It is not intended by this chapter to repeal,
abrogate, annul, void or in any way impair or interfere with existing
provisions of other laws or ordinances, except those specifically
repealed by this chapter, or with private restrictions placed upon
property by covenant, deed or other private agreement or with restrictive
covenants running with the land to which the Borough is a party. Where
any restrictions or requirements of other ordinances of the Borough
of Clementon overlap with provisions of this chapter, the more stringent
set of restrictions or requirements shall be controlling.
No building shall hereafter be erected and no
existing building shall be moved, structurally altered, rebuilt, added
to or enlarged, nor shall any land be used, for any purpose other
than those included among the uses listed as permitted uses in each
zone by this chapter and meeting the requirements set forth in the
appended schedules;nor shall any open space contiguous to any building be
encroached upon or reduced in any manner, except in conformity with
the area and bulk requirements, off-street parking requirements and
all other regulations designated in the schedules and this chapter
for the zone district in which such building or space is located.
In the event of any such unlawful encroachment or reduction, such
building or use shall be deemed to be in violation of this chapter,
and the certificate of occupancy shall become void.
A. No building shall be constructed on land subject to
periodic overflow or on land which has an average water table within
two feet of the ground surface.
B. No person, firm or corporation shall strip, excavate
or otherwise remove topsoil for sale or other use other than on the
premises from which taken, except in connection with the construction
or alteration of a building on such premises and excavating or grading
incidental thereto.
[Added 6-18-2013 by Ord. No. 2013-10; amended 11-12-2013 by Ord. No.
2013-16]
There is adopted by ordinance an official submission checklist
which specifies the information that must accompany all applications
for minor site plans, major site plans, variances, and subdivisions
under this chapter. No application shall be deemed complete under
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-10.3 unless the requirements have been met or waived
by the Land Use Board following a waiver request by the applicant.
The Checklist is available and on file at Borough Hall.
[Amended 9-16-1968 by Ord. No. 68-13; 3-25-1991 by Ord. No. 91-5]
A. Prior to application for a building permit for the
construction of any garden apartments, commercial or industrial structure,
structures to be utilized as a facility in an amusement park or multifamily
housing, the developer shall submit a site plan to the Zoning Officer
showing the location of the buildings or the principal buildings or
use, the general building dimensions and the location of parking areas
or driveways, the proposed grade and drainage, proposed sewerage connections,
proposed plantings and proposed screening. The Zoning Officer shall
refer said site plan to the Planning Board for review and recommendation.
[Amended 11-22-1993 by Ord. No. 93-15]
B. The Planning Board shall review such site plan for
spacing and orientation of buildings in relation to off-street parking
and ingress and egress to the site; for safety, convenience and adequacy
of vehicular and pedestrian circulation; for adequacy of landscaping
and proposed site improvements (which may be referred to the Borough
Engineer); and for overall conformity to provisions of the Master
Plan of the Borough of Clementon. The Planning Board should initially
determine whether or not the site plan can be classified as minor.
If it is determined that it is a minor site plan, the review thereof
should be referred back to the Construction and Zoning Officials.
Thereupon, they would review the minor site plan application, unless
they determined that an engineering review would be necessary. If
no engineering review is deemed necessary, the application will be
handled as a minor site plan.
C. If the site plan is not classified as minor, it shall
remain within the jurisdiction of the Planning Board. Both the Planning
Board and/or the Construction and Zoning Officials shall, within 30
days after receipt of said plan, approve or disapprove the proposed
development. The reasons for disapproval shall be clearly stated by
the appropriate entity, and the Zoning and/or Construction Officials
shall deny a building permit for the proposed development until such
conditions have been corrected, any changes deemed necessary by the
Planning Board have been made and the written approval of the Planning
Board has been obtained.
D. If it is determined that the application is a minor
site plan, the obligor (applicant or developer) shall post in escrow
with the Municipal Clerk an amount to cover review, inspection, planning
and legal fees. This escrow for minor site plans shall be in the amount
of $500. If at any time the escrow fund shall be deemed insufficient
by the Planning Board or governing body to cover actual or anticipated
expenses or fees, said escrow fund shall be subject to increase upon
written notice from the Secretary of the Planning Board or the Borough
Clerk.
