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its residents will be able to receive satisfactory <br />service from cellular towers located in a <br />neighboring jurisdiction. So prohibiting the <br />siting of the towers in the town may not have <br />the effect of prohibiting the provision of the <br />service to town residents. It is the "provision of <br />the service" that must be allowed, not the <br />siting of the facility. <br /> <br />What should the locality do? <br /> In addition to examining its current zoning and <br />land use ordinances, a county or other local <br />government should undertake the same kind of <br />review -- and revision if necessary N of the <br />permitting and other processes that it uses to <br />grant permission to construct towers and similar <br />facilities in the community. Is there a standard, <br />written procedure for processing siting permits <br />and other approvals? Are similar services treated <br />similarly? If there are differences in fees, <br />processing time, bonding requirements or other <br />regulations, are the differences reasonably related <br />to the differences between facilities? <br /> The following techniques have allowed various <br />local governments to accommodate facilities and <br />still maintain community attractiveness and quality: <br /> <br />Co-location <br /> Co-location means that a number of different <br />providers locate their transmitting facilities <br />together in the same place or on the same towers <br />or mono-poles. Co-location also can include the <br />use of the same tower or pole for a number of <br />different kinds of telecommunications services. <br />Although competitors may balk, most <br />communications towers can -- and typically do <br />-- carry several transmitters of several different <br />providers. The illustration at the right shows the <br />range of services that can be accommodated at <br />different heights on one tower. The television <br />transmitting antenna, which serves ranges of 30 or <br />more miles, needs a very tall tower ~ 750 to 1000 <br />feet is common -- and is located on the top of <br />that tower. Several paging service antennas <br />occupy different locations, and FM radio, SMK <br />and cellular transmitters occupy lower levels. <br /> A local government that wants to encourage <br /> co-location should keep in mind that it cannot <br /> "unreasonably discriminate" among personal wireless <br /> communications service providers. To protect a <br /> policy of co-location bom charges of unreasonable <br /> discrimination, a local government might: <br /> <br />lower <br /> <br />Antenna Farm <br /> Tel~4sion <br /> <br />FM <br /> <br />Smafl Fl( <br /> <br /> Cenul~ <br /> <br />High <br />microwa~ <br /> <br />'\ <br /> <br />(~and 8~d Ncaa) <br /> <br />Enact the policy into an ordinance. <br /> <br />Provide for incentives for co°location-- such <br />as a shorter processing time for applicants <br />who want to locate on a tower that has <br />already been approved, based on a <br />reasonable conclusion that such a site <br />requires less additional evaluation compared <br />to the legitimate evaluation and review <br />needed for a new site. <br /> <br />Set out~ in writing the application process <br /> <br />i~l~ A Cou/¥rY ,~D LOCAL Of'P/C/ALS GU/DL~ TO THE TELECOMMUI'IICATIO115 ACT Of= 1996 <br /> <br /> <br />