Showing ordinances that apply to Springfield, NJ
Springfield is an unincorporated community (population 1,518) in Union County, New Jersey. Because Springfield is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal code. Instead, Union County ordinances apply directly to properties here. The grading & drainage rules below are the ones that govern your area.
Union County municipalities regulate grading and drainage through building codes and engineering review. Elizabeth Chapter 15.04 requires grading permits for significant earthwork. Westfield ยง13.14 requires site plan review for grading. Drainage cannot be redirected to neighbors (common law + statute). Retaining walls over 4 feet need engineered plans. Soil compaction testing required for structural fill. NJ DEP Flood Hazard Area Rules apply in floodplains. Union County Engineering coordinates for county roads.
Grading and drainage regulation in Union County combines NJ Uniform Construction Code (N.J.A.C. 5:23) requirements with local zoning and engineering ordinances plus NJ DEP Flood Hazard Area Control Act Rules (N.J.A.C. 7:13) where applicable. Elizabeth Revised Ordinances Chapter 15.04 requires grading permits for excavation or fill exceeding 50 cubic yards; plans must show existing and proposed contours, drainage patterns, erosion control, and impact on adjacent properties. Westfield Land Use Ordinance ยง13.14 requires site plan review for grading affecting drainage or exceeding threshold volumes. Summit, Cranford, and other municipalities have similar provisions. A fundamental principle under NJ common law and codified in most municipal ordinances is that property owners cannot redirect natural surface drainage onto neighboring properties in a concentrated or increased manner; the Armstrong v. Francis Corp. (1956) rule permits reasonable development but prohibits undue harm to neighbors. Retaining walls over 4 ft require engineered plans and building permits under NJ UCC; walls over 6 ft typically require additional geotechnical review. Soil compaction testing is required for structural fill supporting buildings or critical infrastructure. Driveway slopes typically capped at 12-15% maximum. In FEMA-designated floodplains (significant portions of Elizabeth, Linden, Cranford along Rahway River, Union Township, and lower-lying areas) any grading requires NJ Flood Hazard Area permit plus local flood damage prevention ordinance compliance. Union County Engineering reviews work affecting county roads (Springfield Avenue, Morris Avenue, various others). Sinkholes and karst geology are not typical in Union County (contrast Warren, Sussex) but brownfield contamination constrains grading in industrial areas.
Elizabeth unpermitted grading: stop-work order plus $250-$2,500 fines and required engineering review. Redirecting drainage to neighbors: civil action under Armstrong rule plus code enforcement. Unpermitted retaining wall over 4 ft: stop-work, engineering submittal, possible removal. Flood Hazard Area violations: NJ DEP enforcement up to $50,000 per day.
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