary.
Policy 8-1 : All personal wireless service facilities approved by the City will be
conditioned with a permit expiration date to create opportunities for the City and
applicant to check maintenance, check the level of radio frequency radiation emissions,
improve equipment and camouflage techniques when needed.
In the event a company abandons its personal wireless service facility, the facility
should be dismantled and removed by the company and/or property owner.
Such a condition should be placed in City approvals for private property and in
City lease agreements for City-owned and leased properties.
30
Policy 8-2 : All personal wireless service facilities approved by the City shall be
conditioned with an abandonment provision providing for dismantling and removal of a
facility by the company and/or property owner.
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Chapter 9. Implementation
BACKGROUND
This section of the plan addresses how this wireless facilities master plan will be
implemented by the City through its zoning ordinances, City lease agreements
and development standards. While all personal wireless service facilities will
require some sort of discretionary review and/or approval, the City will not be
overly burdensome from a regulation standpoint for well-designed and sited
facilities that meet the goals of this plan. Applicants can expect a “tiered permit
system” where the level of staff and public review of a facility proposal will
depend on how well a facility is camouflaged and how unobtrusive it is in
appearance to the viewing public. The necessity for a RFR report is a separate
issue. The RFR report’s conclusions may affect the level of review. The Planning
Division staff is the main contact for most City approvals of personal wireless
service facilities.
Facility Development Permits
Simple Complex
Building Permit Only Director’s Approval ASA/Design Approval Use Permit
(Staff) (Planning Commission)
1. Building Permit Only.
Only a building permit is required for personal wireless service facilities that are
totally screened from any public view. The facility is able to use existing
structures to screen the equipment, or replace existing structures with ones
composed of radio transparent materials that are identical in appearance. While
Planning staff reviews these proposals for qualification, no separate planning
permit is required. To date, very few facilities have qualified for this minimum
level of review.
2. Director’s Approval.
Also known as a Director’s Minor Modification, this approval is executed by
Planning staff and the Community Development Director. No public hearing or
notice is required, but the decision is reviewed and may be appealed by anyone
during a 14 calendar-day appeal period. Typically, well-screened, building-
mounted or structured-mounted personal wireless facilities qualify for this level
of planning approval. A separate building permit is also required.
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3. ASA/Design Approval.
Certain personal wireless service facility projects require design approval by the
Design Review Committee, a two-member subcommittee of the Planning
Commission. The public meeting is less formal than a full Planning Commission
hearing and requires 10-day advanced noticing of adjacent property owners.
This type of planning application is required for more noticeable building and
structure-mounted personal wireless service facilities. Plans are reviewed by a
member of the Telecommunications Commission. A separate building permit is
also required.
4. Use Permit.
Typically, new tower- or monopole-mount personal wireless service facilities
will require public review by the City’s Planning Commission. Public hearing
noticing consists of a notice published in a local newspaper of general circulation
and mailed noticed to property owners within 500 feet. Plans are reviewed by a
member of the Telecommunications Commission. A separate and sequential
building permit is also required.
The Community Development Director may refer a Director’s Minor
Modification to the Planning Commission for public hearing review. This is
necessary when the Director believes there are significant design issues or
potential public controversy about the project. Noticing may be just adjacent
property owners or more if warranted by the Director.
WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS FACILITIES ORDINANCE
The wireless communications facilities ordinance was adopted and incorporated
into the City’s Municipal Code (Chapter 19.108) in 1997. It has been the City’s
main implementation tool and by default its policy document for the review of
all personal wireless service facilities in the City. With the adoption of a wireless
facilities master plan, this ordinance will need to be updated and broaden to
implement the master plan. The ordinance shall specify maximum antenna
height and provide for an exception process. This ordinance also regulates ham
radio facilities intended for personal use. Implementor: Community
Development Dept.
OTHER ZONING ORDINANCES.
