THE SENATE |
S.B. NO. |
2704 |
TWENTY-NINTH LEGISLATURE, 2018 |
S.D. 2 |
|
STATE OF HAWAII |
H.D. 1 |
|
|
|
|
|
||
|
A BILL FOR AN ACT
RELATING TO WIRELESS BROADBAND FACILITIES.
BE IT
ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION 1. This Act is essential to establishing the policy framework to foster the installation of a robust, reliable, and technologically advanced wireless broadband network throughout the State.
SECTION 2. The Hawaii Revised Statutes is amended by adding a new chapter to title 13 to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:
"Chapter
WIRELESS BROADBAND AND COMMUNICATIONS
NETWORKS
§ -1 Applicability. This chapter shall apply only to activities of a communications service provider to deploy wireless facilities and to modified or replaced state or county solely-owned utility poles associated with wireless facilities.
§ -2 Definitions. As used in this chapter:
"Antenna" means communications equipment that transmits or receives electromagnetic radio frequency signals used in the provision of services using wireless facilities.
"Applicable codes" means uniform building, fire, electrical, plumbing, or mechanical codes adopted by a recognized national code organization or local amendments to those codes.
"Applicant" means any person who submits an application and is a communications service provider.
"Application" means a request submitted by an applicant to the State or county for a permit to collocate wireless facilities or to approve the installation or modification of a state or county solely-owned utility pole.
"Collocate" means to install, mount, maintain, modify, operate, or replace wireless facilities on or adjacent to a wireless support structure or utility pole. "Collocation" has a corresponding meaning.
"Communications service" means cable service, as defined in section 440G-3 or 47 United States Code section 522(6), as amended; information service, as defined in 47 United States Code section 153(24), as amended; telecommunications service, as defined in section 269-1 or 47 United States Code section 153(53), as amended; mobile service, as defined in 47 United States Code section 153(33), as amended; or wireless service other than mobile service.
"Communications service provider" means a cable operator, as defined in section 440G-3 or 47 United States Code section 522(5); a provider of information service, as defined in 47 United States Code section 153(24); a telecommunications carrier, as defined in section 269-1 or 47 United States Code section 153(51); or a wireless provider.
"Decorative pole" means a state or county pole that is specially designed and placed for aesthetic purposes and on which no appurtenances or attachments, other than a wireless facility attachment, specially designed informational and directional signage, or temporary holiday or special event attachments, have been placed or are permitted to be placed according to nondiscriminatory state or county rules or codes.
"Historic district" means a group of buildings, properties, or sites that are either listed in the National Register of Historic Places or as determined by the state historic preservation program in accordance with chapter 6E.
"Micro wireless facilities" means a wireless facility having dimensions either:
(1) No larger than twenty-four inches in height, fifteen inches in width, and twelve inches in depth; or
(2) Twenty-four inches in length, fifteen inches in width, and twelve inches in height.
"Right of way" means the area on, below, or above a public roadway, highway, street, sidewalk, alley, utility easement, or similar property.
"State
or county pole" means a utility pole solely-owned by the State or a
county, which may be managed or operated by, or on behalf of, the State of
Hawaii or a county in the State of Hawaii.
"Substantial modification" means a proposed modification or replacement to an existing utility pole or wireless support structure that will substantially change the physical dimensions of the utility pole or wireless support structure under the objective standard for substantial change adopted by the Federal Communications Commission pursuant to title 47 Code of Federal Regulations section 1.40001, or a proposed modification of the equipment compound boundaries in excess of the site dimensions specified in section III.B of title 47 Code of Federal Regulations part 1, appendix C.
"Technically feasible" means that by virtue of engineering or spectrum usage, the proposed placement for a wireless facility, or its design or site location can be implemented without a reduction in the functionality of the wireless facility.
"Utility pole" means a pole or similar structure that is or may be used in whole or in part by or for wireline communications, electric distribution, lighting, traffic control, signage, or a similar function, or for the collocation of wireless facilities. "Utility pole" shall not include wireless support structures.
