Showing ordinances that apply to Shark River Hills, NJ
Shark River Hills is an unincorporated community (population 3,583) in Monmouth County, New Jersey. Because Shark River Hills is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal code. Instead, Monmouth County ordinances apply directly to properties here. The dark sky rules rules below are the ones that govern your area.
Outdoor lighting in Monmouth County is regulated by municipal zoning codes with many towns adopting full-cutoff/shielded fixture requirements. NJ has no statewide dark-sky law, but the NJ DEP and Department of Transportation use dark-sky principles on state projects. Monmouth shore towns face glare issues over Atlantic Ocean viewsheds — some have adopted International Dark-Sky Association standards. Sea turtle nesting protection (Raritan Bay has minimal but coastal bird habitat exists) informs lighting at some Monmouth beaches. Commercial light trespass actively enforced.
Outdoor lighting regulation in Monmouth County is municipal with growing adoption of dark-sky friendly standards. Most Monmouth municipalities require fully shielded (full-cutoff) fixtures for new exterior lighting installations — fixtures that direct 100% of light below the horizontal plane. Maximum lumen or wattage limits apply in residential zones (often 1,800 lumens per fixture for non-commercial residential), with lower limits near property lines. Motion-sensor lighting is encouraged for security to reduce all-night illumination. Commercial lighting (parking lots, signage, storefronts) faces specific pole height limits (typically 20 to 25 feet in residential-adjacent areas) and must not spill onto residential properties — 'light trespass' exceeding 0.5 foot-candles at property lines is actionable. LED color temperature is increasingly regulated — 3000K or below preferred to reduce blue light pollution. Monmouth coastal municipalities address glare over ocean viewsheds; Asbury Park boardwalk, Long Branch Pier Village, and Belmar boardwalk balance security with dark-sky principles. NJ Monmouth County parks and reservations (Huber Woods, Hartshorne Woods) maintain naturalistic lighting. Historic districts (Spring Lake, Ocean Grove, Red Bank) enforce period-appropriate fixtures. Shielded streetlights are standard on Monmouth County roads and most municipal upgrades.
Non-compliant new fixtures: notice to correct within 30 days; fines $100 to $500 per fixture. Commercial light trespass: citation plus required shielding retrofit; $250 to $2,500 fines. Failure to comply after notice: daily accrual. Repeat commercial violations: conditional use permit review and possible permit suspension.
See how Shark River Hills's dark sky rules rules stack up against other locations.
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