CA Alarm Company Operator Licensingination
1. Q: What is the primary law governing alarm companies in California?
A: The Alarm Company Act, found in Division 3, Chapter 11.6 of the Business
and Professions Code, beginning with Section 7590.
2. Q: Who administers and enforces the Alarm Company Act? A: The
Bureau of Security and Investigative Services (BSIS), under the Department of
Consumer Affairs.
3. Q: What is an "alarm company" under California law? A: Any person
engaged in the business of installing, maintaining, altering, or servicing alarm
systems, or responding to alarm system signals.
4. Q: What is an "alarm company operator"? A: An individual qualified and
licensed by the state to manage an alarm company's operations.
5. Q: What is required to operate an alarm company in California? A: A
valid alarm company operator license issued by the Bureau of Security and
Investigative Services.
6. Q: Can a corporation operate an alarm company? A: Yes, but it must be
represented by a qualified manager who holds an alarm company operator
license.
7. Q: What is the minimum age requirement to obtain an alarm company
operator license? A: An applicant must be at least 18 years of age.
8. Q: Are there citizenship requirements for licensure? A: No specific
citizenship requirement, but applicants must be legally authorized to work in the
United States.
9. Q: What type of experience is required for an alarm company operator
license? A: Two years of experience in the alarm system business within the
past five years, or equivalent education.
,10. Q: Can education substitute for experience requirements? A: Yes, an
associate degree or higher in electronics, electrical engineering, or related field
may substitute for one year of experience.
11. Q: What happens if an alarm company operator license expires? A: The
company cannot legally operate until the license is renewed.
12. Q: How long is an alarm company operator license valid? A: Two years
from the date of issuance.
13. Q: When should you renew your license? A: Before the expiration date;
renewal applications should be submitted 60-90 days before expiration.
14. Q: What is the penalty for operating without a license? A: It is a
misdemeanor punishable by fines and/or imprisonment, and civil penalties may
also apply.
15. Q: Can the Bureau deny a license application? A: Yes, for reasons
including lack of qualifications, criminal history, or prior violations.
16. Q: What criminal convictions can disqualify an applicant? A:
Convictions substantially related to the qualifications, functions, or duties of an
alarm company operator.
17. Q: Are felony convictions an automatic disqualification? A: Not
necessarily automatic, but they are grounds for denial depending on the nature
and recency of the offense.
18. Q: Can a license be revoked? A: Yes, for violations of the Alarm
Company Act, fraud, dishonesty, or other misconduct.
19. Q: What is the difference between suspension and revocation? A:
Suspension is temporary; revocation permanently terminates the license (though
reapplication may be possible).
20. Q: Must alarm company operators carry insurance? A: Yes, general
liability insurance is required as specified by the Bureau.
21. Q: What is the minimum insurance coverage required? A: At least
$1,000,000 general liability insurance per occurrence.
22. Q: What must be included in insurance coverage? A: Coverage for
bodily injury, property damage, and contractual liability.
23. Q: How must you prove insurance to the Bureau? A: By filing a
certificate of insurance on the Bureau's approved form.
, 24. Q: What happens if insurance lapses? A: The license may be suspended
or revoked.
25. Q: Must you notify the Bureau of insurance changes? A: Yes, within a
specified timeframe (typically 10-15 days).
Section 2: Alarm System Regulations
26. Q: What is an "alarm system" under California law? A: Any system
designed to detect and signal unauthorized entry, fire, robbery, or other
emergencies.
27. Q: What types of alarm systems are regulated? A: Burglar alarms, fire
alarms, holdup alarms, and emergency response systems.
28. Q: Are carbon monoxide detectors considered alarm systems? A: They
can be if integrated into a monitored alarm system.
29. Q: What is a "false alarm"? A: An alarm signal that results in emergency
response when no actual emergency exists.
30. Q: Who is responsible for false alarms? A: The alarm system user, though
installers may share responsibility for system malfunctions.
31. Q: Can municipalities impose false alarm fees? A: Yes, local jurisdictions
may establish false alarm reduction programs and fee structures.
32. Q: What should alarm companies do to reduce false alarms? A: Provide
proper training, regular maintenance, and user education.
33. Q: What is "verified response"? A: A policy requiring alarm verification
before law enforcement dispatch.
34. Q: Must alarm systems have a cancellation code? A: Yes, to allow
authorized users to cancel false alarms.
35. Q: What is a "monitoring station"? A: A facility that receives and
responds to alarm signals.
36. Q: Must monitoring stations be licensed? A: Yes, if located in California
and performing alarm monitoring services.
37. Q: What is UL certification? A: Underwriters Laboratories certification
ensuring alarm equipment meets safety standards.
38. Q: Are UL-listed products required? A: While not always legally
required, they are industry standard and often required by local codes.