"Wireless facility" means equipment at a fixed location that enables high-speed bandwidth data transmission between user equipment and a communications network, including wireless, wireline, and satellite devices and their auxiliary components, regardless of technological configuration, that meets one or both of the following criteria:
(1) Each communication service provider's radio transceiver and antenna could fit within an enclosure of no more than six cubic feet in volume; or
(2) All other equipment associated with the wireless facility, whether ground- or pole-mounted, is cumulatively no more than cubic feet in volume. The following types of associated ancillary equipment are not included in the calculation of equipment volume: electric meter, concealment elements, telecommunications demarcation box, grounding equipment, power transfer switch, cut-off switch, and vertical cable runs for the connection of power and other services.
"Wireless
facility" shall not include:
(1) The structure or improvements on, under, or within or adjacent to which the equipment is collocated;
(2) Wireline backhaul facilities; and
(3) Coaxial or fiber-optic cable between utility poles or communications facilities that are otherwise not immediately adjacent to and directly associated with a particular antenna.
"Wireless provider" means an individual, corporation, company, association, trust, or other entity or organization who:
(1) Provides services, including wireless broadband services, whether at a fixed location or mobile, to the public using wireless facilities; or
(2) Builds or installs wireless communication transmission equipment or wireless facilities, including an individual authorized to provide telecommunications service in the State.
"Wireless support structure" means a structure, such as a monopole, tower, either guyed or self-supporting building, or other existing or proposed structure designed to support or capable of supporting broadband or wireless facilities, other than a structure designed solely for the collocation of wireless facilities. "Wireless support structure" shall not include a utility pole.
"Wireline backhaul" means the transport of communications service or any other electronic communications by coaxial, fiber-optic cable, or any other wire. Wireline backhaul shall not include wire connecting the wireless facility to the backhaul.
§ -3 Zoning. Wireless facilities and associated modified or replaced utility poles subject to the height limits in section -4(c), shall be classified as permitted uses and not subject to zoning review or zoning approval if they are deployed:
(1) In the right of way in any zone; or
(2) Outside the right of way in property not zoned exclusively for conservation.
Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to modify existing permitting processes for the placement of wireline backhaul in the right of way.
§ -4 Use of the right of way for wireless facilities
and utility poles. (a) The State or county shall not enter into an
exclusive arrangement with any person for use of the right of way for the
construction, operation, marketing, or maintenance of wireless facilities.
(b) Subject to this section, the construction or modification of wireless facilities in the right of way shall be a permitted use not subject to zoning review or other discretionary approval; provided that such facilities shall be constructed and maintained so as not to obstruct the usual travel, public safety, or other factors set forth in section -5(9) on such right of way or obstruct the legal use of such right of way by utilities or authorized parties. Modified or replaced utility poles associated with a wireless facility that meet the requirements of this section are permitted uses subject to the permit process in section -5.
No additional discretionary permit shall be required to maintain, operate, modify, or replace wireless facilities and associated utility poles along, across, upon, and under the right of way. The grant of a permit for a wireless facility does not authorize the provision of any communications service or the installation, placement, maintenance, or operation of any communications facility, including a wireline backhaul facility, other than a wireless facility, in the right of way, and shall not otherwise be a general authorization to occupy and use the right of way.
In its discretion, the department of commerce and consumer affairs may require a wireless provider or communications service provider, or affiliate thereof, to obtain a cable franchise if the wireless provider or communications service provider, or affiliate thereof, furnishes video programming services directly to subscribers via, in whole or in part, any communications facility deployed in the right of way.
As used in this subsection, "video programming services" means the provision of video programming directly to subscribers, without regard to delivery technology, via communications facilities located in, over, above, or across the right of way. The term includes, but is not limited to, video programming delivered directly to subscribers via internet protocol technology or as cable service as defined in 47 United States Code section 522(6). The term does not include over-the-top or online video programming offerings accessible to internet users via the public internet.
(c) Each modified or replaced utility pole installed in the right of way for the collocation of wireless facilities shall not exceed the greater of:
(1) Ten feet in height above the tallest existing utility pole in place as of the effective date of Act , Session Laws of Hawaii 2018, located within five hundred feet of the modified pole in the same right of way; or
(2) Fifty feet above ground level.
New wireless facilities in the right of way shall not extend more than ten feet above an existing utility pole in place as of the effective date of Act , Session Laws of Hawaii 2018. Subject to this section and section -5, a communications service provider or wireless provider may modify, replace, and maintain a utility pole or wireless facility that exceeds these height limits along, across, upon, and under the right of way, subject to applicable zoning regulations.