E. Multifamily housing. Any building containing three
or more dwelling units occupied or intended to be occupied by persons
living independently of each other is governed by the provisions of
this subsection.
[Added 11-22-1993 by Ord. No. 93-15]
(1) Any multifamily housing development requiring subdivision
or site plan approval must include an indoor or outdoor recycling
area for the collection and storage of residentially generated recyclable
materials.
(2) The recycling area shall be large enough to accommodate
a number of recycling bins and/or containers consistent with the anticipated
usage.
(3) Said recycling area shall be physically situated so
as to not impair the flow of the normal collection process.
(4) Said recycling area must be situated to be reasonably
accessible to recycling personnel and vehicles.
(5) The bins and/or containers shall be designed so as
to provide maximum protection against adverse environmental conditions.
Reasonable measures shall be taken to protect the recycling area against
theft of the recyclable materials, bins and/or containers.
(6) Signs and/or markers identifying the recycling area
shall be posted. The bins and/or containers shall be plainly marked
so as to indicate the material to be placed therein.
(7) Protection by means of landscaping and/or appropriate
fencing shall be provided around any outdoor recycling area.
[Amended 9-23-2008 by Ord. No. 2008-16; 11-15-2008 by Ord. No.
2008-21; 11-23-2010 by Ord. No. 2010-08]
A. Each property
shall be permitted two accessory buildings: one shed not to exceed
150 square feet and one garage for storing private vehicles not to
exceed 24 feet by 24 feet.
B. Accessory
buildings in the B-1, B-2, B-3, M-1 and AP Zoning Districts require
site plan approval.
C. An accessory
building that is attached to a principal building shall comply with
the setback and yard requirements of the zone for the principal building.
D. Detached
accessory buildings are not permitted in the front yard area, and
if located in the side yard area, the accessory structure must meet
the setback requirements of the principal building.
E. When situated
in the rear yard, accessory buildings in residential and nonresidential
zoning districts shall be a minimum of five feet from the rear and
side property lines.
F. Accessory
buildings shall not exceed 14 feet in height in residential zones
and shall not exceed 25 feet in height in the nonresidential zones.
[Amended 3-24-1986 by Ord. No. 86-2; 10-22-1990 by Ord. No. 90-12; 11-23-2010 by Ord. No. 2010-08]
A. Required off-street parking.
(1) The
required number of parking spaces shall be prescribed by the schedule
below:
|
Use
|
Number of Parking Spaces
|
---|
|
Assembly and industrial operations
|
1 per 800 square feet of GFA*
|
|
Bowling alley
|
4 per alley or lane
|
|
Car wash
|
5 stacking spaces for each lane plus 1 for each employee
|
|
Church or synagogue
|
1 per 3 seats
|
|
Convenience store
|
6 per 1,000 square feet of GFA*
|
|
Financial institutions/banks
|
5 stacking per lane and 4 per 1,000 square feet of GFA*
|
|
Home occupation
|
1 per 250 square feet devoted to business in addition to residential
requirement
|
|
Hotel/motel
|
1 per room and 1 per employee
|
|
Manufacturing
|
1 per 400 square feet
|
|
Medical and dental offices
|
1 per 200 square feet
|
|
Professional and business offices
|
1 per 250 square feet
|
|
Restaurant or bar
|
1 per 3 seats
|
|
Retail and shopping center
|
1 per 250 square feet
|
|
Service station
|
4 per bay plus 1 per employee
|
|
Warehouse
|
1 per 4,000 square feet
|
(2) The
provision of shared parking by two or more uses on adjacent lots is
permitted, provided that the total parking provided shall not be less
than the required spaces computed separately, and provided that a
cross access and parking agreement is in place between the two properties.
(3) Parking
shall not be permitted in designated fire lanes, streets, driveways,
aisles or where otherwise prohibited by Title 39 of the New Jersey
Statutes.
(4) No
parking shall be permitted in any buffer area.
(5) Parking
stalls shall be a minimum of nine feet by 18 feet when set at ninety-degree
angles. Parking stalls shall be 10 feet by 18 feet when shopping carts
are provided for the use.