The Location Section of this Plan identifies all types of locations and structures
that may be appropriate for personal wireless service facilities. Since these
locations and structures may be in any number of zoning districts, a review and
probable amendments of the zoning code is required to ensure that it is
33
internally consistent with the Wireless Facilities Master Plan. Implementor:
Community Development Dept.
OTHER CITY ORDINANCES AND CITY POLICIES
As this master plan proposes the potential lease of all types of City property for
private purposes, a review of other City ordinances and policies regarding such
lease to private concerns is necessary to ensure that they are internally consistent
with the Wireless Facilities Master Plan and that appropriate levels of review are
built into the leasing process. Implementors: Community Development Dept.,
Public Works Dept. & City Attorney
LEASE AGREEMENTS
A lease to locate personal wireless service facilities on an existing City-owned
facility or structure is typically negotiated with Public Works Department staff
and approved or disapproved by the City Council at a public hearing. The level
of Planning Division involvement and public review depends on the
obtrusiveness of the facility. A building permit may also be required. An
example of this type of entitlement is the lease of City light standards to a
wireless company for its antenna boxes. Leases involving the construction of
new stand-alone facilities will probably require greater scrutiny. Model lease
agreements should be developed by the City to facilitate lease of public property
and structures for personal wireless service facilities and to protect City interests.
Coordination with affected departments, such as the Parks and Recreation Dept.
for City parklands, will be necessary to ensure their concerns are met. The City’s
consultant has prepared a survey of lease rates to ascertain market rental rates
for such facilities. Implementor: Public Works Dept.
CITY STANDARD DETAILS
The City Public Works Department maintains standard specifications for all
public works structures. Some of the structures suggested in this plan, like traffic
signal poles and light poles, may not be physically or structurally suited to
accommodate a personal wireless service facility. These structures should be
evaluated by the wireless companies and the Public Works Department to
determine their suitability. An alternative design or standard may need to be
adopted to accommodate a residential deployment of personal service wireless
facilities. Implementors: Public Works Dept. & Wireless Companies.
34
Chapter 10. Glossary of Terms
A meaningful understanding of this Wireless Facilities Master Plan depends on a
common knowledge and understanding of the terminology used in this
document. The Plan uses the following terms and their definitions in regulating
and planning personal wireless service facilities.
• Above Ground Level (AGL). A measurement of height from the natural
grade of a site to the highest point of a structure.
• Antenna. An antenna is the transmitting/receiving portion of the personal
wireless service facility that tends to be, proportionally, a small part of the
total personal wireless service facility. Presently, five (5) types of antenna
have been identified:
- Dish or Parabolic Antenna. This is a bowl-shaped antenna of varying
diameter used for point-to-point microwave communications.
- Global Positioning System (GPS) Antenna. This is a small can-shaped
antenna affix to a rod and mounted at a lower height, usually near the
equipment cabinets.
- Panel Antenna. This is an antenna usually deployed in clusters of
three and commonly used in cellular and PCS systems. These
antennas usually are rectangular in shape, standing with the end up.
They can resemble plastic or glass light casings, such as seen on
streetlights, but the more typical shape is like a fluorescent light case.
35
They are typically 4-5 feet in height, 6-12 inches in width and 6-8
inches in depth.
- Whip Antenna. This is an omni-directional antenna that appears as a
very thin, rod-like element, projecting up or down from its mount.
They are typically 2-6 inches in diameter and 1-18 feet in length.
- Yagi Antenna. This is a directional antenna designed to “see” one site.
It consists of a thin, rod-like element with half a dozen or more short
cross members mounted at right angles. This antenna is mounted in a
horizontal direction from its mount.
• Antenna Mount or Mount. This term refers to the antenna mounting
hardware and the structure, if any, that elevates the antennas above the
surrounding landscape, for example, a building, monopole, lattice tower, etc.
There are four (4) typical types of mounts:
- Ground-mount. Each antenna is fastened to a separate, short, thin rod
that is anchored to the ground. These installations would be typically
seen on foothill properties where the height of the hill provides the
elevation for the antennas.
- Roof-mount. Antennas are mounted on the roof of a building.