(d) A communications service provider or wireless provider may replace a decorative pole, when necessary to collocate a wireless facility, if the replacement pole reasonably conforms to the design aesthetics of the decorative pole or poles being replaced.
(e)
Subject to section -5, and except for
facilities excluded from evaluation for effects on historic properties under title
47 Code of Federal Regulations section 1.1307(a)(4), a State or county may
require reasonable, technically feasible, non-discriminatory, and
technologically neutral design or concealment measures in a historic district. Any such design or concealment measures shall
not have the effect of prohibiting any provider's technology, nor shall any
such measures be considered a part of the wireless facility for purposes of the
size restrictions.
(f) The State or county shall be competitively
neutral in the exercise of its administration and regulation related to the
management of the right of way and with regard to other users of the right of way,
shall not impose any conditions that are unreasonable or discriminatory.
(g) The State or county may require a wireless provider
to repair all damage to the right of way directly caused by the activities of
the wireless provider in the right of way and to return the right of way to the
same or better condition before the damage pursuant to the competitively
neutral, reasonable requirements, and specifications of the State or county
within thirty working days. If the wireless
provider fails to make the repairs required by the State or county within thirty
working days after written notice, the State or county may complete those
repairs and charge the applicable party the reasonable, documented cost of the repairs.
§ -5 Permitting process in the right of way. The State or county may require an applicant to obtain one or more permits to collocate a wireless facility or install a modified or replaced utility pole associated with a wireless facility as provided in section -4; provided that the permits are of general applicability and do not apply exclusively to wireless facilities. The State or county shall receive permit applications and process and issue permits subject to the following requirements:
(1) The applicant shall provide a geographical description of the project area;
(2) The applicant shall provide a listing and description of the condition of utility poles, light standards, buildings, and wireless support structures included in the project for the installation, mounting, operation, and placement of wireless facilities, including an assessment of the identifying information, location, and ownership of the listed utility poles, light standards, buildings, and structures;
(3) The applicant shall provide a description of the equipment associated with the facilities to be installed in the project area, including radio transceivers, antennas, coaxial or fiber-optic cables, power supplies, and related equipment, and the size and weight of the equipment to be installed on each pole, building, or structure;
(4) The State or county shall not require the
placement of wireless facilities on any specific utility pole or category of
poles or require multiple antenna systems on a single utility pole;
(5) The State or county shall not limit the
placement of wireless facilities by minimum separation distances; provided that
the State or county may limit the number of wireless facilities placed on a
single utility pole;
(6) The State or county may require an applicant
to include an attestation that the wireless facilities will be operational for
use by a communications service provider within one year after the permit
issuance date; provided that the State or county and the applicant may agree to
extend this period if there is a delay caused by lack of commercial power or
communications transport facilities to the site;
(7) Within thirty working days of receiving an application,
the State or county shall notify the applicant in writing whether the
application is complete. If an application
is incomplete, the State or county shall specifically identify all missing
information in writing. The processing
deadline in paragraph (8) shall be suspended from the date the State or county
sends the notice of incompleteness until the date the applicant provides the
missing information;
(8) An application shall be processed on a
nondiscriminatory basis and deemed approved if the State or county fails to
approve or deny the application within ninety working days of receipt of the application. The processing deadline may be tolled in
accordance with paragraph (7) or by agreement of the applicant and the State or
county;
(9) The State or county may deny a proposed collocation of a wireless facility or the modification of a modified or replaced utility pole that meets the requirements in section -4(c) only if the proposed collocation:
(A) Materially interferes with the safe operation of public safety equipment;
(B) Materially
interferes with sight lines or clear zones for transportation or pedestrians;
(C) Materially interferes with compliance with the
Americans with Disabilities Act or similar federal or state standards regarding
pedestrian access or movement;
(D) Fails to comply with reasonable and
nondiscriminatory spacing requirements of general application adopted by
ordinance that concern the location of ground-mounted equipment. Such spacing requirements shall not prevent a
wireless facility from serving any location;
(E) Fails to comply with building or other
applicable codes;
(F) Could cause the installation of the facilities
on the poles, buildings, and structures to be performed in a manner that does
not protect public health and safety and safe travel in the public rights of
way;
(G) Could cause the utility poles and light
standards to be unable to bear the additional weight of the facilities and the facilities
could pose a hazard or obstruction to the public;
(H) Could allow the project equipment and
broadband and wireless facilities to interfere with government systems for
public safety communication operations, law enforcement, or emergency services;
(I) Causes the load carrying capacity of the
State- or county-owned utility pole, building, or structure, to exceed seventy
per cent as determined by the appropriate State or county agency; or
(J) Causes degradation of the utility pole's wind
rating.
