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🌍 Environmental Rules/Stormwater Management

Stormwater Management: Fort Lee vs Hackensack

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

Fort Lee and Hackensack have similar restriction levels.

Fort Lee, NJ

Bergen County

Heavy Restrictions

Fort Lee enforces stormwater management requirements aligned with NJDEP rules, requiring runoff controls, water quality treatment, and groundwater recharge for new development.

View full Fort Lee rules β†’

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 β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactFort LeeHackensack
State RuleN.J.A.C. 7:8 applies-
Quality TreatmentRequired for major dev-
Recharge StandardGroundwater required-
MaintenanceLong-term plan 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.

Fort Lee FAQ

Does my home addition trigger stormwater requirements in Fort Lee?

Major development thresholds typically apply at one acre disturbance or quarter-acre new impervious; smaller projects may have simplified requirements but still need review.

Who maintains stormwater basins after construction?

Property owners or HOAs typically maintain private stormwater facilities under recorded maintenance plans approved during Fort Lee site plan review.

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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