Chapter 19.25A
SMALL WIRELESS FACILITIES

Sections:

19.25A.010    Purpose.

19.25A.020    Definitions.

19.25A.030    General provisions.

19.25A.040    Process.

19.25A.050    Review process and conditions of approval.

19.25A.060    Permit and time requirements.

19.25A.070    Modifications to small wireless facilities.

19.25A.080    Consolidated permit.

19.25A.090    Design and concealment standards for small wireless facility deployments.

19.25A.100    New poles in the rights-of-way for small wireless facilities.

19.25A.110    Appeals.

19.25A.010 Purpose.

The purpose of this chapter is to regulate placement, development, permitting, and removal of small wireless facilities and accomplish the following:

(1) Minimize adverse visual, aesthetic, and safety impacts of small wireless facilities.

(2) Establish objective standards for the placement of small wireless facilities.

(3) Ensure that standards allow competition and do not unreasonably discriminate among providers of functionally equivalent services.

(4) Encourage the design of such small wireless facilities to be aesthetically and architecturally compatible with the surrounding built and natural environments where possible.

(5) Encourage the collocation or attachment of small wireless facilities on existing support structures and reduce the total number and impact of such structures throughout the community.

(6) Manage the city rights-of-way in a manner that balances the need to accommodate new and evolving technologies with the preservation of the natural and aesthetic environment of the city.

(7) Reduce challenges faced by the city and applicants by coordinating applicable legislative and administrative processes under the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) regulations. (Ord. 11-19 § 6, 2019).

19.25A.020 Definitions.

In addition to the terms defined in BMC 1.01.060, 13.35.040, and Chapter 19.12 BMC, the following words and phrases used in this chapter shall have the following meanings unless the context clearly indicates otherwise:

(1) “City property” shall be as defined in BMC 1.01.060.

(2) “Franchise” or “franchise agreement” shall be as defined in BMC 13.35.040.

(3) “Grantee” shall be as defined in BMC 13.35.040.

(4) “Grantor” shall be as defined in BMC 13.35.040.

(5) “Light pole” shall be as defined in BMC 13.35.040.

(6) “Macro facility” means a large wireless communication facility that provides radio frequency coverage for a cellular telephone network. Generally, macrocell antennas are mounted on ground-based towers, rooftops and other existing structures, at a height that provides a clear view over the surrounding buildings and terrain. Macrocell facilities typically contain antennas that are greater than three cubic feet per antenna and typically cover large geographic areas with relatively high capacity and may be capable of hosting multiple wireless service providers.

(7) “Public right-of-way” or “right-of-way” means land acquired or dedicated for public roads and streets but does not include:

(a) State highways;

(b) Land dedicated for roads, streets, and highways not opened and not improved for motor vehicle use by the public;

(c) Structures, including poles and conduits, located within the right-of-way;

(d) Federally granted trust lands or Forest Practices Board trust lands;

(e) Lands owned or managed by the State Parks and Recreation Commission; or federally granted railroad rights-of-way acquired under 43 U.S.C. Section 912 and related provisions of federal law that are not open for motor vehicle use.

(8) “Service provider” shall be as defined in BMC 13.35.040. Service provider also shall include those infrastructure companies that provide telecommunications services or equipment to enable the deployment of personal wireless services.

(9) “Small wireless” and “small wireless facility” shall be as defined in BMC 13.35.040.

(10) “Structure” shall be as defined in BMC 13.35.040.

(11) “Telecommunications facilities” shall be as defined in BMC 13.35.040.

(12) “Telecommunications service” shall be as defined in BMC 13.35.040.

(13) “Transmission equipment” means equipment that facilitates transmission for any FCC licensed or authorized wireless communication service, including, but not limited to, radio transceivers, antennas, coaxial or fiber-optic cable, and regular and backup power supply. The term includes equipment associated with wireless communications services including, but not limited to, private, broadcast, and public safety services, as well as unlicensed wireless services and fixed wireless services such as microwave backhaul.

(14) “Traffic signal poles” shall be as defined in BMC 13.35.040.

(15) “Unified enclosure” means a small wireless facility providing concealment of antennas and equipment within a single enclosure.

(16) “Utility pole” means a structure designed and used primarily for the support of electrical wires, telephone wires, television cable, traffic signals, or lighting for streets, parking areas, or pedestrian paths. (Ord. 11-19 § 6, 2019).