(6) Parking
for the handicapped shall be designed in accordance with application
design standards at a ratio of one handicapped space for each 25 parking
spaces. Each parking lot must have at least one handicap-accessible
space.
(7) Landscaped
islands, containing ground cover and shrubs, shall be provided at
the end of each parking row and shade trees shall be planted at forty-foot
intervals around the perimeter of parking areas.
(8) The
following setbacks shall apply to parking areas other than residential
driveways:
(a) Parking may not be closer than 10 feet to the right-of-way line.
(b) Parking must be set back a minimum of five feet from side and rear
lot lines that abut a nonresidential property, except that when there
is shared parking, the parking areas on adjacent lots may be connected.
(c) Parking must be set back a minimum of 10 feet from an abutting residential
property.
B. Loading and service areas.
(1) Adequate
areas must be provided for all nonresidential uses (and for multifamily
uses when needed) for unloading of delivery trucks, refuse collection,
fuel fire and other service vehicles.
(2) Loading
areas may not be located in a front yard and may not be located in
a public street.
(3) Loading
areas shall have a minimum clearance of 14 feet and shall be a minimum
of 10 feet wide by 35 feet long.
(4) At
least one loading space shall be provided for each nonresidential
use, unless the use is less than 5,000 square feet and sufficient
evidence can be provided that a loading space will not be needed based
on the operations of the site.
C. Driveways.
(1) Driveways
shall be a minimum of 12 feet wide for one-way and 24 feet wide for
two-way traffic and may not be any more than 40 feet in width.
(2) All
parking lots and driveways must be surfaced and paved in accordance
with Borough standards.
(3) For
nonresidential uses, no driveway edge shall be closer than 100 feet
to an intersection or closer than 20 feet to a property line.
D. No commercial vehicle parked for the purposes of advertising
or display shall remain out of doors in any district for more than
48 consecutive hours. This does not include commercial vehicles with
simple lettering identifying the name of a commercial business, where
letters are no greater than six inches and there are no more than
four lines of text.
[Amended 11-23-2010 by Ord. No. 2010-07]
A. Applicability. The provisions of this section shall apply to the
construction, erection, alteration, use, type, number, location, size,
design, and maintenance of all signs. This section is intended to
regulate and control signs and their placement and construction throughout
the Borough of Clementon. Each site plan or subdivision application
shall include, where necessary, a sign plan showing the specific design,
location, size, height, construction and illumination of proposed
signs in accordance with the regulations within this chapter. Sign
permits are also required when a sign is proposed not in conjunction
with a site plan or subdivision application.
B. Purpose and intent. The purpose of the sign regulations is to provide
a legal framework for a comprehensive and balanced system of signage
that will preserve the right of free speech and expression, provide
an easy and pleasant communication between people and the built environment,
protect and enhance the scenic qualities of the Borough, and avoid
visual clutter that is potentially harmful to the character of the
community, the aesthetics of the Borough, and potentially unsafe for
motorists and pedestrians. The sign regulations are intended to minimize
the potential for safety hazards, create a more productive, enterprising
and professional business atmosphere, and to enhance the architectural
and planned character of each zoning district.
C. Definitions. The definitions in section §
298-3 apply.
D. General regulations and requirements.
(1) Any sign hereafter erected in Clementon Borough which is exposed
to public view shall conform with the provisions of this section and
any other ordinance or regulation of Clementon Borough, Camden County,
or the state or federal government relating to the erection, alteration
or maintenance of signs. In the event of conflicting regulations,
the most restrictive regulation shall prevail. Signs shall be considered
accessory uses in all zoning districts when placed in conformance
with the provisions of this section.
(2) No sign other than exempt signs shall be erected without first obtaining
a sign permit from the Zoning Officer. Permit applications for signs
larger than two square feet in area shall be accompanied by a plan,
drawn to scale, showing details of the sign, its size, and its location
on the building or lot. A color photograph of each existing sign on
the property shall be submitted with the permit application. Fees
for sign permits shall be paid in accordance with a fee schedule adopted
by the Borough Council.
