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🏚️ Property Maintenance/Property Blight

Property Blight: Englewood vs Hackensack

How do property blight rules compare between Englewood, NJ and Hackensack, NJ?

Englewood has fewer restrictions than Hackensack.

Englewood, NJ

Bergen County

Some Restrictions

Englewood requires residential grounds to be kept trimmed and free of overgrowth so that conditions do not deteriorate or harm neighboring properties.

View full Englewood rules β†’

Hackensack, NJ

Bergen County

Heavy Restrictions

Property blight in Bergen County is addressed through municipal property maintenance codes adopting the International Property Maintenance Code, supplemented by New Jersey's abandoned properties law, with enforcement at the local level.

View full Hackensack rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactEnglewoodHackensack
Code ChapterProperty Maintenance-
StandardNo overgrowth, no blight-
Companion ChapterBrush, Grass, Weeds-
EnforcementProperty Maintenance Officer-
Primary Code-International Property Maintenance Code
State Law-Abandoned Properties Rehabilitation Act
Daily Fines-Up to $2,000 in some cases
Enforcement Level-Municipal code officers
Lien Authority-Cleanup costs become liens

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Englewood FAQ

What counts as property blight in Englewood?

Conditions like overgrown lawns, untrimmed shrubs, debris accumulation, and unsightly grounds that harm neighboring property values fall under Englewood's property maintenance and brush, grass, and weeds rules.

Who enforces blight rules in Englewood?

Englewood's Property Maintenance Officer issues notices of violation, and unresolved conditions can lead to municipal abatement at the owner's expense plus court fines.

Hackensack FAQ

Who enforces property blight rules in Bergen County?

Each municipality's code enforcement office handles blight complaints and violations. The county does not directly enforce property maintenance on private residential properties.

What is the New Jersey Abandoned Properties Act?

N.J.S.A. 55:19-78 allows municipalities to designate properties as abandoned, place them on a public list, and pursue accelerated tax sale or rehabilitation through court-appointed receivers.

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