As used in this article, the following terms shall have the meanings indicated:
ABANDONMENTCease of operation of wireless telecommunications facilities for a period of one year.
ANTENNAAny exterior transmitting or receiving device mounted on a tower, building or structure and used in wireless telecommunications to radiate or capture electromagnetic waves; radio frequencies (excluding radar signals); and digital, analog, wireless communications, or other communications signals. For the purposes of this article, antennas do not include AM or FM radio or television transmitters, amateur shortwave radio antennas, or satellite communications "dishes."
ARRAYSupporting mounts for wireless communications devises on a monopole or lattice tower.
BACKHAUL NETWORKThe lines that connect a provider's towers/cell sites to one or more cellular telephone switching offices, and/or long-distance providers, or the public switching telephone network.
BUILDING-MOUNTED FACILITYAntenna mounted on an existing structure such as a lattice tower, stack, water tower, or rooftop installation.
CO-LOCATIONThe use and installation of wireless telecommunications equipment by more than one provider on a single site.
DISGUISED FACILITYExisting or new features that camouflage or conceal the presence of antennas, such as man-made trees, clock towers, bell steeples, lightpoles, flagpoles, or similar alternative design mounting structures.
FAAFederal Aviation Administration.
FALL ZONEThe farthest distance from the base of a monopole or lattice tower that a structure could be expected to collapse into in the event of structural failure. The purpose of this zone is to safeguard citizens and property during hurricanes and other storms from the dangers of falling or collapsing tower structures and windborne objects or debris from the structure. This area may not be less than 150% of the total height of the structure.
FCCFederal Communications Commission.
HEIGHTFor a tower or other structure, the distance measured from the finished grade of the parcel to the highest point on the tower or other structure, including, if building-mounted, the height of the portion of the building on which it is mounted.
LATTICE TOWERA guyed or self-supporting three- or four-sided open-frame structure constructed of vertical metal struts and cross braces used to support telecommunications equipment, including antennas (for the purposes of this article, not a wind power facility, including a meteorological tower).
MONOPOLEA single, freestanding pole-type structure securely anchored to a foundation without guy wires, which, for the purposes of this article, does not include a "tower." Monopoles shall be limited to one exterior wireless telecommunications provider, for a total of two providers: one exterior provider and one interior provider.
POLE-MOUNTED FACILITYAn antenna mount attached to or upon a publicly owned electric transmission or distribution pole, streetlight, traffic signal, or similar facility located within a public right-of-way or utility easement. The facility shall include any associated equipment shelters, regardless of where they are located with respect to the mount. This includes distributed antenna systems that are mounted on a utility pole within the public right-of-way.
PREEXISTING TOWERS and PREEXISTING ANTENNASAny tower or antenna for which a building permit, special use permit, or use variance has been properly issued prior to the effective date of this article, including permitted towers or antennas that have not been constructed, as long as such approval is current and not expired.
TOWERSee "lattice tower" and "wireless telecommunications tower" definitions.
WIRELESS TELECOMMUNICATIONS FACILITYIncludes an antenna, a wireless communications tower, a monopole, a building-mounted facility, a pole-mounted facility, or a disguised telecommunications facility.
WIRELESS TELECOMMUNICATIONS TOWERA structure intended to support equipment used to transmit and/or receive telecommunications signals, including monopoles and lattice towers.