19.25A.030 General provisions.

(1) Small wireless facilities shall not be considered or regulated as essential public facilities.

(2) Small wireless facilities located outside the public right-of-way may be either a primary or a secondary use. A different use of an existing structure on the same lot shall not preclude the installation of a small wireless facility.

(3) Small wireless facilities located within the public right-of-way pursuant to a valid franchise are outright permitted uses in every zone of the city and require a small wireless facility permit pursuant to BMC 19.25A.040. (Ord. 11-19 § 6, 2019).

19.25A.040 Process.

Reviews may be for facilities in the right-of-way and facilities not in the right-of-way. Both types of facilities shall meet the following submittal requirements unless specifically noted:

(1) Small wireless permit process is Type A-1.

(2) For small wireless facilities inside the right-of-way, the applicant must also comply with the requirements pursuant to Chapter 13.35 BMC.

(3) As an exercise of police powers pursuant to RCW 35.99.040(2), the small wireless facility permit is not a right-of-way use permit, but instead a consolidated public works and land use permit.

(a) Consolidation is required for review and decisions rendered to the full extent feasible with the presumptively reasonable time periods established by 47 CFR 1.6003.

(b) Included in consolidation are all permits, permissions, leases, and right-of-way use authorizations necessary for the deployment of small wireless facilities and, if applicable, an application for franchise pursuant.

(c) If the applicant requires a new franchise to use the right-of-way, the franchise approval may be consolidated with the small wireless facility permit review if requested by the applicant.

(d) To the extent they do not conflict with the requirements of this chapter, the general standards applicable to the use of the rights-of-way described in Chapter 13.35 BMC shall apply to all small wireless facility permits.

(e) The issuance of a small wireless permit grants authority to construct small wireless facilities in the rights-of-way in a consolidated manner to allow the applicant, in most situations, to avoid the need to seek duplicative approval by both the public works and the development services department.

(4) The director is authorized to establish franchise and other application forms to gather the information required by this chapter from applicants and to determine the completeness of the application process as provided herein. The application shall include Parts A, B, and C as described below.

(a) Part A is the complete application for a franchise agreement. A franchise agreement is required if any part of the facilities is to be in the public right-of-way.

(i) An applicant with an existing franchise for deployment of small wireless facilities in the city may proceed to directly apply for a small wireless facility permit and related approvals (Parts B and C).

(b) Part B of the application requires specification of the small wireless facility components and locations as further required in the small wireless permit application described in this section.

(c) Part C of the application shall contain attachments of all associated permit requirements such as applications or check lists required under the critical areas, shoreline or SEPA ordinances.

(i) Applicants for deployment of small wireless facilities for new poles shall comply with the requirements in BMC 19.25A.100.

(d) Part D is for lease applications, which is required for attaching a small wireless facility on any city-owned property. This lease application shall be a component of the application.

(i) Leases for the use of public property, structures or facilities shall be submitted to the city council for approval.

(5) The following information shall be provided by all applications for a small wireless permit:

(a) The application shall provide specific locational information including GIS coordinates of all proposed small wireless facilities and specify where the small wireless facilities will use existing, replacement or new poles, towers, existing buildings and/or other structures. Ground-mounted equipment, conduit, junction boxes and fiber and electrical connections necessary for and intended for use in the deployment shall also be specified regardless of whether the additional facilities are to be constructed by the applicant or leased from a third party. Detailed schematics and visual renderings of the small wireless facilities, including engineering and design standards, shall be provided by the applicant. The application shall have sufficient detail to identify:

(i) The location of overhead and underground public utility, telecommunication, cable, water, sewer drainage and other lines and equipment in the rights-of-way along the proposed route.

(ii) The specific trees, structures, facilities, lines and equipment, and obstructions, if any, that the applicant proposes to temporarily or permanently remove or relocate and a landscape plan for protecting, trimming, removing, replacing, and restoring any trees or areas to be disturbed during construction.

(iii) All existing or proposed improvements related to the proposed location, including but not limited to poles, driveways, ADA ramps, equipment cabinets, street trees and structures within 250 feet from the proposed site.

(iv) If the site location includes a new replacement light pole, then the applicant must submit a photometric analysis of the roadway and sidewalk within 150 feet of the existing light.

(v) Compliance with the aesthetic requirements of BMC 19.25.100, Design criteria.

