Fort Lee vs Garfield
How do wildfire zones rules compare between Fort Lee, NJ and Garfield, NJ?
Fort Lee and Garfield have similar restriction levels.
Fort Lee, NJ
Bergen County
Fort Lee is not in a high wildfire hazard zone, but the Palisades cliffs and wooded slopes create localized brush fire risk requiring vegetation management and fire code compliance.
View full Fort Lee rules →Garfield, NJ
Bergen County
Bergen County has limited high-risk wildfire zones compared to southern New Jersey, but wooded areas in the northwest border the Ramapo Mountains and follow NJ Forest Fire Service wildland-urban interface guidelines.
View full Garfield rules →Key Facts Comparison
| Fact | Fort Lee | Garfield |
|---|---|---|
| Risk Area | Palisades wooded slopes | - |
| State Risk Class | Not high-risk zone | - |
| Defensible Space | Required near woods | - |
| Park Authority | Palisades Interstate | - |
| Highest-risk towns | - | Mahwah, Oakland, Ramsey |
| Adjacent forest | - | Ramapo Mountain State Forest |
| Building code | - | NJ Uniform Construction Code |
| Defensible space | - | Recommended 30 feet |
| Coordinator | - | County OEM and NJFFS |
Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.
Fort Lee FAQ
Is Fort Lee at risk for wildfires?
Fort Lee has lower wildfire risk than the Pinelands but the wooded Palisades slopes create localized brush fire potential, especially during dry conditions in spring and fall.
Who manages the Palisades cliff vegetation?
Palisades Interstate Park Commission manages much of the cliff land. Adjacent Fort Lee property owners are responsible for vegetation on their own parcels.
Garfield FAQ
Does Bergen County have official wildfire hazard zones?
The NJ Forest Fire Service maintains statewide risk maps. Bergen County's highest-risk areas are in the northwest near Ramapo State Forest, but no county-level WUI building code exists.
Are there special building rules in wooded Bergen County areas?
Standard NJ Uniform Construction Code applies. Some northwestern municipalities recommend fire-resistant roofing and defensible space, but these are largely advisory rather than mandatory.
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