(3) All signs, flags, and banners as provided for in these regulations
shall be kept in a proper state of repair, in accordance with the
Uniform Construction Code and other pertinent regulations. Signs that
fall into a state of disrepair so as to become unsightly or to pose
a threat to public safety will receive a warning via certified mail
from the Zoning Officer, and if after 30 days it is not removed it
may be removed by the Borough at the owner's expense.
(4) Nonconforming signs which are structurally altered, relocated or
replaced shall comply with the provisions of this section. A change
in copy is not an alteration or replacement in accordance with this
section. Nonconforming signs must be maintained in good condition.
If the use of a nonconforming sign ceases for a period of more than
180 days or if the premises upon which the nonconforming sign is located
is abandoned, the nonconforming sign must be removed or replaced with
a conforming sign.
(5) No sign other than official traffic or other similar official signs
shall be erected within or project over the right-of-way of any public
street or sidewalk except as provided herein.
(6) Signs shall not be located at the intersection of any streets within
the triangular area formed by the right-of-way lines and a line connecting
them at points 25 feet from their intersection. No sign may impede
the safe vision of motorists and pedestrians or otherwise endanger
their safety.
(7) Exempt signs. The following signs are exempt from the need to secure
permits:
(a)
Signs required by law/ government signs.
(b)
Any sign or graphic integrated into or on a coin-operated machine,
vending machine, gas pump or telephone booth.
(c)
Any sign carried by a person.
(d)
Decorations for any officially recognized holiday, provided
they do not create a fire or traffic hazard and provided that the
decorations are removed within 30 days after the holiday.
(e)
Political signs associated with an election or referendum, provided
that such signs are on private property and are removed within seven
days after the day of voting.
(f)
Temporary yard or garage sale signs, provided that such signs
are erected on private property, are no more than four square feet
in area, are erected no more than seven days before the sale, and
are removed within 24 hours after the sale.
(g)
Temporary real estate signs on the lot on which the real estate
for rent or for sale is located shall be limited to one per lot frontage.
The signs may not be more than four square feet and four feet high
for residential property and eight square feet and six feet high for
commercial property. They must be removed within 14 days of the sale
or rental of the property. Open-house signs are also permitted, but
only on the day of the open house and not within the public right-of-way.
(h)
Temporary "Grand Opening" signs are permitted for an occupant
of a shopping center or other single-use or multi-use commercial building.
The sign may not exceed 20 square feet and may not be displayed for
more then two weeks out of a calendar year. The sign must comply with
all requirements to protect the public health and safety.
(i)
Temporary (30 days or less) banners advertising special events
sponsored by or held by the Borough, county, school district, fire
department, or the like.
(j)
Temporary signs may be erected for residential developments
or commercial sites that are under construction. The temporary sign
must meet the setback and size requirements for the zone and may not
be installed until construction has commenced. The sign must be removed
within one year or upon installation of the permanent signs.
(k)
American, state, county and borough flags.
(m)
Directional signs less than two square feet in area that do
not contain any advertising.
(8) Illuminated signs in residential zoning districts and in all districts
when the lot is immediately adjacent (including directly across a
street) to a residential district must be turned off between the hours
of 10:00 p.m. and 6:00 a.m. This does not apply to residential name
plates.
(9) All ground and freestanding signs must be a minimum of 50 feet from
the nearest other sign.
(10)
Architectural details may extend up to 12 inches on the sides
and top of the sign. For monument or ground signs, the architectural
base may be up to 30 inches above grade. More expansive walls or architectural
elements require site plan approval.
(11)
Wall signs shall be attached to the face of the building in
a plane parallel to such face and projecting not more than 12 inches
therefrom and shall not extend higher than the top of the parapet.
Wall signs shall not cover wholly or partially any wall opening, including
doors, fire escapes or windows, nor shall they extend beyond the ends
of the wall.
(12)
As described in Subsection
E below, shopping centers or developments with more than one use on a site are permitted one ground or freestanding sign per street frontage for the entire site, which may include tenant panels. Individual tenants or occupants may have wall or facade signs or other attached signs as described in Subsection
E below, but may not have individual ground or freestanding signs.
(13)
Ground or freestanding signs must have the address of the site
identified prominently on the sign.