(b) The applicant must show written approval from the owner of any pole or structure for the installation of its small wireless facilities on such pole or structure. Such written approval shall include approval of the specific pole, engineering and design standards, as well as assurances that the specific pole can withstand wind and seismic loads, from the pole owner, unless the pole owner is the city.

(c) The applicant may batch multiple small wireless facility sites in one application. The applicant is encouraged to batch the small wireless facility sites within an application in contiguous service areas.

(d) Any application for a small wireless facility located in the right-of-way adjacent to a parcel zoned for residential use shall demonstrate that it has considered the following:

(i) Whether a small wireless facility is currently installed on an existing pole in front of the same residential parcel. If a small wireless facility exists, then the applicant must demonstrate that no technically feasible alternative location exists that is not in front of the same residential parcel.

(ii) Whether the proposed small wireless facility can be screened from residential view by choosing a pole location that is not directly in front of a window or a view.

(e) Any application for a small wireless permit that contains an element that is not exempt from SEPA review shall simultaneously apply under Chapter 43.21C RCW and Chapter 12.04 BMC. Further, any application proposing small wireless facilities in shoreline management zones (pursuant to Chapter 19.42 BMC) or in critical areas (pursuant to Chapter 12.08 BMC) must indicate that the application is exempt or comply with the review processes in such codes.

(f) The applicant shall submit a sworn affidavit signed by an RF engineer with knowledge of the proposed project affirming that the small wireless facilities will be compliant with all FCC and other governmental regulations in connection with human exposure to radio frequency emissions for every frequency at which the small wireless facility will operate. If facilities that generate RF radiation necessary to the small wireless facility are to be provided by a third party, then the small wireless permit shall be conditioned on an RF certification showing the cumulative impact of the RF emissions on the entire installation. The applicant may provide one emissions report for the entire small wireless deployment if the applicant is using the same small wireless facility configuration for all installations within that batch or may submit one emissions report for each subgroup installation identified in the batch.

(g) The applicant shall provide proof of FCC and other regulatory approvals required to provide the service(s) or use the technologies sought to be installed.

(h) A professional engineer licensed by the state of Washington shall certify in writing, over his or her seal, that both construction plans and final construction of the small wireless facilities and structure or pole and foundation are designed to reasonably withstand wind and seismic loads.

(i) Application materials required for a right-of-way use permit as required by BMC 13.35.090(2)(f).

(j) Recognizing that small wireless facility technology is rapidly evolving, the director is authorized to adopt and publish standards for the technological and structural safety of city-owned structures and to formulate and publish application questions for use when an applicant seeks to attach to city-owned structures.

(k) Such other information as the director, in his/her discretion, shall deem appropriate to effectively evaluate the application based on technical, engineering and aesthetic considerations. (Ord. 11-19 § 6, 2019).

19.25A.050 Review process and conditions of approval.

The following provisions relate to review of applications for a small wireless facility permit:

(1) Only complete applications for a small wireless permit containing all required submission elements described in BMC 19.25A.040 shall be considered by the city. Incomplete applications that are not made complete by the applicant within 60 days of initial submission of the application materials shall be deemed withdrawn.

(2) In any zone, upon application for a small wireless permit, the city will permit small wireless deployment on existing or replacement utility poles conforming to the city’s generally applicable design and concealment standards adopted pursuant to BMC 19.25A.090, except as provided in subsection (7) of this section.

(3) Vertical clearance shall be reviewed by the director to ensure that the small wireless facilities will not pose a hazard to other users of the rights-of-way.

(4) Replacement poles and new poles shall comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), city construction and sidewalk clearance standards, traffic warrants, city ordinances, and state and federal statutes and regulations in order to provide a clear and safe passage within the rights-of-way.

(a) The location of any replacement pole or new pole must be physically possible, cannot obstruct vehicular or pedestrian traffic or the clear zone, not interfere with utility or safety fixtures (e.g., fire hydrants, traffic control devices), and not adversely affect the public welfare, health, or safety.

(5) No equipment shall produce noise in violation of Chapter 8.30 BMC.

(6) Small wireless facilities may not encroach onto or over private property or property outside the right-of-way without the property owner’s express written consent.

(7) A right-of-way permit is needed showing traffic control work location and for any work required by Chapter 13.35 BMC.

(8) Small wireless deployment on new poles is subject to review and approval pursuant to BMC 19.25A.100.