(10) The State or county shall document the basis for a denial, including the specific provisions of law on which the denial was based, and send the documentation to the applicant on or before the day the State or county denies an application. The applicant may address the deficiencies identified by the State or county and resubmit the application within thirty working days of the denial without paying an additional application fee. The State or county shall approve or deny the revised application within ninety working days. Any subsequent review shall be limited to the deficiencies cited in the original documentation noting the basis for denial;
(11) An applicant seeking to collocate multiple wireless facilities within a two-mile radius may, at the applicant's discretion, file a consolidated application and receive a single permit for the collocation of no more than twenty-five wireless facilities; provided that the denial of the collocation of one or more wireless facilities in a consolidated application shall not delay processing of any other wireless facilities in the same batch;
(12) Installation
or collocation for which a permit is granted pursuant to this section shall be
completed within one year of the permit issuance date; provided that the State
or county and the applicant may agree to extend this period or the period may
be tolled if a delay is caused by lack of commercial power or communications
transport facilities to the site.
Approval of an application authorizes the applicant to:
(A) Undertake the installation or collocation; and
(B) Subject to applicable relocation requirements and the applicant's right to terminate at any time, operate and maintain the wireless facilities and any associated utility pole covered by the permit for a period of not less than twenty years, which shall be renewed for equivalent durations so long as the facilities and pole are in compliance with the criteria set forth in this subsection; provided that the State or a county may remove a utility pole if it decides to do so;
(13) The
State or county shall not require an application or permit, or charge any rate,
fees, or compensation for:
(A) Routine maintenance;
(B) Replacement of wireless facilities with wireless facilities that are substantially similar or the same size and weight or smaller; or
(C) Installation, placement, maintenance, operation, or replacement of micro wireless facilities on utility poles or that are strung on cables between existing utility poles, in compliance with the national electrical safety code. The State or county may, however, require a permit to work within the right of way for such activities, if applicable. Any such permits shall be subject to the requirements provided in section -4 and this section; and
(14) State and county poles, related structures, sites, and facilities that support public safety, law enforcement, and emergency communications shall be excluded from these public access provisions.
§ -6
Access to state or county utility poles
within the right of way. (a) A person owning, managing,
or controlling state or county utility poles in the right of way shall not
enter into an exclusive arrangement with any person for the right to attach to
such poles.
(b) The rates to collocate on state or county poles
shall be nondiscriminatory regardless of the communications services provided
by the collocating person.
(c) The rates, fees, and terms and conditions for
the make-ready work to collocate on the state or county pole shall be
nondiscriminatory, competitively neutral, and commercially reasonable.
(d) The State or county shall provide a good
faith estimate for any make-ready work to be performed by a wireless provider or
communications service provider and that is necessary to enable the pole to
support the requested collocation by a wireless provider or communications
service provider, including pole replacement if necessary, within one hundred
and twenty working days after receipt of a complete application. Make-ready work, including any pole replacement,
shall be completed by the wireless provider or communications service provider within
one hundred and twenty working days of written acceptance of the good faith
estimate by the applicant.
(e) The person owning, managing, or controlling
the state or county pole shall not require more make-ready work than required
to meet applicable codes or industry standards.
Fees for make-ready work shall not include costs related to pre-existing
or prior damage or noncompliance. Fees
for make-ready work including any pole replacement shall not exceed actual
costs or the amount charged to other communications service providers for
similar work and shall not include any consultant fees or expenses.
(f) The provisions of this section shall
apply to activities of the wireless provider and communications service
provider within the right of way.
§ -7 Public notice. Prior to collocating a wireless facility or installing a modified or replaced utility pole associated with a wireless facility, a wireless provider shall provide notice to the surrounding community of such collocation or installation.