(14)
The size of any sign shall be computed by multiplying its greatest
height by its greatest length, exclusive of supporting structures.
(15)
Signs advertising an establishment or use no longer in existence,
or a product no longer available, shall be removed within 14 days.
(16)
Each sign may have a principal message identifying the business
and the service offered. Additional advertising of products and services
is not permitted on the sign.
E. Schedule of sign use and bulk regulations. Signs shall be permitted
in each zoning district with the issuance of a zoning permit according
to the following use regulations and other applicable requirements
of this section.
(1) Permitted signs in residential districts.
Use or Function
|
Type of Sign Permitted
|
Total Number of Signs Permitted
|
Maximum Size
(square feet)
|
Maximum Height
(feet)
|
Minimum Setback*
(feet)
|
---|
Nameplate for residence
|
Ground, hanging, wall
|
1 per lot
|
1 1/2
|
3 for ground sign
|
10
|
No Solicitation
|
Wall
|
1 within 2 of front door
|
1
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
Permanent subdivision identification
|
Ground
|
1 per entrance
|
20 square
|
6
|
10
|
Institutional uses (school, municipal facilities, library, etc.),
public parks and playgrounds, religious uses, child-care centers
|
Ground or facade
|
1 per street frontage
|
24
|
8 for ground
|
10
|
NOTES:
* Minimum setback applies to all property lines.
|
(2) Permitted signs in nonresidential districts.
Zone
|
Use
|
Type of Sign
|
Total Number of Signs Permitted
|
Maximum Size
(square feet)
|
Maximum Height
(feet)
|
Minimum Setback
(feet)
|
---|
All nonresidential*
|
Any permitted
|
Facade or wall
|
1 per street frontage on principal structure
|
1 for each linear foot of building frontage or 40,
whichever is less
|
n/a (may not extend above roof)
|
Same as building
|
PO/R
|
Permitted office uses
|
Ground or monument
|
1 per street frontage
|
12
|
6
|
10
|
B-1, B-2, B-3, M-1
|
Any permitted but not part of a shopping center or
planned development
|
Freestanding, ground or monument
|
1 per street frontage
|
24
|
6
|
10
|
AP, B-1, B-2, B-3, M-1
|
Amusement park or shopping centers
|
Freestanding (or pole), ground, or monument
|
1 per street frontage
|
40
|
16 for freestanding; 8 for ground
|
10
|
All nonresidential
|
Any permitted
|
Window
|
|
No more than 25% of the window area
|
n/a
|
Same as building
|
Any nonresidential
|
Gasoline filling stations only
|
Canopy
|
1 per street frontage
|
21
|
Minimum clearance for vehicles, 10
|
Same as building
|
Any nonresidential
|
Only permitted if a wall sign is not proposed, and
only on the vertical hang
|
Awning
|
2 per street frontage
|
No more than 25% of the awning area and letters not
more than 5 inches
|
15
|
Same as building
|
NOTES:
*For the purposes of the sign regulations "any non-residential"
means all non-residential zones including those residential zoning
district in which non-residential uses are permitted as a conditional
use.
|
F. Design regulations.
(1) A total increase in size and height of up to 10% may be allowed for
monument or ground signs that are designed with carved or sandblasted
copy and borders.
(2) Freestanding and ground signs shall have a landscaped area around
the base. The landscaped area shall be a minimum of 1.5 times the
area of the sign. For example, a twenty-four-square-foot sign must
have a minimum thirty-six-square-foot landscaped area at the base.
The landscaping should include evergreen shrubs and ground cover and
seasonal flowers.
(3) There should be a consistent sign design theme throughout a particular
project. The design theme should include style of lettering, illumination,
color, height, construction material, size, and type of pole or structure.
Color of letters and background should be carefully considered in
relation to the color and material of the buildings and where the
signs are proposed to be located. Signs should be a subordinate feature
of the plan relative to the principal structure. The design of a sign
must be integrated into the design of the building to which it relates.
Adjacent property owners should also seek harmony in design with the
neighboring properties.