- Side-mount. Antennas are mounted on the side of a building.
36
- Tower or Monopole-mount. Antennas are mounted on the top or side
of a lattice tower, guyed tower or monopole, or a monopole.
Sometimes a large and substantial framework is added so the antennas
will protrude noticeably above or beyond the surface of the tower or
monopole. This is referred to as a “top hat” or “rack” configuration,
which is often used to accommodate more than three panel antennas at
one mount. On monopoles, sometimes a dual-polarized or cross-
polarized panel antennas are used which allows the antennas to be
mounted very closely, almost flush, to the surface of the monopole.
- Structure-mount. Antennas are mounted to the top or side of a
structure, other than a building, tower or monopole, such as a water
tank or tall ground sign.
• Applicant. A person or entity who submits a permit application for a
personal wireless service facility before the City of Cupertino.
• Base Transceiver Station. The personal wireless service facility
equipment housed in cabinets or an enclosure or shelter. The term is
usually used for a PCS-type cell site.
• Camouflage. A palette of techniques used to disguise, hide and conceal a
personal wireless service facility from public view by blending its
appearance into elements of the visual background. The term connotes
the use of paint, landscaping, building materials and artificial screens in
patterns that merge with the elements in the background environment.
• Carrier. An entity or company in the business of providing personal
wireless services.
• Cell Site. An informal term for a personal wireless service facility.
• Cellular. A mobile telephone technology operating in the 800 MHz range
of the electromagnetic spectrum.
• Co-applicant. All other persons and/or entities joining with an applicant
in permit application for a personal wireless service facility, including the
owner(s) of the personal wireless service facility, the property owner(s),
and any tenant(s) for the personal wireless service facility.
• Co-location. The practice of installing antennas from more than one
wireless communications company on a single antenna mount.
• Co-location, Horizontal. The horizontal orientation of personal wireless
service facilities from more than one carrier on a building.
• Co-location, Vertical. The generally vertical orientation of personal
wireless service facilities from more than one carrier on a vertical mount
such as a monopole or lattice tower.
37
Horizontal Co-location of
Antennas
• Commercial Mobile Radio Services (CMRS). As defined by Section 704
of the 1996 Telecommunications Act, any of several technologies using
radio signals at various frequencies to send and receive voice, video and
data. These are considered “functionally equivalent services” by the
Telecommunications Act.
• Cross-polarized Antenna. Three panel antennas flush-mounted or
attached very close to a shaft.
• Design. The appearance of a personal wireless service facility, which
includes materials, colors and shape.
• Enhanced Specialized Mobile Radio (ESMR). Private land mobile radio
with telephone services. The local purveyor of this communications
technology is Nextel Communications.
• Environmental Assessment. The document required by the Federal
Communications Commission and the National Environmental Policy Act
when a personal wireless service facility is proposed in an area that may
be environmentally affected by the facility. The environmental
assessment must show how negative environmental impacts can be
mitigated.
• Equipment Cabinets. Personal wireless service facilities also include one
(1) or more small, enclosed structures, cabinets, boxes, sheds or
underground vaults near the base of the antenna mount. These structures
house power connections, emergency batteries, hardwire telephone
connections and sometimes ventilation equipment needed for the
operation of the facility. The equipment is connected to the antennas by
cable(s). The equipment is usually secured by an enclosing structure, such
38
as a fence, shed or vault. “Base transceiver station” is also used to
describe the radio equipment in these structures used by PCS technology.
• Facility. See Personal Wireless Service Facility.
• Federal Communications Commission (FCC). The FCC is the United
States governmental agency responsible for regulating personal wireless
services. This agency issues licenses and writes federal regulations and
standards governing telecommunication companies. The
Telecommunications Act of 1996 granted this agency significant authority
to regulate personal wireless services.
• Functionally Equivalent Services. Cellular, PCS, ESMR, Specialized
Mobile Radio and Paging. According to the Telecommunications Act,
these five services must receive the same treatment by local government.