§ -8
Local authority. (a) Subject to this chapter and applicable
federal law, the State or county may continue to exercise zoning, land use,
planning, and permitting within its jurisdictional boundaries, including with
respect to utility poles; except that neither the State nor a county shall have
or exercise any jurisdiction or authority over the design, engineering,
construction, installation, or operation of any wireless facility located in an
interior structure or upon the site of any campus, stadium, or athletic
facility not owned or controlled by the State or county, other than to comply
with applicable codes. Nothing in this
chapter authorizes the State or a county to require wireless facility
deployment or to regulate broadband services.
(b) Except as provided in this chapter with respect to the wireless facilities subject to the permit, rate, and fee requirements established herein or specifically required pursuant to chapter 440G or federal law, the State and each county shall not adopt or enforce any regulations or requirements or charge additional rates or fees on the placement or operation of communications facilities in the right of way where the entity is already authorized by a franchise or authorization other than that granted in this chapter to operate throughout the right of way, and the State and each county shall not regulate or charge fees for the provision of communications services, unless expressly authorized by applicable law.
§ -9
Implementation. No later than
July 1, 2019, the State and each county shall adopt or modify laws, regulations,
and agreements for lands within its jurisdiction that make available rates,
fees, and other terms that comply with this chapter to wireless providers. In the absence of laws, regulations, and
agreements that fully comply with this chapter and until such laws,
regulations, or agreements are adopted, wireless providers may install and
operate wireless facilities and utility poles pursuant to this chapter.
§ -10 Indemnification, insurance, and bonding. (a) The State or county may adopt indemnification, insurance, and bonding requirements related to wireless facility permits subject to this section.
(b)
The State or county may require a wireless provider to indemnify
and hold the State or county and its officers and employees harmless against any
claims, lawsuits, judgments, costs, liens, losses, expenses, or fees resulting
from the wireless provider's actions in installing, repairing, or maintaining
any wireless facilities or utility poles.
(c) The State or county may require a wireless provider
to have in effect insurance coverage consistent with this subsection and
requirements for other right of way users, if such requirements are reasonable
and nondiscriminatory. If
insurance coverage is required, the State or county may require a wireless provider
to furnish proof of insurance prior to the effective date of any permit issued
for a wireless facility.
(d) The State or county may adopt bonding requirements for wireless facilities if the State or county imposes similar requirements in connection with permits issued for other right of way users.
The purpose of such bonds shall be to:
(1) Provide for the removal of abandoned or improperly maintained wireless facilities, including those for which the State or county determines a need for the wireless facilities to be removed to protect public health, safety, or welfare;
(2) Restoration
of the right of way; or
(3) Recoupment of past due rates or fees that have
not been paid by a wireless provider in over twelve months; provided that the
wireless provider has received reasonable notice from the State or county of
the non-compliance listed and an opportunity to cure the delinquency of the rates
or fees.
Bonding requirements shall not exceed $200 per wireless facility. For wireless providers with multiple wireless facilities within the jurisdiction of a single state or county, the total bond amount across all facilities shall not exceed $ , which amount may be combined into one bond instrument."
SECTION 3. Section 205-2, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (c) to read as follows:
"(c) Rural districts shall
include activities or uses as characterized by low density residential lots of
not more than one dwelling house per one-half acre, except as provided by
county ordinance pursuant to section 46-4(c), in areas where
"city-like" concentration of people, structures, streets, and urban
level of services are absent, and where small farms are intermixed with low
density residential lots except that within a subdivision, as defined in
section 484-1, the commission for good cause may allow one lot of less than
one-half acre, but not less than
eighteen thousand five hundred square feet, or an equivalent residential density, within a rural subdivision and
permit the construction of one dwelling on such lot; provided that all other
dwellings in the subdivision shall have a minimum lot size of one-half acre or
21,780 square feet. Such petition for
variance may be processed under the special permit procedure. These districts may include contiguous areas
which are not suited to low density residential lots or small farms by reason
of topography, soils, and other related characteristics. Rural districts shall also include golf
courses, golf driving ranges, and golf-related facilities.
