Showing ordinances that apply to Port Monmouth, NJ
Port Monmouth is an unincorporated community (population 3,745) in Monmouth County, New Jersey. Because Port Monmouth is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal code. Instead, Monmouth County ordinances apply directly to properties here. The grading & drainage rules below are the ones that govern your area.
Grading and drainage in Monmouth County are regulated by municipal construction codes (NJ UCC, N.J.A.C. 5:23) and Freehold Soil Conservation District for larger projects. Grading permits required for excavation/fill typically over 50 to 100 cubic yards. Drainage cannot be redirected onto neighboring properties — NJ follows modified reasonable-use rule for surface water. Retaining walls over 4 feet require engineering and permits. Coastal grading faces CAFRA review.
Grading and drainage in Monmouth County combine municipal, county, and state oversight. Municipal construction codes (NJ UCC, N.J.A.C. 5:23) require grading permits for significant earth moving — typical thresholds 50 to 100 cubic yards of cut or fill. Projects disturbing 5,000+ sq ft additionally need Freehold Soil Conservation District certification. NJ follows a modified reasonable-use rule for surface water drainage (Armstrong v. Francis Corp. (1956) and successor cases): upland owners cannot materially increase runoff to adjoining properties through grading changes. Drainage swales, French drains, catch basins, and underground detention may be required on new construction. Retaining walls exceeding 4 feet in height (measured from bottom of footing to top of wall) require NJ-licensed professional engineer design and separate building permit. Retaining walls in coastal zones require CAFRA review. Compaction testing required for structural fill. Final grade must match approved plans — reinspection required before certificate of occupancy. Post-construction drainage maintenance is property owner responsibility. Coastal Monmouth municipalities face additional grading scrutiny due to dune protection, flood elevation requirements, and sea level rise adaptation. Superstorm Sandy reconstruction permits in Sea Bright, Long Branch, and Monmouth Beach required extensive re-grading plans.
Unpermitted grading: stop-work order from municipal construction official; fines $250 to $2,500. Redirecting drainage onto neighbor: civil liability under NJ common law (Armstrong rule) plus municipal enforcement. Unengineered retaining wall over 4 feet: stop-work plus potentially dangerous wall removal. CAFRA violation for coastal grading: NJDEP enforcement up to $25,000/day. Slope failure from improper grading: owner liability for damage and remediation.
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