(4) Signs must be located on a lot so that they are not within the public-right-of-way
and do not interfere with sight distances at street intersections
or ingress and egress points to a lot. Signs intended to be seen from
a vehicle should be perpendicular to the line of travel, while signs
designed to be read by pedestrians can be parallel with walkways.
(5) Sign lettering. The standard letter height for signs is a letter
size of two inches plus one additional inch for each 25 feet of viewing
distance. A sign designed to be read from 100 feet away should have
letters of at least sixinches.
(6) Illumination. Signs may be illuminated internally or from an outside
source directed at the sign from above and shielded so as not to create
glare or unnecessary light pollution.
G. Prohibited signs. Any other provisions of this section notwithstanding,
the following signs shall be prohibited in all zoning districts unless
otherwise specified:
(1) Signs which contain or are an imitation of an official traffic signal
or hide from view any traffic street signal or sign or that have any
characteristics that are likely to confuse or dangerously distract
the attention of the operator of a motor vehicle operator.
(2) Signs which are designed to move, either by mechanical or other means.
(3) Signs which contain or consist of banners, posters, pennant ribbons,
streamers, strings of light bulbs, spinners, or other similarly moving
devices. (This does not include permitted flags.)
(4) Signs which flash or scroll, except for time and temperature indicator.
(5) Electronic message boards are only permitted for public institutions
such as schools, municipal buildings, fire halls, etc., and may not
change message more often than every 30 seconds. Such signs may only
have one color, may not be more than 24 square feet in area, may not
contain more than two lines of text, and must be approved by the Land
Use Board.
(6) Signs which emit odors or smoke or produce noise or sounds capable
of being heard even though the sounds produced are not understandable.
(7) Silhouetted or three-dimensional signs, e.g., signs lacking a background
and having letters, figures, or devices silhouetted against the sky
or other open space not a part of the sign, and/or signs in which
objects or representational devices are present in the round or other
than in a vertical plane.
(8) Any freestanding sign or any sign projecting from a building within
a triangular area bounded by the intersection of two right-of-way
lines and a line connecting points 30 feet from such intersection
along the right-of-way lines, whether existing or shown on the Master
Plan or in sight-clearance triangles specified in other regulations.
(9) Signs located or placed on any tree, telephone or utility pole or
light standard or upon rocks or other natural features.
(10)
Tubes of lighting or strings of lights may not outline the rooflines,
doors, windows or wall edges for advertising purposes. This provision
does not apply from Thanksgiving Day through January 25 (during the
Christmas season).
(11)
Portable signs, such as those on wheels.
(12)
Signs projecting above the roof or the main cornice line of
the building to which it is affixed.
[Amended 11-23-2010 by Ord. No. 2010-08]
A. Trash and recycling containers.
(1) Refuse and recycling containers and dumpsters for multifamily residential
and nonresidential uses must be contained in an enclosure and shielded
from the public view. Such areas may not be located in the front yard
area.
(2) All refuse and recycling containers shall be enclosed by a decorative
fence or masonry wall finished to match the principal structure, a
minimum of five feet high, with locking gates on the front.
(3) All refuse and recycling areas shall separate and provide distinct
containers for recyclable and nonrecyclable trash.
(4) All refuse and recycling areas shall be surrounded on three sides
by a five-foot-wide landscaped area.
(5) Where refuse disposal units are used for townhouse, condominium or
apartment dwellings, the disposal locations shall be conveniently
located between 25 and 150 feet from each building.
B. No front yard shall be used for open storage of portable pools, vehicles,
boats or any other equipment except for in driveways where the parking
of operable vehicles is permitted.
C. No side or rear yard shall be used for open storage of house trailers,
camp cars, vehicles or boats exceeding 16 feet in length.
D. Where permitted, outdoor storage areas must be screened from public
view by decorative fencing and/or evergreen landscaping.
Any use required by this chapter to be screened
shall be contained within a fence or wall six feet high or a visual
screen consisting of evergreen or evergreen-type hedge or shrubs,
spaced at intervals of not more than six feet, located and maintained
in good condition within 10 feet of the property line.
