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🌍 Environmental Rules/Stormwater Management

Stormwater Management: Long Branch vs North Middletown

How do stormwater management rules compare between Long Branch, NJ and North Middletown, NJ?

Long Branch and North Middletown have similar restriction levels.

Long Branch, NJ

Monmouth County

Some Restrictions

Stormwater management in Monmouth County is regulated under NJ Stormwater Management Rules (N.J.A.C. 7:8), NJ Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NJPDES) Municipal Separate Storm Sewer System (MS4) permits, and municipal ordinances adopting these state standards. Coastal Monmouth municipalities face additional scrutiny due to ocean and bay water quality impacts. Major development (1 acre disturbance, 0.25 acre new impervious) triggers state plan requirements. Green infrastructure incentivized through state 2020 rule update. Monmouth County Planning Board reviews county road impacts.

View full Long Branch rules →

North Middletown, NJ

Monmouth County

Some Restrictions

Stormwater management in Monmouth County is regulated under NJ Stormwater Management Rules (N.J.A.C. 7:8), NJ Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NJPDES) Municipal Separate Storm Sewer System (MS4) permits, and municipal ordinances adopting these state standards. Coastal Monmouth municipalities face additional scrutiny due to ocean and bay water quality impacts. Major development (1 acre disturbance, 0.25 acre new impervious) triggers state plan requirements. Green infrastructure incentivized through state 2020 rule update. Monmouth County Planning Board reviews county road impacts.

View full North Middletown rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactLong BranchNorth Middletown
State RulesN.J.A.C. 7:8N.J.A.C. 7:8
Trigger1 ac disturbance or 0.25 ac imp1 ac disturbance or 0.25 ac imp
2020 UpdateGreen infrastructure priorityGreen infrastructure priority
MS4 PermitAll Monmouth munis coveredAll Monmouth munis covered
Coastal ImpactExtra NJDEP scrutinyExtra NJDEP scrutiny

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Long Branch FAQ

Do I need a stormwater plan for my home addition in Monmouth County?

For most single-family additions, no — state rules trigger at 0.25 acre (10,890 sq ft) of new impervious cover. However, many Monmouth municipalities have stricter local thresholds. Coastal municipalities with beach water quality concerns (Asbury Park, Belmar, Long Branch) tend toward stricter local rules. Check your municipal engineering department.

Who maintains the stormwater basin in my Monmouth subdivision?

Typically the HOA or individual property owners where the basin is located — private stormwater facilities are owner responsibility under N.J.A.C. 7:8. Municipal infrastructure (street drains, public basins) is town-maintained. Maintenance failures can trigger NJDEP enforcement if runoff water quality is affected.

North Middletown FAQ

Do I need a stormwater plan for my home addition in Monmouth County?

For most single-family additions, no — state rules trigger at 0.25 acre (10,890 sq ft) of new impervious cover. However, many Monmouth municipalities have stricter local thresholds. Coastal municipalities with beach water quality concerns (Asbury Park, Belmar, Long Branch) tend toward stricter local rules. Check your municipal engineering department.

Who maintains the stormwater basin in my Monmouth subdivision?

Typically the HOA or individual property owners where the basin is located — private stormwater facilities are owner responsibility under N.J.A.C. 7:8. Municipal infrastructure (street drains, public basins) is town-maintained. Maintenance failures can trigger NJDEP enforcement if runoff water quality is affected.

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