(9) The designs approved in a small wireless facility permit shall be considered concealment elements, as expressed in BMC 19.25A.090, and may only be expanded upon in an eligible facilities request described in BMC 19.25.170 when the modification does not defeat the concealment elements of the small wireless facility.

(10) Review of the site locations proposed by the applicant shall be governed by the provisions of 47 USC 253 and 332 and other applicable statutes, regulations and case law. Applicants for franchises and the small wireless facility permits shall be treated in a competitively neutral and nondiscriminatory manner with other service providers, using supporting infrastructure that is functionally equivalent; that is, service providers whose facilities are similarly situated in terms of structure, placement, or cumulative impacts. Small wireless facility permit review under this chapter shall neither prohibit nor have the effect of prohibiting the ability of an applicant to provide telecommunications services.

(11) The city shall provide notice of a complete application for a small wireless facility permit on the city’s website with a link to the application per BMC Title 20.

(a) The notice shall include an email contact and telephone number for the applicant to answer citizen inquiries.

(b) The applicant is encouraged to host informational meetings for the public regarding the deployment.

(c) The city shall post meeting notices, if any, for informational meetings on its website. These meetings are for the public’s information and are neither hearings nor part of any land use appeal process.

(12) Any applicant may withdraw an application submitted pursuant to BMC 19.25A.040 at any time, provided the withdrawal is in writing and signed by all persons who signed the original application, or their successors in interest.

(a) When a withdrawal is received, the application shall be deemed null and void.

(b) If such withdrawal occurs prior to the director’s decision, then reimbursement of fees submitted in association with said application shall be prorated to withhold the amount of city costs incurred in processing the application prior to time of withdrawal. If such withdrawal is not accomplished prior to the director’s decision, there shall be no refund of all or any portion of such fee. (Ord. 11-19 § 6, 2019).

19.25A.060 Permit and time requirements.

(1) The grantee of any permit shall comply with all of the requirements within the small wireless permit.

(2) Within 30 days after construction of the small wireless facility, the grantee shall provide the city with as-builts of the small wireless facilities demonstrating compliance with the permit and shall provide site photographs.

(3) Construction of the small wireless facility must be completed within six months after the approval date by the city. The grantee may request one extension to be limited to three months, if the applicant cannot construct the small wireless facility within the original six-month period.

(4) The grantee must maintain the small wireless facilities in safe and working condition.

(a) The grantee shall be responsible for the removal of any graffiti or other vandalism and shall keep the site neat and orderly, including but not limited to following any maintenance or modifications on the site.

(5) The grantee shall commence operation of the small wireless facility no later than three months after installation. (Ord. 11-19 § 6, 2019).

19.25A.070 Modifications to small wireless facilities.

(1) The grantee shall apply for a small wireless facility permit if a modification to an existing small wireless facility is desired, including but not limited to expanding or changing the antenna type, increasing the equipment enclosure, placing additional pole-mounted or ground-mounted equipment, or modifying the concealment elements, as expressed in BMC 19.25A.090.

(2) A small wireless facility permit shall not be required for routine maintenance and repair of a small wireless facility within the rights-of-way, or the replacement of an antenna or equipment of similar size, weight, and height; provided, that such replacement does not defeat the concealment elements used in the original deployment of the small wireless facility, does not impact the structural integrity of the pole, and does not require pole replacement.

(a) A small wireless facility permit shall not be required for replacing equipment within the equipment enclosure or reconfiguration of fiber or power to the small wireless facility.

(b) Right-of-way use permits may be required for routine maintenance, repair or replacement consistent with Chapter 13.35 BMC. (Ord. 11-19 § 6, 2019).

19.25A.080 Consolidated permit.

(1) The issuance of a small wireless permit grants authority to construct small wireless facilities in the rights-of-way in a consolidated manner to allow the applicant, in most situations, to avoid the need to seek duplicative approval by both the public works and the development services department.

(a) An application for a franchise to deploy small wireless facilities shall be processed in parallel and consideration coordinated with the process outlined in this chapter in order to comply with the presumptively reasonable review periods established by FCC regulation.

(b) As an exercise of police powers pursuant to RCW 35.99.040(2), the small wireless facility permit is not a right-of-way use permit, but instead a consolidated public works and land use permit. The city shall make every effort to act on the consolidated permits within the presumptively reasonable time periods established by FCC order.