In addition to the uses listed in this
subsection, rural districts shall include geothermal resources exploration and
geothermal resources development, as defined under section 182‑1, and construction
and operation of wireless communication antenna, as defined under section
205-4.5(a)(18), as permissible uses."
SECTION 4. Section 205-4.5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
"(a) Within the agricultural district, all lands with soil classified by the land study bureau's detailed land classification as overall (master) productivity rating class A or B and for solar energy facilities, class B or C, shall be restricted to the following permitted uses:
(1) Cultivation of crops, including crops for bioenergy, flowers,
vegetables, foliage, fruits, forage, and timber;
(2) Game and fish propagation;
(3) Raising of livestock, including poultry, bees, fish, or other
animal or aquatic life that are propagated for economic or personal use;
(4) Farm dwellings, employee housing, farm buildings, or activities or
uses related to farming and animal husbandry.
"Farm dwelling", as used in this paragraph, means a
single-family dwelling located on and used in connection with a farm, including
clusters of single-family farm dwellings permitted within agricultural parks
developed by the State, or where agricultural activity provides income to the family occupying the
dwelling;
(5) Public institutions and buildings that are necessary for
agricultural practices;
(6) Public and private open area types of recreational uses, including
day camps, picnic grounds, parks, and riding stables, but not including
dragstrips, airports, drive-in theaters, golf courses, golf driving ranges,
country clubs, and overnight camps;
(7) Public, private, and quasi-public utility lines and roadways, transformer stations, communications
equipment buildings, solid waste transfer stations, major water storage tanks,
and appurtenant small buildings such as booster pumping stations, but not
including offices or yards for equipment, material, vehicle storage, repair or
maintenance, treatment plants, corporation yards, or other similar structures;
(8) Retention, restoration, rehabilitation, or improvement of buildings
or sites of historic or scenic interest;
(9) Agricultural-based commercial operations as described in section
205-2(d)(15);
(10) Buildings and uses, including mills, storage, and processing facilities, maintenance
facilities, photovoltaic,
biogas, and other small-scale renewable energy systems producing energy solely for use in the agricultural activities
of the fee or leasehold owner of the property, and vehicle and equipment
storage areas that are normally considered directly accessory to the
above-mentioned uses and are permitted under section 205-2(d);
(11) Agricultural parks;
(12) Plantation community subdivisions, which as used in this chapter
means an established subdivision or cluster of employee housing, community
buildings, and agricultural support buildings on land currently or formerly
owned, leased, or operated by a sugar or pineapple plantation; provided that
the existing structures may be used or rehabilitated for use, and new employee
housing and agricultural support buildings may be allowed on land within the
subdivision as follows:
(A) The employee housing is occupied by employees
or former employees of the plantation who have a property interest in the land;
(B) The employee housing units not owned by their
occupants shall be rented or leased at affordable rates for agricultural
workers; or
(C) The agricultural support buildings shall be
rented or leased to agricultural business operators or agricultural support
services;
(13) Agricultural tourism conducted on a working farm, or a farming operation as defined in section 165-2, for the enjoyment, education, or involvement of visitors; provided that the agricultural tourism activity is accessory and secondary to the principal agricultural use and does not interfere with surrounding farm operations; and provided further that this paragraph shall apply only to a county that has adopted ordinances regulating agricultural tourism under section 205-5;
(14) Agricultural
tourism activities, including overnight accommodations of twenty-one
days or less, for any one stay within a county; provided that this paragraph shall apply only to a
county that includes at least three islands and has adopted ordinances
regulating agricultural tourism activities pursuant to section 205-5; provided
further that the agricultural tourism activities coexist with a bona fide
agricultural activity. For the purposes
of this paragraph, "bona fide agricultural activity" means a farming
operation as defined in section 165-2;
(15) Wind
energy facilities, including the appurtenances associated with the production
and transmission of wind generated energy; provided that the wind energy
facilities and appurtenances are compatible with agriculture uses and cause
minimal adverse impact on agricultural land;
(16) Biofuel processing facilities, including the appurtenances associated with the production and refining of biofuels that is normally considered directly accessory and secondary to the growing of the energy feedstock; provided that biofuel processing facilities and appurtenances do not adversely impact agricultural land and other agricultural uses in the vicinity.
