Hudson County's 20+ mile waterfront along the Hudson River, Newark Bay, Kill Van Kull, and Hackensack River is heavily regulated under NJ's Waterfront Development Act (N.J.S.A. 12:5-3) and CAFRA (Coastal Area Facility Review Act) N.J.S.A. 13:19-1. NJ DEP Land Use Regulation approval required for most waterfront projects. Public access along the Hudson River Walkway is mandated. Wetlands and tidelands heavily protected.
Coastal development in Hudson County involves multi-layer regulation. The NJ Waterfront Development Act (N.J.S.A. 12:5-3) requires a Waterfront Development Permit from NJ DEP Division of Land Resource Protection for any construction, dredging, or filling below the mean high water line along tidal waters β this covers the entire Hudson waterfront from Jersey City to North Bergen. The NJ Coastal Area Facility Review Act (CAFRA) applies to portions of Hudson County within the coastal zone. NJ Tidelands Resource Council holds title to former tidal waters and leases or grants tidelands licenses; any development on formerly-inundated property requires tidelands review. The iconic Hudson River Waterfront Walkway β an 18+ mile public path from Bayonne to the GW Bridge β is a legally mandated public access easement under NJ DEP rules and must be provided, maintained, and kept open by adjacent private developers. Obstruction or privatization of the Walkway triggers enforcement. Wetlands along Hackensack Meadowlands are protected by the NJ Sports and Exposition Authority (NJSEA) which administers the former Meadowlands District covering parts of North Bergen, Secaucus, Kearny, and Jersey City. Sea level rise planning requirements under recently updated NJ DEP rules (REAL β Resilient Environments and Landscapes) affect new coastal construction. Seawalls and bulkhead armoring require Waterfront Development Permit with strict review. Post-Sandy Rebuild by Design includes major coastal resilience infrastructure.
Unpermitted waterfront work: stop-work order plus NJ DEP fines $5,000 to $50,000+. Demolition possible. Wetland damage: restoration plus fines $10,000-$100,000+. Hudson Walkway obstruction: daily fines and removal orders. CAFRA violations: administrative penalties and court action.
Hudson County, NJ
Chronic barking dog complaints in Hudson County are handled by municipal animal control officers and police. Hudson County Animal Control (contracted service...
Hudson County, NJ
Construction hour restrictions in Hudson County are set at the municipal level. There are no countywide construction hour limits applying to private property...
Hudson County, NJ
Hudson County does not maintain a countywide noise ordinance with specific quiet hours β each of Hudson County's 12 municipalities sets its own quiet hours a...
Hudson County, NJ
Hudson County municipalities require permits for amplified music in public spaces and enforce strict residential decibel limits. Jersey City and Hoboken both...
Hudson County, NJ
Disputes between neighbors over fences in Hudson County are governed by New Jersey property law and municipal ordinances. New Jersey's spite fence law (N.J.S...
Hudson County, NJ
Fence permits in Hudson County are required by most municipalities and are issued at the municipal level through the local construction and zoning offices. T...
See how Hudson County's coastal development rules stack up against other locations.
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