(2) To the extent they do not conflict with the requirements of this chapter, the general standards applicable to the use of the rights-of-way described in Chapter 13.35 BMC shall apply to all small wireless facility permits. (Ord. 11-19 § 6, 2019).

19.25A.090 Design and concealment standards for small wireless facility deployments.

Small wireless facility deployments permitted inside or outside the right-of way shall conform to the following design standards. These design standards serve as concealment elements for the purposes of an eligible facilities request.

(1) Small wireless facilities attached to existing or replacement nonwooden light poles and other nonwooden poles in the right-of-way or nonwooden poles outside of the right-of-way shall conform to the following design criteria:

(a) Enclosure Location and Dimensions. The applicant shall minimize to the extent possible the antenna and equipment space and shall use the smallest amount of enclosure possible to fit the necessary equipment. The antennas and equipment shall be located using the following methods in priority order:

(i) Concealed Completely within the Pole or Pole Base. Antennas and the associated equipment enclosures (including disconnect switches and other appurtenant devices) shall be fully concealed within the pole, unless such concealment is otherwise technically infeasible, or is incompatible with the pole design. If within the pole base, the base shall meet the ADA requirements and not impact the pedestrian access route.

(ii) Located on a Pole. If located on a pole, antennas and associated equipment enclosures must be camouflaged to appear as an integral part of the pole or flush-mounted to the pole, meaning no more than six inches off of the pole, and the equipment enclosure and all other wireless equipment associated with the small wireless facility shall be the minimum size necessary for the intended purpose. The equipment enclosure and all other wireless equipment associated with the pole (including interior conduit), including wireless equipment associated with the antenna and any preexisting associated equipment on the pole, may not exceed 28 cubic feet. If the equipment enclosure is permitted on the exterior of the pole, the applicant is required to place the equipment enclosure behind any banners or road signs that may be on the pole; provided, that such location does not interfere with the operation of the banners or signs. The furthest point of any antenna or equipment enclosure may not extend more than 24 inches from the face of the pole.

(iii) Underground in a Utility Vault. If located underground, the access lid to the equipment enclosure shall be located outside the footprint of any pedestrian curb ramp and shall have a nonskid surface meeting ADA requirements if located within an existing pedestrian access route.

(iv) On Private Property. If located on private property, the applicant shall submit a copy of an executed permission document with the private property owner prior to the right-of-way permit issuance.

(b) The furthest point of any antenna or equipment enclosure may not extend more than 24 inches from the face of the pole. Any equipment or antenna enclosures must meet WSDOT height clearance requirements.

(c) All conduit, cables, wires and fiber must be routed internally in the nonwooden pole. Full concealment of all conduit, cables, wires and fiber is required within mounting brackets, shrouds, canisters or sleeves if attaching to exterior antennas or equipment.

(d) An antenna on top of an existing pole may not extend more than six feet above the height of the existing pole and the diameter may not exceed 16 inches, measured at the top of the pole, unless the applicant can demonstrate that more space is needed. The antennas shall be integrated into the pole design so that it appears as a continuation of the original pole, including colored or painted to match the pole, and shall be shrouded or screened to blend with the pole except for canister antennas that shall not require screening. All cabling and mounting hardware/brackets from the bottom of the antenna to the top of the pole shall be fully concealed and integrated with the pole.

(e) Any replacement pole shall substantially conform to the design of the pole it is replacing or the neighboring pole design standards used within the contiguous right-of-way.

(f) The height of any replacement pole may not extend more than 10 feet above the height of the existing pole or the minimum additional height necessary; provided, that the height of the replacement pole cannot be extended further by additional antenna height.

(g) The diameter of a replacement pole shall comply with the city’s setback and sidewalk clearance requirements and shall, to the extent technically feasible, not be more than a 25 percent increase of the existing nonwooden pole measured at the base of the pole, unless additional diameter is needed in order to conceal equipment within the base of the pole, and shall comply with the requirements in subsection (5)(d) of this section.

(h) The use of the pole for the siting of a small wireless facility shall be considered secondary to the primary function of the pole. If the primary function of a pole serving as the host site for a small wireless facility becomes unnecessary, the pole shall not be retained for the sole purpose of accommodating the small wireless facility and the small wireless facility and all associated equipment shall be removed.

