Telecommunications Law
Cellular Antennas on
Special District Property:
The Opportunity and the Risk
Gail A. Karish
Matthew K. Schettenhelm
Best Best & Krieger LLP
September 17, 2013

Telecommunications Law
Do you have any obligation to license
your property to cell-phone companies?

Telecommunications Law
No.

Telecommunications Law
(Or, you shouldn’t.*)
*FCC rulemaking?

Telecommunications Law
Do you “regulate” cell tower
placements?

Telecommunications Law
No.

Telecommunications Law
You are a property owner.

Telecommunications Law
It is the company’s obligation to ensure
that it has all regulatory approvals.

Telecommunications Law
This talk will have two parts.

Telecommunications Law
(1) regulatory framework

Telecommunications Law
(2) how you protect yourself as a
property owner

Telecommunications Law
What regulations apply here?

Telecommunications Law
Typically, local zoning approval

Telecommunications Law
(May be easier to get zoning approval
on special-district property than
elsewhere)

Telecommunications Law
47 U.S.C. § 332(c)(7)

Telecommunications Law
Generally preserves local zoning
authority, subject to five limitations

Telecommunications Law
1. A State or local government may not
“prohibit” the provision of service.

Telecommunications Law
2. It may not unreasonably discriminate
among providers.

Telecommunications Law
3. Any decision to deny must be in
writing and supported by “substantial
evidence.”

Telecommunications Law
4. A local government must act within a
“reasonable period of time” in light of
the nature of the application.

Telecommunications Law
The FCC reasonably imposed
90 and 150-day “shot-clocks”

Telecommunications Law
The Supreme Court upheld the FCC

Telecommunications Law
City of Arlington v. FCC,
No. 11-1545

Telecommunications Law
5. The local government must not
regulate based on the effects of
radiofrequency emissions

Telecommunications Law
47 U.S.C. § 1455

Telecommunications Law
A State or local government “may not
deny, and shall approve, any eligible
facilities request” for a modification of
an existing wireless tower or base
station that does not substantially
change the physically dimensions of
such tower or base station.

Telecommunications Law
“Eligible facilities request” is any
request to modify an existing tower or
base station that involves:
“(A) collocation of new transmission
equipment; (B) removal of transmission
equipment; or (C) replacement of
transmission equipment.”

Telecommunications Law
Congress left all the other key terms
undefined

Telecommunications Law
&

Telecommunications Law
Didn’t clarify if it intended to reach
proprietary, or only regulatory, action

Telecommunications Law
In January, FCC issued non-binding
“guidance”

Telecommunications Law
• Defines “substantially change” through
criteria developed in a different context
(historic preservation).
• no “substantial change” if an addition
extends a facility less than 20 feet in any
direction.

Telecommunications Law
 Defines “substantially change” through criteria
developed in a different context (historic
preservation).
• For example, no “substantial change” if an addition
extends a facility less than 20 feet in any direction.

 Offers broad definition of “base station” that
could make statute apply to many facilities.

Telecommunications Law
Historic Site – Post Guidance?
Illustration showing potential impact of co-location of an additional approximately 20’-high pole mounted antenna array.

Telecommunications Law
Stealth Site –
Now
100’ monopole disguised as a flagpole constructed to
conceal six panel antennas within its exterior. Located
on Brightseat Road alongside I-95 in Prince George’s
County, Maryland.

Telecommunications Law
Stealth
Site – Post
Guidance?
Illustration shows the potential impact of an
approximately 20’- high extension to support a colocation of antennas in a typical triangular platform
array (partially shown at top of frame) and smaller colocation in a flush-mount attachment
configuration atop the existing monopole.

Telecommunications Law
Rooftop Stealth Site – Now
Two-story office building located on Layhill Road at Bonifant Road in Montgomery County with antennas from
three carriers permitted by Special Exception and either concealed within the faux screening atop the penthouse
on the roof, or painted to match the exterior of the screening or brick walls.

Telecommunications Law
Rooftop Stealth Site – Post Guidance?
Illustration of a tower-like structure constructed to support co-location antennas approximately 20’ above existing
antennas.

Telecommunications Law
We expect the FCC to launch a
rulemaking, perhaps within the month

Telecommunications Law
Educating the FCC could be important

Telecommunications Law
Part II:
How should you structure the deal?

Telecommunications Law
10 points
1. Control the drafting process
2. Establish the structure (lease/license)
3. Define what you are granting
4. Establish the term
5. Set the rent
6. Address subletting and assignment
7. Forbid interference
8. Clarify removal responsibilities
9. Address termination
10.Include standard terms
Telecommunications Law
(1) Control the drafting process

Telecommunications Law
Company’s form agreements likely will
be highly slanted in their favor

Telecommunications Law
Consider developing your own

Telecommunications Law
(2) What are you granting the company?