For the purposes of this paragraph:
"Appurtenances" means operational infrastructure of the appropriate type and scale for economic commercial storage and distribution, and other similar handling of feedstock, fuels, and other products of biofuel processing facilities.
"Biofuel processing
facility" means a facility that produces liquid or gaseous fuels from
organic sources such as biomass crops, agricultural residues, and oil crops, including
palm, canola, soybean, and waste cooking oils; grease; food wastes; and animal
residues and wastes that can be used to generate energy;
(17) Agricultural-energy facilities, including appurtenances necessary
for an agricultural-energy enterprise; provided that the primary activity of
the agricultural-energy enterprise is agricultural activity. To be considered the primary activity of an
agricultural-energy enterprise, the total acreage devoted to agricultural
activity shall be not less than ninety per cent of the total acreage of the
agricultural-energy enterprise. The
agricultural-energy facility shall be limited to lands owned, leased, licensed,
or operated by the entity conducting the agricultural activity.
As used in this
paragraph:
"Agricultural
activity" means any activity described in paragraphs (1) to (3) of this
subsection.
"Agricultural-energy
enterprise" means an enterprise that integrally incorporates an
agricultural activity with an agricultural-energy facility.
"Agricultural-energy
facility" means a facility that generates, stores, or distributes
renewable energy as defined in section 269-91 or renewable fuel including
electrical or thermal energy or liquid or gaseous fuels from products of
agricultural activities from agricultural lands located in the State.
"Appurtenances"
means operational infrastructure of the appropriate type and scale for the
economic commercial generation, storage, distribution, and other similar
handling of energy, including equipment, feedstock, fuels, and other products
of agricultural-energy facilities;
(18) Construction and operation of wireless communication antennas[;],
including wireless facilities; provided that, for the purposes of this
paragraph, "wireless communication antenna" means communications
equipment that is either freestanding or placed upon or attached to an already
existing structure and that transmits and receives electromagnetic radio
signals used in the provision of all types of wireless communications services;
provided further that "wireless
facilities" shall have the same meaning as in section
-2; provided
further that nothing in this paragraph shall be construed to permit the
construction of any new structure that is not deemed a permitted use under this
subsection;
(19) Agricultural
education programs conducted on a farming operation as defined in section
165-2, for the education and participation of the general public; provided that
the agricultural education programs are accessory and secondary to the
principal agricultural use of the parcels or lots on which the agricultural
education programs are to occur and do not interfere with surrounding farm
operations. For the purposes of this
paragraph, "agricultural education programs" means activities or
events designed to promote knowledge and understanding of agricultural
activities and practices conducted on a farming operation as defined in section
165-2;
(20) Solar energy facilities that do not occupy more than ten per cent of the acreage of the parcel, or twenty acres of land, whichever is lesser or for which a special use permit is granted pursuant to section 205-6; provided that this use shall not be permitted on lands with soil classified by the land study bureau's detailed land classification as overall (master) productivity rating class A unless the solar energy facilities are:
(A) Located on a paved or unpaved road in existence as of December 31, 2013, and the parcel of land upon which the paved or unpaved road is located has a valid county agriculture tax dedication status or a valid agricultural conservation easement;
(B) Placed in a manner that still allows vehicular traffic to use the road; and
(C) Granted a special use permit by the commission pursuant to section 205-6;
(21) Solar energy facilities on lands with soil classified by the land study bureau's detailed land classification as overall (master) productivity rating B or C for which a special use permit is granted pursuant to section 205-6; provided that:
(A) The area occupied by the solar energy facilities is also made available for compatible agricultural activities at a lease rate that is at least fifty per cent below the fair market rent for comparable properties;
(B) Proof of financial security to decommission the facility is provided to the satisfaction of the appropriate county planning commission prior to date of commencement of commercial generation; and
(C) Solar energy facilities shall be decommissioned at the owner's expense according to the following requirements:
(i) Removal of all equipment related to the solar energy facility within twelve months of the conclusion of operation or useful life; and
(ii) Restoration of the disturbed earth to substantially the same physical condition as existed prior to the development of the solar energy facility.
