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🌍 Environmental Rules/Stormwater Management

Englewood vs Hackensack

How do stormwater management rules compare between Englewood, NJ and Hackensack, NJ?

Englewood has fewer restrictions than Hackensack.

Englewood, NJ

Bergen County

Some Restrictions

Englewood enforces Chapter 374 stormwater management and Chapter 370 surface drainage rules to protect property and water quality from regulated development activities.

View full Englewood rules →

Hackensack, NJ

Bergen County

Heavy Restrictions

Bergen County operates an MS4 stormwater program under New Jersey's Municipal Stormwater General Permit. The county Soil Conservation District enforces erosion and stormwater controls for projects disturbing 5,000 square feet or more.

View full Hackensack rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactEnglewoodHackensack
Stormwater chapterChapter 374-
Surface drainageChapter 370-
AdoptedOrd. 00-14, 2000-
Reviewing officialCity Engineer-
Inlet retrofitsChapter 384 required-
Disturbance trigger-5,000 square feet
Rule-N.J.A.C. 7:8
Local certifier-Soil Conservation District
Green infrastructure-Required since 2021

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Englewood FAQ

When does Englewood require a stormwater management plan?

Major development and regulated activities that include permanent stormwater management facilities require plans certified by the City Engineer under Chapters 370 and 374 before construction approval.

Does Englewood require storm drain inlet labeling?

Yes. Englewood's retrofitting of private storm drain inlets program requires owners to upgrade and properly label inlets to meet design standards that prevent debris from polluting waterways.

Hackensack FAQ

When do Bergen County stormwater rules apply to my project?

When you disturb 5,000+ square feet or create one acre of impervious surface. The Soil Conservation District must certify your stormwater plan before construction begins.

What is green infrastructure under NJ rules?

Green infrastructure includes pervious pavement, rain gardens, bioswales, and similar nature-based controls. NJ requires it for all new major developments since March 2021.

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