Telecommunications Law
Usually ok to structure
as a license or a lease

Telecommunications Law
(3) What access are you granting?

Telecommunications Law
Define specifically what facilities may
be placed, and where

Telecommunications Law
Do not freely allow “improvements”:
require specific plans, subject to your
approval.

Telecommunications Law
Avoid: “approval will not be
unreasonably withheld, delayed, or
conditioned”

Telecommunications Law
If you allow replacement of existing
facilities, clarify that new equipment
cannot differ in size, impact, aesthetics,
etc.

Telecommunications Law
Address how the company may access
its facilities – and when it will do so . . .

Telecommunications Law
May the provider use common areas?
Must it obtain supervised access?
Must it provide advanced notice?
May it use your access roads or obtain
its own?
Are there other security risks that need
to be addressed?
Telecommunications Law
Address how the provider will obtain
and use electricity at the site

Telecommunications Law
If you have aesthetic concerns,
address them directly

Telecommunications Law
(4) What is the term?

Telecommunications Law
Typically structured as consecutive
series of 5-year terms,
spanning 20 or 30 years total

Telecommunications Law
Avoid “options to lease” particular sites,
which may prevent you from recovering
full fees for a particular location

Telecommunications Law
Avoid long delivery or construction
periods pre-payment; begin payments
immediately

Telecommunications Law
If provider requests a “due diligence”
period, don’t give this time away for
free – and ensure that provider
indemnifies you.

Telecommunications Law
(5) What should you charge in rent?

Telecommunications Law
Two elements:

Telecommunications Law
(1) Base rent

Telecommunications Law
(2) Collocation fees

Telecommunications Law
Base rent for tower typically between
$2,000 - $5,000/month

Telecommunications Law
Companies often offer low annual
escalators

Telecommunications Law
Can collect collocation fees from initial
licensee or directly from later
subtenants

Telecommunications Law
Address late fees (interest)
and hold-over fees
(100%-200% of then-current rent)

Telecommunications Law
(6) Subletting and Assignment

Telecommunications Law
Do not permit subletting/collocation
without your permission

Telecommunications Law
• Have licensee waive rights under Civil
Code §§ 1995.260, 1995.270
• 47 U.S.C. § 1455 should not affect
contractual restrictions*

Telecommunications Law
(7) Interference

Telecommunications Law
Ensure that tenant cannot interfere with
your operations – or those of any
existing tenants.

Telecommunications Law
Burden should be on newcomers

Telecommunications Law
Be sure that it is not on you

Telecommunications Law
(8) Removal

Telecommunications Law
May depend on type of facility

Telecommunications Law
In some cases, you might assume
ownership.

Telecommunications Law
In others, licensee should
bear the duty to remove, at its cost.

Telecommunications Law
(9) Termination

Telecommunications Law
Establish events of default justifying
termination:

Telecommunications Law
Non-payment

Telecommunications Law
Habitual late payment

Telecommunications Law
Violation of any term, if not cured

Telecommunications Law
Bankruptcy

Telecommunications Law
Carefully define when the provider can
terminate

Telecommunications Law
Either prohibit volitional terminations or
requirement payment
(e.g. rent for remainder of term or 1224 months of rent)

Telecommunications Law
(10) Standard terms

Telecommunications Law
Insurance: check with risk-assessment
Typical: general liability, auto liability,
employer’s liability, all-risk property,
and workers’ compensation

Telecommunications Law
Hazardous substances:
strictly prohibit

Telecommunications Law
Require indemnification

Telecommunications Law
No relocation assistance

Telecommunications Law
What to do after you contract?

Telecommunications Law
Monitor compliance, and . . .

Telecommunications Law
. . . after you have a great deal . . .

Telecommunications Law
don’t change it.

Telecommunications Law
Be wary of offers:
• To purchase lease/license rights
• To extend agreements
• To alter terms

Telecommunications Law
Telecommunications Law
Thank you
Gail A. Karish
gail.karish@bbklaw.com
Best Best & Krieger LLP
Ontario, CA
Phone: (202) 785-0600

Telecommunications Law

Matthew K. Schettenhelm
matthew.schettenhelm@bbklaw.com
Best Best & Krieger LLP
Washington, DC
Phone: (202) 785-0600

Cellular Antennas on Special District Property: The Opportunity and the Risk