• Guyed Monopole or Guyed Tower. A monopole or lattice tower that is
anchored to the ground or other surface by diagonally-oriented cables.
• Intrusive. A term used to describe a personal wireless service facility that
visually contrasts with its surroundings to the point of conflicting with it,
but not to the extent of visually dominating the surroundings (See
Obtrusive.)
• Lattice Tower. A self-supporting mount with multiple legs and cross
bracing of structural steel.
• Licensed Carrier. A company authorized by the FCC to construct and
operate a commercial mobile radio services system.
• Location. The area where a personal wireless service facility is located or
proposed to be located. The term differs from “siting”.
• Mean Sea Level (MSL). A uniform reference point from which height can
be measured.
• Modification. The changing of any portion of a personal wireless service
facility from what was approved in a previous City permit.
• Monopole. A self-supporting mount consisting of a single shaft of wood,
steel or concrete specifically designed and constructed to carry more than
one personal wireless service antenna.
• Mount. See Antenna-Mount.
• Obtrusive. A term used to describe a personal wireless service facility
that is visually dominating to its surrounding environment. This term
usually applies to a facility where a new monopole or lattice tower is
erected to mount the antennas. It may also apply to building-mounted or
structure-mounted facilities that lack adequate camouflage.
• Omni-directional Antenna. A thin rod that transmits or receives a radio
signal in all directions. Also called a “whip” antenna.
• Paging. A service that provides tone, text and limited voice messaging.
Commercial paging operates on several frequencies, including
narrowband PCS.
39
• Panel Antenna. A flat surface antenna that is usually deployed in three
directional sectors and used to transmit and receive signals from that
sector only.
• Personal Communications Services (PCS). A form of radiotelephone
service capable of transmitting and receiving voice, data, text and video
messaging and which operates in the 1850-1900 MHz range.
• Personal Wireless Services. The Plan uses the definition found in Section
704 of the Telecommunications Act of 1996. Unlicensed Wireless Services,
Common Carrier Wireless Exchange and Commercial Mobile Radio
Services, which includes: Cellular, Personal Communications Services
(PCS), Enhanced Specialized Mobile Radio, Specialized Mobile Radio and
Paging.
• Personal Wireless Service Facility. As defined in the
Telecommunications Act of 1996, a facility that is designed to provide
personal wireless services.
• Pylon Sign. A sign erected on a tall and substantial supporting structure,
but is not a billboard sign.
• Radio Frequency (RF) Engineer. Someone with a background in
electrical engineering who specializes in the study of radio frequencies.
RF engineers are licensed by the State as Professional Engineers.
• Radio Frequency Radiation (RFR). The emissions from personal wireless
service facilities that in excessive amounts can be harmful to humans.
• Search Ring. A generally circular geographic area of a specific radius that
a carrier uses to focus his search for a personal wireless service facility
location.
• Separation. The distance between one carrier’s antenna array and another
carrier’s antenna array. Separation may be horizontal or vertical.
• Siting. The method of placing a personal wireless service facility on a
specific site or property. The term differs from determining “location.”
• Specialized Mobile Radio (SMR). A group of services serving dispatch
and data communication users, usually over a small geographic area.
SMR operates over several frequencies in the 800 to 900 MHz range.
• Telecommunications Act of 1996. This is a broad revision of the 1934
federal statute governing telecommunications. It is important at the local
government level because it contains language that both preserves and
limits the authority of local government to regulate personal wireless
service facilities.
• Unobtrusive. A term used to describe a personal wireless service facility
that is not visually dominating to its surroundings. These are usually
facilities mounted on buildings or other structures that are well-
camouflaged. This also describes facilities that are not as well
camouflaged, but do not visually stand-out because of placement, shape
40
and/or relative size of the facility compared to surrounding visual
elements.
• Unlicensed Wireless Services. Commercial mobile services that can
operate on public domain frequencies and that therefore need no FCC
license for each personal wireless service facility. However, an unlicensed
carrier needs a FCC license. Examples are Metricom and Wi-Fi.