Section
General Provisions
153.001 Purpose
153.002 Objectives
153.003 Definitions
153.004 Police powers
153.005 Permit required
153.006 Permit application; permit contents
153.007 Permit fees
153.008 Insurance and indemnification
153.009 Performance bond; letter of credit
153.010 Performance warranty/guarantee
153.011 Inspections
153.012 Public safety
153.013 Time of completion
153.014 Traffic control
153.015 Revocation of permits and stop work orders
153.016 Appeals procedures
General Use and Construction
153.030 Right-of-way meetings
153.031 Minimal interference
153.032 Underground construction and use of poles
153.033 Use of conduits from town
153.034 Common users
153.035 Joint planning and construction; coordination of excavations
153.036 Minimizing impacts of work in rights-of-way
153.037 Standards for repairs and restoration
153.038 Relocation of facilities
153.039 Abandonment and removal of facilities
153.040 Emergency procedures
Newly Constructed or Overlayed Streets
153.055 Application
153.056 Criteria for approval
153.057 Exemptions for emergency operations
153.058 Exemptions for non-emergency operations
153.059 Construction and restoration standards for newly constructed or overlayed streets and alleys
Right-of-Way Permit Fees
153.070 Degradation costs
153.071 Administrative/management cost
153.072 Recommended cost of recovery method
153.073 Formula example
153.074 Cost of recovery method
GENERAL PROVISIONS
This chapter provides principles, procedures and associated funding for the placement of structures and facilities, construction excavation encroachments and work activities within or upon any public right- of-way and to protect the integrity of the road system. To achieve these purposes, it is necessary to require permits of private users of the public rights-of-way, to establish permit procedures and to fix and collect fees and charges.
(Prior Code, § 165.1.1) (Ord. 503, passed 7-7-2005; Ord. 577, passed 11-6-2014)
(A) Public and private uses of public rights-of-way for location of facilities employed in the provision of public services should, in the interests of the general welfare, be accommodated; however, the town must ensure that the primary purpose of the right-of-way, passage of pedestrian and vehicular traffic, is maintained to the greatest extent possible. In addition, the value of other public and private installations, roadways, facilities and properties should be protected, competing uses must be reconciled and the public safety preserved. The use of the right-of-way corridors by other users is secondary to these public objectives and the movement of traffic. This code is intended to strike a balance between the public need for efficient, safe transportation routes and the use of rights-of-way for location of facilities by public and private entities.
(B) It, thus, has several objectives:
(1) To ensure that the public safety is maintained and that public inconvenience is minimized;
(2) To protect the town’s infrastructure investment by establishing repair standards for the pavement, facilities and property in the public rights-of-way, when work is accomplished;
(3) To facilitate work within the rights-of-way through the standardization of regulations;
(4) To maintain an efficient permit process;
(5) To conserve and fairly apportion the limited physical capacity of the public rights-of-way held in public trust by the town;
(6) To establish a public policy for enabling the town to discharge its public trust consistent with the rapidly evolving federal and state regulatory policies, industry competition and technological development;
(7) To promote cooperation among the permittees (as defined herein) and the town in the occupation of the public rights-of-way, and work therein, in order to:
(a) Eliminate duplication that is wasteful, unnecessary or unsightly;
(b) Lower the permittee’s and the town’s costs of providing services to the public; and
(c) Minimize street cuts.
(8) To assure that the town can continue to fairly and responsibly protect the public health, safety and welfare.
(Prior Code, § 165.1.2) (Ord. 503, passed 7-7-2005; Ord. 577, passed 11-6-2014)
For the purpose of this chapter, the following definitions shall apply unless the context clearly requires a different meaning.
ACCESS VAULT. Any structure containing one or more ducts, conduits, manholes, handhole or other such facilities in the permittee’s facilities.
APPURTENANCES. Transformers, switching boxes, gas regulator stations, terminal boxes, meter cabinets, pedestals, junction boxes, handholes substations, system amplifiers, power supplies, pump stations, manholes, valves and valve housings and other devices that are necessary to the function of electric, communications, cable television, water, sewer, storm water, natural gas and other utilities and services.
