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🌍 Environmental Rules/Grading & Drainage

Englewood vs Hackensack

How do grading & drainage rules compare between Englewood, NJ and Hackensack, NJ?

Englewood and Hackensack have similar restriction levels.

Englewood, NJ

Bergen County

Some Restrictions

Englewood combines Chapter 358 soil disturbance controls with Chapter 370 surface drainage rules to govern grading, regrading, and on-site drainage during development.

View full Englewood rules →

Hackensack, NJ

Bergen County

Some Restrictions

Hackensack regulates grading and drainage to prevent flooding, erosion, and impacts on neighboring properties. Significant earthwork or drainage modifications require engineering review and a grading permit through the Building Department.

View full Hackensack rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactEnglewoodHackensack
Erosion authorityChapter 358-
Drainage authorityChapter 370-
CO conditionEngineer compliance certification-
Stream setbackRestricted near drainage ROW-
Permit fee start$100 first 50 cy-
Grading Permit-Required for major work
Engineering Review-City Engineer
Off-Site Runoff-Prohibited
CO Certification-May be required

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Englewood FAQ

Do I need approval to regrade my Englewood property?

If grading disturbs soil or alters surface drainage, you typically need a Chapter 358 soil disturbance permit and may need Chapter 370 drainage approval, both reviewed by the City Engineer.

Can I build close to a stream or drainage canal in Englewood?

No. Englewood restricts construction, alteration, location, or placement of structures too close to drainage canals, brooks, or streams to keep these channels open and reduce flood risk.

Hackensack FAQ

Do I need a permit to regrade my Hackensack yard?

Significant grading, retaining walls, or work that alters drainage patterns requires a permit. Minor landscaping that does not change drainage typically does not.

What if my neighbor's grading is flooding my yard?

Report the issue to Hackensack Building Department or City Engineer. Improper grading that directs runoff onto adjoining properties is a code violation subject to enforcement.

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