1. Q: What is the primary law governing alarm companies in California?
A: The Alarm Company Act, found in Division 3, Chapter 11.6 of the Business
and Professions Code, beginning with Section 7590.
2. Q: Who administers and enforces the Alarm Company Act? A: The
Bureau of Security and Investigative Services (BSIS), under the Department of
Consumer Affairs.
3. Q: What is an "alarm company" under California law? A: Any person
engaged in the business of installing, maintaining, altering, or servicing alarm
systems, or responding to alarm system signals.
4. Q: What is an "alarm company operator"? A: An individual qualified and
licensed by the state to manage an alarm company's operations.
5. Q: What is required to operate an alarm company in California? A: A
valid alarm company operator license issued by the Bureau of Security and
Investigative Services.
6. Q: Can a corporation operate an alarm company? A: Yes, but it must be
represented by a qualified manager who holds an alarm company operator
license.
7. Q: What is the minimum age requirement to obtain an alarm company
operator license? A: An applicant must be at least 18 years of age.
8. Q: Are there citizenship requirements for licensure? A: No specific
citizenship requirement, but applicants must be legally authorized to work in the
United States.
9. Q: What type of experience is required for an alarm company operator
license? A: Two years of experience in the alarm system business within the
past five years, or equivalent education.
,10. Q: Can education substitute for experience requirements? A: Yes, an
associate degree or higher in electronics, electrical engineering, or related field
may substitute for one year of experience.
11. Q: What happens if an alarm company operator license expires? A: The
company cannot legally operate until the license is renewed.
12. Q: How long is an alarm company operator license valid? A: Two years
from the date of issuance.
13. Q: When should you renew your license? A: Before the expiration date;
renewal applications should be submitted 60-90 days before expiration.
14. Q: What is the penalty for operating without a license? A: It is a
misdemeanor punishable by fines and/or imprisonment, and civil penalties may
also apply.
15. Q: Can the Bureau deny a license application? A: Yes, for reasons
including lack of qualifications, criminal history, or prior violations.
16. Q: What criminal convictions can disqualify an applicant? A:
Convictions substantially related to the qualifications, functions, or duties of an
alarm company operator.
17. Q: Are felony convictions an automatic disqualification? A: Not
necessarily automatic, but they are grounds for denial depending on the nature
and recency of the offense.
18. Q: Can a license be revoked? A: Yes, for violations of the Alarm
Company Act, fraud, dishonesty, or other misconduct.
19. Q: What is the difference between suspension and revocation? A:
Suspension is temporary; revocation permanently terminates the license (though
reapplication may be possible).
20. Q: Must alarm company operators carry insurance? A: Yes, general
liability insurance is required as specified by the Bureau.
21. Q: What is the minimum insurance coverage required? A: At least
$1,000,000 general liability insurance per occurrence.
22. Q: What must be included in insurance coverage? A: Coverage for
bodily injury, property damage, and contractual liability.
23. Q: How must you prove insurance to the Bureau? A: By filing a
certificate of insurance on the Bureau's approved form.
, 24. Q: What happens if insurance lapses? A: The license may be suspended
or revoked.
25. Q: Must you notify the Bureau of insurance changes? A: Yes, within a
specified timeframe (typically 10-15 days).
Section 2: Alarm System Regulations
26. Q: What is an "alarm system" under California law? A: Any system
designed to detect and signal unauthorized entry, fire, robbery, or other
emergencies.
27. Q: What types of alarm systems are regulated? A: Burglar alarms, fire
alarms, holdup alarms, and emergency response systems.
28. Q: Are carbon monoxide detectors considered alarm systems? A: They
can be if integrated into a monitored alarm system.
29. Q: What is a "false alarm"? A: An alarm signal that results in emergency
response when no actual emergency exists.
30. Q: Who is responsible for false alarms? A: The alarm system user, though
installers may share responsibility for system malfunctions.
31. Q: Can municipalities impose false alarm fees? A: Yes, local jurisdictions
may establish false alarm reduction programs and fee structures.
32. Q: What should alarm companies do to reduce false alarms? A: Provide
proper training, regular maintenance, and user education.
33. Q: What is "verified response"? A: A policy requiring alarm verification
before law enforcement dispatch.
34. Q: Must alarm systems have a cancellation code? A: Yes, to allow
authorized users to cancel false alarms.
35. Q: What is a "monitoring station"? A: A facility that receives and
responds to alarm signals.
36. Q: Must monitoring stations be licensed? A: Yes, if located in California
and performing alarm monitoring services.
37. Q: What is UL certification? A: Underwriters Laboratories certification
ensuring alarm equipment meets safety standards.
38. Q: Are UL-listed products required? A: While not always legally
required, they are industry standard and often required by local codes.