A. Height. The height limitations of this chapter shall
not apply to silos, church spires, belfries, cupolas and domes not
used for human occupancy, nor to chimneys, ventilators, skylights,
water tanks, similar features and necessary mechanical appurtenances
usually carried above the roof level. Such features, however, shall
be erected only to such height as is necessary to accomplish the purpose
they are to serve. The provisions of this chapter shall not apply
to prevent the erection above the building height limit of a parapet
wall or cornice for ornament (and without windows) extending above
such height limit not more than five feet. Public and quasi-public
buildings, schools, churches and other similar permitted uses shall
increase the front, rear and side yards by one foot for each foot
by which such building exceeds the height limit herein established
for such zone in which it is located, and further provided that in
no case shall any building have a height greater than 50 feet unless
explicitly permitted by the schedules of this chapter.
B. In the case of irregularly shaped lots, the minimum
lot width specified in the schedule shall be measured at the rear
line of the required front yard area, provided that in no case shall
the frontage or the distance between side lot lines be reduced to
less than 50% of the minimum frontage requirements.
A. Barns, structures of temporary nature, tents and trailers
shall not be used within the confines of this Borough for sleeping
or dwelling purposes.
B. The use of any real property within the confines of
the Borough as a trailer camp shall be prohibited.
C. The use of any real property within the confines of
the Borough as a junkyard, dump or public or private use of that nature
shall be prohibited.
D. The use of any real property within the confines of
the Borough as a gravel pit, sand pit, topsoil or turf removal or
other similar surface stripping shall be prohibited.
E. No solid fence shall be permitted upon any land, and
no fence of any type of a height greater than four feet shall be permitted
without the approval of the Board of Adjustment.
F. Farm animals, such as horses, mules, ponies, hinnies, donkeys, cows,
llamas, alpacas, commercial hogs, emus, peacocks, geese, guinea hens
and roosters, excluding dogs and cats, potbelly pigs, goats, sheep,
ducks, chickens, rabbits and other small animals, are prohibited in
residential zones R-1, R-2 PO/R, A-P and R-5.
[Added 7-12-2016 by Ord.
No. 2016-08; amended 5-5-2020 by Ord. No. 2020-09]
G. Pursuant to Section 31b of the New Jersey Cannabis
Regulatory, Enforcement Assistance, and Marketplace Modernization
Act (P.L. 2021, c. 16), Class 1 Cannabis Cultivator businesses, Class
2 Cannabis Manufacturer businesses, Class 3 Cannabis Wholesaler businesses,
and Class 4 Cannabis Distribution businesses are prohibited from operating
anywhere in the Borough of Clementon, except for the delivery of cannabis
items and related supplies by a licensed cannabis delivery service
based and initiated from a cannabis delivery service licensed location
outside of the Borough of Clementon.
[Added 5-5-2020 by Ord. No. 2020-09; amended 9-6-2022 by Ord. No. 2022-12]
H. Any use
not specifically permitted in a zone is prohibited.
[Added 10-24-2006 by Ord. No. 2006-19]
[Added 3-28-1983 by Ord. No. 83-3; amended 3-8-2005 by Ord. No. 2005-08]
Businesses or uses commonly known as those involved
in selling, exchanging, handling or otherwise disposing of used or
secondhand motor vehicles cannot be situated within 1,200 feet of
each other. These uses or those substantially similar thereto are
specifically prohibited from being situated within 1,200 feet of each
other, measured from the property line of said use.
[Added 11-12-2013 by Ord. No. 2013-16]
A. Purpose. The purpose of this section is to prevent the erection of
dwellings or other structures in areas unsuitable for building sites;
to minimize danger to public health by protecting watersheds; to discourage
erosion of soils by maintaining adequate foliage cover on hills; and
to promote the perpetuation of open space on hillsides. Slope areas
may be located within any zoning district in the Borough.
B. Designation of areas.
(1)
The steep slope areas shall include all areas in the Borough
in which the slope is 12% or more, as indicated on the current topographic
maps of the United States Geological Survey or on a recent topographical
survey prepared on behalf of any property owner. Slope calculation
shall be based on contour intervals of 10 feet in accordance with
standard engineering procedures.
(2)
Areas subject to steep slope and stream area restrictions shall
be indicated on a map maintained by the Borough and available to the
Zoning Officer and Land Use Administrator.
