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 heritage & protected trees rules below are the ones that govern your area.
Several Monmouth County municipalities designate heritage, landmark, or specimen trees for enhanced protection. Criteria typically include trunk diameter of 24+ inches DBH, rare species, or historical significance. Removal or damage to heritage trees carries substantial fines ($2,000 to $25,000+). Monmouth County Shade Tree Commission works with municipalities on landmark tree inventory. Fair Haven, Rumson, Red Bank, and Middletown Township have active heritage tree programs. Construction near heritage trees requires root zone protection.
Heritage tree protection in Monmouth County is municipality-specific but growing. Common designation criteria: trunk diameter 24 inches DBH or greater, historical significance (trees associated with historic properties, Civil War sites, or early Monmouth settlements), rare or declining species (American chestnut survivors, American elm specimens that survived Dutch elm disease, oak species predating development), and ecological value (mast-producing trees supporting wildlife). Monmouth towns with active heritage or landmark tree programs include Fair Haven, Rumson, Red Bank, Middletown Township (Navesink Historic District), Ocean Township, and Freehold Township. Designation typically occurs through municipal shade tree commission nomination and governing body resolution. Removal requires not just standard tree permit but special council or commission approval — rarely granted except for imminent safety hazard. Construction projects near heritage trees must include tree protection plans with critical root zone fencing (typically 1 foot radius per 1 inch DBH), air spading to avoid root damage, and monitoring by Licensed Tree Expert. Damage during construction triggers fines plus remediation. Residents can nominate trees through municipal shade tree commission. Monmouth County has several historic tree specimens in Allaire State Park, Deep Cut Gardens, and Holmdel Park County parks.
Unauthorized heritage tree removal: $2,000 to $25,000+ per tree in Monmouth municipalities, plus mandatory replacement with specimen-caliber trees. Construction damage: $1,000 to $10,000 plus remediation costs including ongoing arboricultural care. Failure to implement tree protection plan during construction: stop-work order plus damages. Commercial developer violations: may affect future approvals and bonding.
See how Port Monmouth's heritage & protected trees rules stack up against other locations.
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