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 garage sale rules rules below are the ones that govern your area.
Union County municipalities enforce property maintenance standards during and after garage sales. Elizabeth Chapter 6.08 requires display items removed end-of-day. Westfield ยง11-14 mandates same-day cleanup. Summit Chapter 155 similar. Items cannot remain at curb between sale days or after conclusion. Signs must be removed within 24 hours. Persistent blight may trigger property maintenance citations separate from garage sale ordinance. HOA rules may impose stricter aesthetic standards.
Property maintenance during and after garage sales is enforced across Union County to prevent blight and preserve neighborhood aesthetics. Elizabeth Revised Ordinances Chapter 6.08 (Property Maintenance) applies to garage sales through the general blight provisions and is cross-referenced with Chapter 5.44 (Garage Sales). Merchandise, tables, display racks, and signage must be removed from view at the end of each sale day and at conclusion of the permitted period. Items cannot be left at the curb, front yard, or driveway between sale days (for multi-day sales) or after conclusion. Westfield Code ยง11-14 reinforces these rules through property maintenance enforcement. Summit Code Chapter 155 enforces similarly. Directional sale signs posted at neighborhood intersections must be removed within 24 hours of the sale ending; Cranford, Westfield, and Summit actively remove non-compliant signs during enforcement sweeps and may bill owners for removal costs. Persistent pattern of garage sale activity (beyond permitted frequency) or accumulated unsold merchandise visible from the street may trigger separate property maintenance blight citations under local codes and N.J.S.A. 40:48-2.12a (authorizing municipal abatement of blighted conditions). HOAs in Clark, New Providence, and planned communities may impose stricter aesthetic and signage standards through deed restrictions, enforceable independently of municipal ordinances.
Elizabeth items at curb after hours: $50-$250 blight citation under Chapter 6.08. Signs not removed within 24 hours: $25-$50 per sign plus removal costs. Persistent blight from accumulated sale merchandise: $100-$500 escalating fines. HOA violations: covenant enforcement through civil action.
See how Springfield's garage sale rules rules stack up against other locations.
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