(2) Wooden Pole Design Standards. Small wireless facilities located on wooden poles shall conform to the following design criteria:

(a) The wooden pole at the proposed location may be replaced with a taller pole for the purpose of accommodating a small wireless facility; provided, that the replacement pole shall not exceed a height that is a maximum of 10 feet taller than the existing pole, unless a further height increase is required and confirmed in writing by the pole owner and that such height extension is the minimum extension possible to provide sufficient separation and/or clearance from electrical and wireline facilities.

(b) A pole extender may be used instead of replacing an existing pole but may not increase the height of the existing pole by more than 10 feet, unless a further height increase is required and confirmed in writing by the pole owner and such height increase is the minimum extension possible to provide sufficient separation and/or clearance from electrical and wireline facilities. A “pole extender” as used herein is an object affixed between the pole and the antenna for the purpose of increasing the height of the antenna above the pole. The pole extender shall be painted to approximately match the color of the pole and shall substantially match the diameter of the pole measured at the top of the pole.

(c) Replacement wooden poles must either match the approximate color and materials of the replaced pole or shall be the standard new wooden pole used by the pole owner in the city.

(d) Antennas, equipment enclosures, and all ancillary equipment, boxes and conduit shall be colored or painted to match the approximate color of the surface of the wooden pole on which they are attached.

(e) Antennas shall not be mounted more than 12 inches from the surface of the wooden pole.

(f) Antennas should be placed in an effort to minimize visual clutter and obtrusiveness. Multiple antennas are permitted on a wooden pole; provided, that each antenna enclosure shall not be more than three cubic feet in volume.

(g) A canister antenna may be mounted on top of an existing wooden pole, which may not exceed the height requirements described in subsection (2)(a) of this section. A canister antenna mounted on the top of a wooden pole shall not exceed 16 inches, measured at the top of the pole, and shall be colored or painted to match the pole. The canister antenna must be placed to look as if it is an extension of the pole. In the alternative, the applicant may propose a side-mounted canister antenna, so long as the inside edge of the antenna is no more than 12 inches from the surface of the wooden pole. All cables shall be concealed either within the canister antenna or within a sleeve between the antenna and the wooden pole.

(h) The furthest point of any antenna or equipment enclosure may not extend more than 24 inches from the face of the pole. Any equipment or antenna enclosures must meet WSDOT height clearance requirements.

(i) An omnidirectional antenna may be mounted on the top of an existing wooden pole, provided such antenna is no more than four feet in height and is mounted directly on the top of a pole or attached to a sleeve made to look like the exterior of the pole as close to the top of the pole as technically feasible. All cables shall be concealed within the sleeve between the bottom of the antenna and the mounting bracket.

(j) All related equipment, including but not limited to ancillary equipment, radios, cables, associated shrouding, microwaves, and conduit that are mounted on wooden poles shall not be mounted more than six inches from the surface of the pole, unless a further distance is technically required, and is confirmed in writing by the pole owner.

(k) Equipment for small wireless facilities must be attached to the wooden pole, unless otherwise permitted to be ground-mounted pursuant to subsection (5)(a) of this section. The equipment must be placed in the smallest enclosure possible for the intended purpose. The equipment enclosure and all other wireless equipment associated with the utility pole, including wireless equipment associated with the antenna and any preexisting associated equipment on the pole, may not exceed 28 cubic feet. Multiple equipment enclosures may be acceptable if designed to more closely integrate with the pole design and do not cumulatively exceed 28 cubic feet. The applicant is encouraged to place the equipment enclosure behind any banners or road signs that may be on the pole; provided, that such location does not interfere with the operation of the banners or signs.

(l) An applicant who desires to enclose both its antennas and equipment within one unified enclosure may do so; provided, that such enclosure is the minimum size necessary for its intended purpose and the enclosure and all other wireless equipment associated with the pole, including wireless equipment associated with the antenna and any preexisting associated equipment on the pole does not exceed 28 cubic feet. The unified enclosure may not be placed more than six inches from the surface of the pole, unless a further distance is required and confirmed in writing by the pole owner. To the extent possible, the unified enclosure shall be placed so as to appear as an integrated part of the pole or behind banners or signs; provided, that such location does not interfere with the operation of the banners or signs.

(m) The visual effect of the small wireless facility on all other aspects of the appearance of the wooden pole shall be minimized to the greatest extent possible.

