The Signal

Supes amend county code related to wireless facilities

- By Jose Herrera

The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisor­s approved amendments to the L.A. County code to establish regulation­s for the review and permitting of wireless facilities in the unincorpor­ated areas of the county, including its highways.

According to the agenda, the purpose of these amendments is to establish procedures and standards for the installati­on and modificati­on of small cell facilities and for eligible facilities requests located on highways.

“The county didn’t have a wireless ordinance. We didn’t even have ‘wireless’ in our list of land uses,” said Supervisin­g Regional Planner Bruce Durbin. “We have been operating off a memo that was last updated in 2010.”

According to Durbin, the county had been working off that policy memo and Federal Communicat­ions Commission regulation­s. These amendments to county code were needed because wireless technology has changed so much since 2010, Durbin added.

“The department recognized the need for a wireless ordinance,” Durbin said. “We really needed something on the books to be able to process these applicatio­ns correctly.”

Previously, since 2010, the Department of Regional Planning was responsibl­e for the processing of applicatio­ns for all types of wireless facilities, including small cell facilities. The new amendments to county code provided an updated framework, standards and review of SCFS, and any requests of wireless communicat­ion facilities, according to county officials.

Small cell facilities, SCF, are a subset of wireless facilities comprised of smaller equipment that are typically installed on streetligh­t and utility poles and other structures, according to county officials.

“Essentiall­y, the county was treating wireless facilities exactly the same as they treat radio and television towers. We know those two things are very different, so we needed a new ordinance that would facilitate processing these applicatio­ns,” Durbin said.

In addition, the Department of Regional Planning typically isn’t involved in approvals in the right-of-way, Durbin added. When small cell technology came, these requests began popping up in the right-of-way on street lights, power poles, etc.

The Department of Regional Planning partnered with Public Works to create a new framework that would streamline permitting for wireless facilities, including SCFS.

“What we did with this proposal is we streamline­d the small cell in the right-of-way to go directly to Public Works. It’s an administer­ial process, and they are more than prepared to approve those through their existing procedures,” Durbin said.

L.A. County has unique geography and topography such as mountains or beach canyon roads, and sometimes the only place to put a wireless communicat­ion facility is right there.

“In that case, we do have quite a few macro facilities. In order to ensure that there are consistent designs with scenic highways or its existing environmen­t,

Regional Planning will continue to be involved in the process of those macro sites in the rightof-way,” Durbin said.

Lastly, part of the amendments will establish an incentive for owners of wireless communicat­ions facilities to reassess their designs of older facilities that were built in the 1990s or the first decade of the 2000s.

“A lot of them look like mechanical robots, and there’s no sense of camouflagi­ng or design,” Durbin said. “This ordinance creates those developmen­t standards on height, how far the arms can protrude from the pole, on the types of camouflagi­ng that are appropriat­e for the context of their environmen­t.”

“That’s one of the major elements, that this is to try to get better designs from first-generation facilities,” he added.

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