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 light trespass rules below are the ones that govern your area.
Monmouth County light trespass is regulated by each of the 53 municipalities under N.J.S.A. 40:55D (Municipal Land Use Law) with no county-wide ordinance. Shore towns (Asbury Park, Long Branch, Belmar, Spring Lake, Sea Bright) typically cap illumination at 0.3 to 0.5 foot-candles at residential property lines. Beachfront lighting must also comply with NJDEP coastal regulations protecting sea turtle nesting habitat on certain southern shore beaches.
Monmouth County has no unified light trespass ordinance; each of the 53 municipalities sets standards through zoning codes adopted under N.J.S.A. 40:55D. Typical shore municipality limits: Long Branch Code ยง345-23 caps illumination at 0.5 foot-candles at residential property lines with full-cutoff fixture requirements in oceanfront zones; Asbury Park Code ยง520-18 requires shielded fixtures and 0.3 fc at residential boundaries; Belmar Code ยง16-18.7 limits commercial spillover to 0.5 fc; Red Bank Code ยง490-6.7 applies 0.3 fc residential line standard with 3,000K color temperature cap. Inland towns (Freehold, Marlboro, Manalapan, Howell) follow similar structures. Residential security lights must be aimed and shielded to illuminate only the owner's property. NJ common-law private nuisance (Sans v. Ramsey Golf & Country Club, NJ Supreme Court 1959) provides civil remedy against actionable glare. Floodlights aimed at neighboring homes are prohibited. Boardwalk and oceanfront commercial lighting in Asbury Park, Long Branch Pier Village, and Belmar faces additional Atlantic Ocean glare restrictions. Holiday displays typically have 30 to 60 day exemptions. Sandy Hook (Gateway National Recreation Area) and Sandy Hook Lighthouse zones face federal dark-sky restrictions overlapping with local rules. Enforcement is complaint-driven through municipal code officers; chronic issues may require formal nuisance litigation in Monmouth County Superior Court.
Light trespass complaint: warning and 30-day correction period. Non-compliance: fines $100 to $500 per violation in most Monmouth towns. Commercial violations in Asbury Park/Long Branch oceanfront districts: up to $2,000 per day. Civil nuisance suits under Sans v. Ramsey precedent: injunctive relief plus damages possible.
See how Port Monmouth's light trespass rules stack up against other locations.
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