For the purposes of this paragraph, "agricultural activities" means the activities described in paragraphs (1) to (3);
(22) Geothermal
resources exploration and geothermal resources development, as defined under
section 182‑1; or
(23) Hydroelectric facilities, including the appurtenances associated with the production and transmission of hydroelectric energy, subject to section 205-2; provided that the hydroelectric facilities and their appurtenances:
(A) Shall consist of a small hydropower facility as defined by the United States Department of Energy, including:
(i) Impoundment facilities using a dam to store water in a reservoir;
(ii) A diversion or run-of-river facility that channels a portion of a river through a canal or channel; and
(iii) Pumped storage facilities that store energy by pumping water uphill to a reservoir at higher elevation from a reservoir at a lower elevation to be released to turn a turbine to generate electricity;
(B) Comply with the state water code, chapter 174C;
(C) Shall, if over
five hundred kilowatts in hydroelectric generating capacity, have the approval
of the commission on water resource management, including a new instream flow
standard established for any new hydroelectric facility; and
(D) Do not impact or impede the use of agricultural land or the availability of surface or ground water for all uses on all parcels that are served by the ground water sources or streams for which hydroelectric facilities are considered."
SECTION 5. Section 2 of Act 151, Session Laws of Hawaii 2011, as amended by section 3 of Act 264, Session Laws of Hawaii 2013, as amended by Act 193, Session Laws of Hawaii 2016, is repealed.
"[SECTION
2. Beginning January 1, 2012, actions
relating to the installation, improvement, construction, or development of
infrastructure relating to broadband service or broadband technology, including
the interconnection of telecommunications cables, shall be exempt from county
permitting requirements, state permitting and approval requirements, which
includes the requirements of chapters 171, 205A, and 343, Hawaii Revised
Statutes, and public utilities commission rules under Hawaii Administrative
Rules, chapter 6‑73, that require existing installations to comply with new
pole replacement standards at the time of any construction or alteration to the
equipment or installation, except to the extent that such permitting or
approval is required by federal law or is necessary to protect eligibility for
federal funding, services, or other assistance; provided that the installation,
improvement, construction, or development of infrastructure shall:
(1) Be
directly related to the improvement of existing telecommunications cables or
the installation of new telecommunications cables:
(A) On
existing or replacement utility poles and conduits; and
(B) Using
existing infrastructure and facilities;
(2) Take
place within existing rights-of-way or public utility easements or use existing
telecommunications infrastructure; and
(3) Make
no significant changes to the existing public rights-of-way, public utility
easements, or telecommunications infrastructure.
An
applicant shall comply with all applicable safety and engineering requirements
relating to the installation, improvement, construction, or development of
infrastructure relating to broadband service.
A
person or entity taking any action under this section shall, at least thirty
calendar days before the action is taken, provide notice to the director of
commerce and consumer affairs by electronic posting in the form and on the site
designated by the director for such posting on the designated central State of
Hawaii Internet website; provided that notice need not be given by a public
utility or government entity for an action relating to the installation,
improvement, construction, or development of infrastructure relating to
broadband service or broadband technology where the action taken is to provide
access as the owner of the existing rights-of-way, utility easements, or telecommunications
infrastructure.]"
SECTION 6. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.
SECTION 7. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 3000; provided that:
(1) The amendment made to section 205-4.5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, by this Act shall not be repealed when section 205-4.5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is reenacted on June 30, 2019, by section 3 of Act 52, Session Laws of Hawaii 2014;
(2) This Act shall be repealed on June 30, 2020;
(3) On June 30, 2020, section 205-2, Hawaii Revised Statutes, shall be reenacted in the form in which it read on the day before the effective date of this Act;
(4) On June 30, 2020, section 205-4.5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, shall be reenacted in the form in which it read on the day before the effective date of Act 52, Session Laws of Hawaii 2014; and
(5) This Act shall apply to permit applications filed with the State or county after December 31, 2018.
Report Title:
Wireless Facilities; Economic Development; State or County Solely-owned Utility Poles; Permits
Description:
Establishes a process to upgrade and support next-generation wireless broadband infrastructure throughout the State. Establishes a permitting, application, review, and approval process for wireless providers or communications services providers to install wireless facilities on state or county solely-owned utility poles, or install associated utility poles, in the right of way. Applies to permit applications filed with the State or county after December 31, 2018. (SB2704 HD1)
The summary description
of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is
not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.