Oklahoma Code § 11-36-503

Title 11. Cities And Towns: Rights and limitations on authorities and wireless
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providers.
A.  The provisions of this section shall only apply to the
collocation of small wireless facilities by a wireless provider in
the right-of-way and the deployment of utility poles to support
small wireless facilities by a wireless provider in the right-of-
way.
B.  An authority may not enter into an exclusive arrangement
with any person for use of the right-of-way for the collocation of
small wireless facilities or the installation, operation, marketing,
modification, maintenance or replacement of utility poles.
C.  An authority may only charge a wireless provider a rate or
fee for the use of the right-of-way with respect to the collocation
of small wireless facilities or the installation, maintenance,
modification, operation or replacement of a utility pole in the
right-of-way, if the authority charges nonpublic entities for use of
the right-of-way.  Notwithstanding the foregoing, an authority is
permitted, on a nondiscriminatory basis, to refrain from charging
any rate to a wireless provider for the use of the right-of-way.
The rate for use of the right-of-way is provided in Section 6 of
this act.
D.  Subject to the provisions of this section and approval of an
application pursuant to Section 4 of this act, a wireless provider
shall have the right, as a permitted use not subject to zoning
review or approval, to collocate small wireless facilities and
install, maintain, modify, operate and replace utility poles along,
across, upon and under the right-of-way.  Such structures and
facilities shall be so installed and maintained as not to obstruct
or hinder the usual travel or public safety on such right-of-way or
obstruct the legal use of such right-of-way by other occupants of
the right-of-way, including public utilities, or violate right-of-
way regulations of general application that are consistent with this
act.

E.  Each new or modified utility pole installed in the right-of-
way shall not exceed the greater of:
1.  Ten (10) feet in height above the tallest existing utility
pole in place as of the effective date of this act located within
five hundred (500) feet of the new pole in the same right-of-way; or
2.  Fifty (50) feet above ground level.
New small wireless facilities in the right-of-way may not extend
more than ten (10) feet above an existing utility pole in place as
of the effective date of this act or, for small wireless facilities
on a new utility pole, above the height permitted for a new utility
pole under this section.
F.  A wireless provider shall have the right to collocate a
small wireless facility and install, maintain, modify, operate and
replace a utility pole that exceeds the height limits in subsection
E of this section along, across, upon and under the right-of-way,
subject to applicable zoning or other land-use regulations.
G.  An authority may adopt written guidelines establishing
reasonable and objective stealth or concealment criteria for small
wireless facilities in designated areas, reasonable and objective
design criteria for small wireless facilities to be collocated on
decorative poles and reasonable and objective design criteria for
utility poles deployed in areas with decorative poles.  Such
guidelines may be adopted by any appropriate means, including
without limitation by inclusion in the authority's zoning code, but
such inclusion shall not subject small wireless facilities and
utility poles classified as permitted uses in subsection D of this
section to zoning review.  Such guidelines may be adopted only if
they apply on a nondiscriminatory basis to all other occupants of
the right-of-way, including the authority.  A wireless provider that
seeks to collocate small wireless facilities on a decorative pole
shall comply with Section 4 of this act.  A wireless provider that
is required to replace a decorative pole at its expense in
compliance with Section 5 of this act shall conform the new
decorative pole to the design aesthetics and material of the
decorative pole(s) being replaced.
H.  Wireless providers shall comply with reasonable and
nondiscriminatory requirements that prohibit communications service
providers from installing utility poles or other structures in the
right-of-way in an area designated solely for underground or buried
cable and utility facilities where:
1.  The authority has required all cable and utility facilities
other than authority poles and attachments to be placed underground
(i) by a date certain before the application is submitted or (ii) by
a date certain within two (2) years after the application is
submitted, if relocation of facilities has commenced;
2.  The authority does not prohibit the replacement of authority
poles in the designated area; and

3.  The authority permits wireless providers to seek a waiver of
the undergrounding requirements for the placement of a new utility
pole to support small wireless facilities, which waivers shall be
addressed in a nondiscriminatory manner.
I.  Subject to Section 4 of this act and subsection D of this
section, and except for facilities excluded from evaluation for
effects on historic properties under 47 C.F.R., Section 1.1307(a)(4)
of the FCC rules, an authority may require reasonable, technically
feasible, nondiscriminatory and technologically neutral design or
concealment measures in a historic district.  Any such design or
concealment measures may not have the effect of prohibiting any
provider's technology, nor may any such measures be considered a
part of the small wireless facility for purposes of the size
restrictions in the definition of small wireless facility.
J.  The authority, in the exercise of its administration and
regulation related to the management of the right-of-way, must be
competitively neutral with regard to other users of the right-of-
way, including that terms may not be unreasonable or discriminatory
and may not violate any applicable law.
K.  The authority 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 its functional equivalence before the damage pursuant to the
competitively neutral, reasonable requirements and specifications of
the authority.  If the wireless provider fails to make the repairs
required by the authority within a reasonable time after written
notice, the authority may effect those repairs and charge the
applicable party the reasonable, documented cost of such repairs.  A
wireless provider shall be required to comply with right-of-way and
vegetation management practices adopted by the authority that apply
to all occupants of the right-of-way.
L.  Nothing in this act precludes an authority from adopting
reasonable and nondiscriminatory requirements with respect to the
removal of abandoned small wireless facilities.  A small wireless
facility that is not operated for a continuous period of twelve (12)
months shall be considered abandoned, and the owner of the facility
must remove the small wireless facility within ninety (90) days
after receipt of written notice from the authority notifying the
owner of the abandonment.  The notice shall be sent by certified or
registered mail, return receipt requested, by the authority to the
owner at the last-known address of the owner.  If the owner neither
provides the authority written notice that the small wireless
facility has not been out of operation for a continuous period of
twelve (12) months nor removes the small wireless facility within
the ninety-day period, the authority may remove the small wireless
facility, take ownership of the small wireless facility and assess
the cost of removal to the owner.

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