CONTRACTOR. A person, partnership, corporation or other legal entity who undertakes to construct, install, alter, move, remove, trim, demolish, repair, replace, excavate or add to any improvements covered by this code, that requires work, workers and/or equipment to be in the public right-of-way in the process of performing the above named operations.
DEGRADATION. A decrease in the useful life of the right-of-way or damage to any landscaping within the rights-of-way caused by excavation in or disturbance of the right-of-way, resulting in the need to reconstruct the surface and/or subsurface structure of such right-of-way earlier than would be required if the excavation or disturbance did not occur.
DEVELOPER. The person, partnership, corporation or other legal entity who is improving a parcel of land within the town and who is legally responsible to the town for the construction of improvements within a subdivision or as a condition of a building permit.
DIRECTOR. The Town Manager of the town, or his or her authorized representative.
DUCT or CONDUIT. A single enclosed raceway for cables, fiber optics or other wires or a pipe or canal used to convey fluids or gases.
EMERGENCY. Any event which may threaten public health or safety, or that results in an interruption in the provision of services, including, but not limited to, damaged or leaking water or gas conduit systems, damaged, plugged or leaking sewer or storm drain conduit systems, damaged electrical and communications facilities and advanced notice of needed repairs is impracticable under the circumstances.
EXCAVATE. To dig into or in any way remove or penetrate any part of a right-of-way.
FACILITIES. Including, without limitation, any pipes, conduits, wires, cables, amplifiers, transformers, fiber optic lines, antennas, poles, street lights, ducts, fixtures and appurtenances and other like equipment used in connection with transmitting, receiving, distributing, offering and providing utility and other services.
FENCE. Any artificially constructed barrier of wood, masonry, stone, wire, metal or any other manufactured material or combination of materials erected to enclose partition, beautify, mark or screen areas of land.
INFRASTRUCTURE. Any public facility, system or improvement including, without limitation, water and sewer mains and appurtenances, storm drains and structures, streets, alleys, traffic signal poles and appurtenances, conduits, signs, landscape improvements, sidewalks and public safety equipment.
LANDSCAPING. Materials, including, without limitation, grass, ground cover, shrubs, vines, hedges or trees and non-living natural materials commonly used in landscape development, a well as attendant irrigation systems.
PERMIT. Any authorization for use of the public rights-of-way granted in accordance with the terms of this chapter, and the laws and policies of the town.
PERMITTEE. The holder of a valid permit issued pursuant to this chapter.
PERSON. Any person, firm, partnership, special, metropolitan or general district, association, corporation, company or organization of any kind.
PUBLIC RIGHT-OF-WAY or RIGHT-OF-WAY or PUBLIC WAY. Any public street, way, place, alley, sidewalk, easement, park, square, plaza and town-owned right-of-way dedicated to public use.
ROUTINE MAINTENANCE. Any above ground activity that does not affect the surface of the right-of-way, nor affects the use of the right-of-way.
SPECIFICATIONS. Engineering regulations, construction specifications and design standards adopted by the town.
STRUCTURE. Anything constructed or erected with a fixed location below, on or above grade, including, without limitation, foundations, fences, retaining walls, awnings, balconies and canopies.
SURPLUS DUCTS OR CONDUITS. Conduits or ducts other than those occupied by the permittee or any prior permittee, or unoccupied ducts held by the permittee as emergency use spares, or other unoccupied ducts that permittee reasonably expects to use within three years from the date of a request for use.
TOWN. The Town of Limon, Colorado.
WORK. Any labor performed on, or any use or storage of equipment or materials, including, but not limited to, construction of streets and all related appurtenances, fixtures, improvements, sidewalks, driveway openings, bus shelters, bus loading pads, street lights and traffic signal devices. It shall also mean construction, maintenance, and repair of all underground structures such as pipes, conduit, ducts, tunnels, manholes, vaults, buried cable, wire or any other similar structure located below surface, and installation of overhead poles used for any purpose.
(Prior Code, § 165.2) (Ord. 503, passed 7-7-2005; Ord. 577, passed 11-6-2014)
Loading...