(n) The use of the wooden pole for the siting of a small wireless facility shall be considered secondary to the primary function of the pole. If the primary function of a pole serving as the host site for a small wireless facility becomes unnecessary, the pole shall not be retained for the sole purpose of accommodating the small wireless facility and the small wireless facility and all associated equipment shall be removed.

(o) The diameter of a replacement pole shall comply with the city’s setback and sidewalk clearance requirements and shall not be more than a 25 percent increase of the existing utility pole measured at the base of the pole.

(p) All cables and wires shall be routed through conduit along the outside of the pole. The outside conduit shall be colored or painted to match the pole. The number of conduits shall be minimized to the number technically necessary to accommodate the small wireless facility.

(3) Small wireless facilities attached to existing buildings shall conform to the following design criteria:

(a) Small wireless facilities may be mounted to the sides of a building if the antennas do not interrupt the building’s architectural theme.

(b) The interruption of architectural lines or horizontal or vertical reveals is discouraged.

(c) New architectural features such as columns, pilasters, corbels, or other ornamentation that conceal antennas may be used if it complements the architecture of the existing building.

(d) Small wireless facilities shall use the smallest mounting brackets necessary in order to provide the smallest offset from the building.

(e) Skirts or shrouds shall be used on the sides and bottoms of antennas in order to conceal mounting hardware, create a cleaner appearance, and minimize the visual impact of the antennas. Exposed cabling/wiring is prohibited.

(f) Small wireless facilities shall be painted and textured to match the adjacent building surfaces.

(4) Small wireless facilities mounted on cables strung between existing utility poles shall conform to the following standards:

(a) Each strand-mounted facility shall not exceed three cubic feet in volume;

(b) Only one strand-mounted facility is permitted per cable between any two existing poles;

(c) The strand-mounted devices shall be placed as close as possible to the nearest utility pole, in no event more than five feet from the pole unless a greater distance is technically necessary or is required by the pole owner for safety clearance;

(d) No strand-mounted device shall be located in or above the portion of the roadway open to vehicular traffic;

(e) Ground-mounted equipment to accommodate a strand-mounted facility is not permitted except when placed in preexisting equipment cabinets;

(f) Pole-mounted equipment shall comply with the requirements of subsections (1) and (2) of this section;

(g) Such strand-mounted devices must be installed to cause the least visual impact and without excess exterior cabling or wires (other than the original strand); and

(h) Strand-mounted facilities are prohibited on nonwooden poles.

(5) General Requirements.

(a) Ground-mounted equipment in the rights-of-way is prohibited, unless such facilities are placed underground or the applicant can demonstrate that pole-mounted or undergrounded equipment is technically infeasible. If ground-mounted equipment is necessary, then the applicant shall submit a concealment element plan. Generators located in the rights-of-way are prohibited.

(b) No equipment shall produce noise in violation of Chapter 8.30 BMC.

(c) Small wireless facilities are not permitted on traffic signal poles.

(d) Replacement poles and new poles shall comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), city construction and sidewalk clearance standards, city ordinance, and state and federal laws and regulations in order to provide a clear and safe passage within the rights-of-way. Further, the location of any replacement or new pole must: be physically possible, comply with applicable traffic warrants, not interfere with utility or safety fixtures (e.g., fire hydrants, traffic control devices), and not adversely affect the public welfare, health or safety.

(e) Failure to bring a permitted wireless facility online and into operation within three months of completion of construction shall be deemed an abandonment of the facility and the permit shall expire. The applicant shall remove all facilities within 30 days of written notice from the city. In addition to any other remedy which the city may have, the facility may be removed by the city or its contractor and the owner billed for the actual costs of removal.

(f) No signage, message or identification other than the manufacturer’s identification or identification required by governing law is allowed to be portrayed on any antenna or equipment enclosure. Any permitted signage shall be located on the equipment enclosures and be of the minimum amount possible to achieve the intended purpose (no larger than four by six inches); provided, that signs are permitted as concealment element techniques where appropriate.

(g) Antennas and related equipment shall not be illuminated except for security reasons, required by a federal or state authority, or unless approved as part of a concealment element plan.

(h) Side arm mounts for antennas or equipment must be the minimum extension necessary and may not create a gap of more than 12 inches for wooden poles and no more than six inches for nonwooden poles between the pole and the antennas or equipment.

