SEC. 11-63. SECURITY ALARMS: DEFINITIONS.
   For the purpose of this article, the following words and terms shall have the following meanings.
   (A)   ALARM - A sound, signal, or message generated by an alarm system, alarm user, or other person.
   (B)   ALARM ADMINISTRATOR - The person or entity designated by the police chief to administer and determine security alarm system permit applications, permits, and alarm dispatch requests.
   (C)   ALARM AGENT - A person employed by an alarm business, whose duties include installing, maintaining, moving, repairing, altering, replacing, or servicing alarm systems.
   (D)   ALARM BUSINESS - A business that sells, leases, installs, moves, maintains, repairs, alters, replaces, services, or monitors alarm systems, not including a business that only sells alarm systems from a fixed location, or that only manufactures alarm systems sold to retailers, and not to the public.
   (E)   ALARM CALL CONFIRMATION - An attempt by the alarm company or its representative to contact the alarm site by telephonic or other electronic means, whether or not actual contact with a person is made, before requesting law enforcement dispatch, in an attempt to avoid an unnecessary alarm dispatch request.
   (F)   ALARM CANCELLATION - The termination of an alarm response following an alarm business’s dispatch request, when the alarm business advises the police department that there is not a situation at the alarm site that requires a response. If cancellation occurs prior to police or fire personnel arriving at the scene, this shall not be considered a false alarm for the purpose of civil penalty.
   (G)   ALARM DISPATCH - A notification to police or fire personnel that an alarm has been activated at an alarm site and a response is requested.
   (H)   ALARM SITE - A single fixed premises or location served by an alarm system or systems. Each unit, if served by a separate alarm system in a multi-unit building or complex, shall be considered a separate alarm site.
   (I)   ALARM SYSTEM - Any device, whether mechanical or electrical, designed and used to notify police or fire personnel, either directly or through a third party, of an event to which police or fire personnel are requested to respond. An alarm system does not include a battery operated smoke detector or the conventional use of a cellular or landline telephone. An alarm system includes both manual and automatic alarm systems. An alarm system that notifies police personnel is a security alarm system. An alarm system that notifies fire personnel is a fire alarm system.
   (J)   ALARM USER - An individual, corporation, partnership, association, organization, or other entity, including a permittee, owning, leasing, or controlling an alarm site.
   (K)   AUDIBLE ALARM - An alarm system device that, when activated, emits an audible sound at or around the alarm site.
   (L)   AUTOMATIC ALARM SYSTEM - An alarm system that is activated automatically by one or more sensors such as, but not limited to, motion detectors, reed switches, vibration sensors, acoustic sensors, glass break detectors, smoke sensors, heat detectors, or fire suppression devices. Manually activated alarms or alarms operating from a mobile security device are not automatic alarms.
   (M)   AUTOMATIC DIALING DEVICE - A device that automatically sends over regular telephone lines, by direct connection or otherwise, a prerecorded voice message or coded signal indicating the existence of some type of emergency to which police or fire personnel are requested to respond.
   (N)   BUILDING - A structure used or intended for use as human habitation, including attached non-habitable areas, such as storage and garage areas, and excluding yards and open areas, and detached accessory buildings not used or intended for use as human habitation.
   (O)   DURESS ALARM - A silent alarm system signal generated by the entry of a designated code into an arming station, in order to signal that the alarm user is being forced to turn off the system and requests a law enforcement response.
   (P)   EXCESSIVE FALSE ALARM - The occurrence of two or more false alarms, generated by an alarm user's alarm system, within a 12-month period.
   (Q)   FALSE ALARM - An alarm to which responding personnel, having investigated the alarm site, find no evidence of a situation requiring a response by such personnel, or, except for an alarm based on fire or medical emergency, find that the alarm site contains one or more unsecured exterior doors or windows. A false alarm includes an alarm caused by a power outage, but does not include an alarm caused by a force majeure or an extraordinary condition not reasonably within the control of the alarm business or alarm user. False alarms include situations involving an authorized person or persons at the alarm location who do not use the proper alarm code.
   (R)   FEE - The assessment of a monetary charge based on the cost of services provided by the city, payable to the city pursuant to this division.
   (S)   FINE - The assessment of a monetary charge for noncompliance with this division, payable to the city pursuant to this division.
   (T)   HEARING OFFICER - A person appointed by the city to hear and decide certain matters arising under this article.
   (U)   MANUAL ALARM SYSTEM - An alarm system that is hand-activated by one or more devices such as, but not limited to: buttons, keys, switches, or rails, and are sometimes referred to as panic alarms, panic buttons, trouble alarms, hold-up alarms, emergency buttons, emergency keys, medical alarms, robbery alarms, duress alarms, takeover alarms, hostage alarms, ambush alarms, bill traps, money traps, medical alarms, pull stations, early morning switches, foot rails, or foot switches.
   (V)   MONITORING - The process by which an alarm business or alarm user receives signals from alarm systems or otherwise monitors alarm sites, and relays an alarm dispatch request to response personnel.
   (W)   "MONITOR IT YOURSELF” ALARM SITE - An alarm site that is monitored directly by its alarm user and not by an alarm business.
   (X)   PANIC ALARM - A manual alarm system designed to alert others of emergency situations where an immediate threat to persons or property exists.
   (Y)   PERMIT REVOKED - The status of an alarm permit that has been rendered null and void as a result of excessive false alarms and/or other violations of this article.
   (Z)   PERMIT SUSPENDED - The status of an alarm permit that has been rendered inactive as a result of excessive false alarms and/or other violations of this article, and until corrected is not valid.
   (AA)   PERMITTEE - A person holding a valid alarm system permit issued pursuant to this article, or a person having an alarm system for which this article does not require a permit.
   (BB)   PERSON - Any person as defined in section 1-3 of this code or any other firm, institution, or public entity.
   (CC)   POLICE OR FIRE PERSONNEL - Sometimes referred to as "officer” throughout this article; employees of the city's police and fire departments; employees of police and fire departments of other public entities with which the city has entered into mutual aid agreements.
   (DD)   PRIVATE PATROL OPERATOR - A person licensed as a private patrol operator by the Chief of the California Bureau of Security and Investigative Services pursuant to Cal. Business and Professions Code, Section 7582.11, and holding a current city business tax certificate for a private patrol business.
   (EE)   ROBBERY ALARM/HOLD UP ALARM/211 ALARM - A silent alarm generated by a manual alarm system located at a place of business or residence, intended to signal that a robbery is in progress or that the alarm site is being taken over by intruders.
   (FF)   SECURITY ALARM SYSTEM - An alarm system that is intended to notify and/or request the dispatching of police personnel.
   (GG)   SILENT ALARM - An alarm system device that is connected to a telephone line, and when activated, automatically transmits a message or signal to an alarm business, indicating the request for an response to the alarm site.
   (HH)   UNSECURED - Not equipped with a functioning lock, bar, or other device that is attached to or in contact with the door or window, that is in the fixed or locked position, and that prevents the door or window from being opened from the exterior of the alarm site without breaking the door or window.
(Ord. 2951)