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 recycling requirements rules below are the ones that govern your area.
Monmouth County recycling is mandatory under the NJ Statewide Mandatory Source Separation and Recycling Act (N.J.S.A. 13:1E-99.11). Residents must separate paper, cardboard, glass, aluminum/steel cans, and plastic bottles #1 and #2 (some towns accept through #5). The Monmouth County Recycling program coordinates with municipalities, and contaminated bins are skipped at the curb. NJ recycling rate goals are 50% municipal solid waste and 65% total waste.
Recycling in Monmouth County is mandatory for all residents under NJ law. The NJ Statewide Mandatory Source Separation and Recycling Act (N.J.S.A. 13:1E-99.11) requires separation of designated recyclables from trash. Accepted materials across Monmouth municipalities typically include: paper (newspaper, office paper, magazines), corrugated cardboard (flattened), glass bottles and jars (rinsed), aluminum and steel cans, and plastic bottles/containers #1 PET and #2 HDPE. Some Monmouth towns accept plastics #3 through #5; most do NOT accept plastic bags, film, styrofoam, or food-contaminated items. Plastic bags must be returned to grocery store bins, not curbside. Yard waste (leaves, grass) has separate seasonal collection in most Monmouth towns, especially fall leaf collection. Food scrap composting is emerging but not yet mandatory countywide. Multi-family buildings over 4 units and commercial entities must provide recycling under N.J.S.A. 13:1E-99.13. Monmouth County Department of Public Works and Engineering oversees county-level recycling coordination.
Contaminated bins: skipped at curb with 'oops' tag. Repeat contamination: $25 to $100 municipal fine. Failure to recycle (mixing recyclables into trash): warning then $50 to $250. Commercial recycling failures: up to $1,000 per violation under NJ law. Multi-family non-compliance: $500 to $5,000.
See how Shark River Hills's recycling requirements rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.