(i) The preferred location of a small wireless facility on a pole is the location with the least visible impact.

(j) Antennas, equipment enclosures, and ancillary equipment, conduit and cable, shall not dominate the structure or pole upon which they are attached.

(k) Except for locations in the right-of-way, small wireless facilities are not permitted on any property containing a residential use in the residential zones.

(l) The city may consider the cumulative visual effects of small wireless facilities mounted on poles within the rights-of-way when assessing proposed siting locations so as to not adversely affect the visual character of the city. This provision shall not be applied to limit the number of permits issued when no alternative sites are reasonably available nor to impose a technological requirement on the applicant.

(m) These design standards are intended to be used solely for the purpose of concealment and siting. Nothing herein shall be interpreted or applied in a manner that dictates the use of a particular technology. When strict application of these requirements would unreasonably impair the function of the technology chosen by the applicant, alternative forms of concealment or deployment may be permitted that provide similar or greater protections from negative visual impacts to the streetscape. (Ord. 11-19 § 6, 2019).

19.25A.100 New poles in the rights-of-way for small wireless facilities.

(1) New poles within the rights-of-way are only permitted if the applicant can establish that:

(a) The proposed small wireless facility cannot be located on an existing utility pole or light pole, electrical transmission tower or on a site outside of the public rights-of-way such as a public park, public property, building, transmission tower or in or on a nonresidential use in a residential zone whether by roof or panel-mount or separate structure;

(b) The proposed small wireless facility complies with the applicable requirements of BMC 19.25A.090.

(c) The proposed small wireless facility receives approval for a concealment element design, as described in subsection (3) of this section;

(d) The proposed small wireless facility also complies with the Shoreline Management Act, and SEPA, if applicable; and

(e) No new poles shall be located in a critical area or associated buffer required by the city’s critical areas management ordinance (Chapter 12.08 BMC), except when determined to be exempt pursuant to said ordinance.

(2) The concealment element design shall include the design of the screening, fencing or other concealment technology for a tower, pole, or equipment structure, and all related transmission equipment or facilities associated with the proposed small wireless facility, including but not limited to fiber and power connections.

(a) The concealment element design should seek to minimize the visual obtrusiveness of the small wireless facility. The proposed pole or structure should have similar designs to existing neighboring poles in the rights-of-way, including similar height to the extent technically feasible. Any concealment element design for a small wireless facility on a decorative pole should attempt to mimic the design of such pole and integrate the small wireless facility into the design of the decorative pole. Other concealment methods include, but are not limited to, integrating the installation with architectural features or building design components, using coverings or concealment devices of similar material, color, and texture – or the appearance thereof – as the surface against which the installation will be seen or on which it will be installed, landscape design, or other camouflage strategies appropriate for the type of installation. Applicants are required to use designs in which all conduit and wirelines are installed internally in the structure. Further, applicant designs should, to the extent technically possible, comply with the generally applicable design standards adopted pursuant to BMC 19.25A.090.

(3) If the director has already approved a concealment element design, either for the applicant or another small wireless facility along the same public right-of-way or for the same pole type, then the applicant shall use a substantially similar concealment element design, unless it can show that such concealment element design is not physically or technically feasible, or that such deployment would undermine the generally applicable design standards.

(4) Even if an alternative location is established pursuant to subsection (1)(a) of this section, the director may determine that a new pole in the right-of-way is in fact a superior alternative based on the impact to the city, the concealment element design, the city’s comprehensive plan and the added benefits to the community.

(a) Prior to the issuance of a permit to construct a new pole or ground-mounted equipment in the right-of-way, the applicant must obtain a site-specific agreement from the city to locate such new pole- or ground-mounted equipment. This requirement also applies to replacement poles that are higher than the replaced pole, and the overall height of the replacement pole and the proposed small wireless facility is more than 60 feet.

(5) These design standards are intended to be used solely for the purpose of concealment and siting. Nothing herein shall be interpreted or applied in a manner that dictates the use of a particular technology. When strict application of these requirements would unreasonably impair the function of the technology chosen by the applicant, alternative forms of concealment or deployment may be permitted that provide similar or greater protections of the streetscape. (Ord. 11-19 § 6, 2019).

19.25A.110 Appeals.

Administrative approval or denial of small wireless permits is final. An appeal from any permit approval or denial under this chapter may be taken only to superior court. (Ord. 11-19 § 6, 2019).