§ 96.083  PROTECTION AND RELOCATION OF FACILITIES.
   (A)   The permittee shall not interfere with any existing facility without the written consent of Superintendent of Public Works and the owner of the facility.  If it becomes necessary to relocate an existing facility, this shall be done by its owner.  No facility owned by the city shall be moved to accommodate the permittee unless the cost of that work be borne by the permittee.  The cost of moving privately owned facilities shall be similarly borne by the permittee unless it makes other arrangements with the person owning the facility. 
   (B)   The permittee shall support and protect by timbers or otherwise all pipes, conduits, poles, wires, or other apparatus which may be in any way affected by the excavation work, and do everything necessary to support, sustain, and protect them under, over, along, or across the work.  The permittee shall secure approval of the method of support and protection from the owner of the facility.  In case any of the pipes, conduits, poles, wires, or apparatus should be damaged, and for this purpose pipe coating or other encasement or devices are to be considered as part of a substructure, the permittee shall promptly notify the owner thereof.  All damaged facilities shall be repaired by the agency or person owning them, and the expense of the repairs shall be charged to the permittee. 
   (C)   It is the intent of this section that the permittee shall assume all liability for damage to facilities and any resulting damage or injury to anyone because of the facility damage and this assumption of liability is a contractual obligation of the permittee.  The only exception will be those instances where damage is exclusively due to the negligence of the owning utility.  The city shall not be made a party to any action because of this section.  The permittee shall inform itself as to the existence and location of all underground facilities and protect the same against damage.
(1969 Code, § 22-79)  (Ord. 1985-30, passed 1-27-1986)  Penalty, see § 96.999