C. Uses permitted. The following uses are the only uses permitted in
areas subject to steep slope and stream area controls:
(1)
Buildings may be constructed in accordance with the regulations
of the applicable zoning district, after consideration of the conservation
design opportunities to minimize disturbance to the slope. No portion
of a building may be constructed on a slope where the grade exceeds
20%.
(2)
Tree farming, forestry and other agricultural uses, when conducted
in conformance with conservation practices that ensure adequate protection
against soil erosion.
(3)
Agriculture uses when conducted in conformance with conservation
practices to ensure sufficient protection against soil erosion.
D. Procedures.
(1)
Any person desiring to change or in any way modify an existing
use of land in an area subject to these controls shall supply a statement
to the Zoning Officer signifying his intentions that the intended
use of the land will be a use permitted by these regulations.
(2)
If such change in use involves the construction of any building,
the applicant shall, in addition, furnish the Zoning Officer with
a statement prepared by a registered civil engineer or surveyor to
the effect that the proposed building will not be erected on any land
where the percentage of grade exceeds 20%. No certificate of occupancy
shall be granted until the Zoning Officer has inspected the building
site and determined that the regulations imposed by this section have
been observed.
E. Special exemptions. Single-family residences or a portion thereof
may be constructed on a slope whose grade exceeds 20% if the building
is constructed in such a manner which does not disturb the existing
grade and natural soil conditions and where the applicant can prove
a hardship. Such a special exception will be considered a variance.
An applicant shall supply the Land Use Board with the following and
any other information deemed necessary.
(1)
Site plan of the property indicating existing grades, with contour
lines at two-foot intervals, and proposed grades;
(2)
Landscaping plan indicating proposed paved areas, storm drainage
facilities, and ground cover, as well as trees and ornamental shrub
locations;
(3)
Architectural plans, elevations and cross sections; and
(4)
A statement prepared by a registered architect stating an explanation
of the building methods to be used in overcoming foundation and other
structural problems created by slope conditions, preserving the natural
watersheds, and preventing soil erosion.
[Added 11-12-2013 by Ord. No. 2013-16]
A. Purpose. It is the purpose of this section to require, as a part
of a development application for any site plan, major subdivision,
general development, planned unit development or planned residential
open space development or any new type of development approval or
classification hereinafter authorized to be undertaken in the Borough
of Clementon, the submission of an environmental impact statement.
The purpose of requiring such a statement is to assist the Land Use
Board and its consultants in assessing the impact of a proposed project
upon the local and regional environment, particularly with respect
to water and air resources, pollution of all kinds, topography, drainage,
waste disposal, wildlife habitat and the landscape. No application
for development shall be approved unless it has been affirmatively
determined that the proposed project will not result in a significant
adverse impact to the environments, has been conceived of and designed
in a way that will not impair natural processes and will not place
disproportionate excessive demand upon the total resources available
to the project site and the impact area.
B. Filing and review of environmental impact statement.
(1)
Each applicant for approval with respect to any site plan, major
subdivision, general development, planned unit development or planned
residential open space development or any new type of development
shall file 18 copies of the environmental impact statement, together
with the original application. Upon application by an applicant for
minor site plan approval, the Planning Board or Zoning Board of Adjustment
may waive the requirement for submission of an environmental impact
statement or modify or reduce the requirements of the environmental
impact statement as circumstances warrant. No environmental impact
statement shall be required for a minor subdivision.
(2)
The Land Use Board shall examine the applicant's environmental
impact statement in detail, together with the comments from the Board's
professionals and the Environmental Commission. If such statement
is deemed to be lacking in sufficient detail or is incomplete in any
detail, the Board Secretary shall reject the development application
as being incorrectly filed; provided, however, that the applicant
shall be notified thereof within 45 days of submission of the application,
or it shall be deemed properly submitted.
(3)
The Borough Committee recognizes that providing information
is essential to the orderly growth and planning of the Borough, and
it further recognizes that the time lapse between preliminary or tentative
development approvals and final approvals often results in environmental
impact(s) which must be properly analyzed. It is therefore required
that the provisions of this article with respect to the submission
of an environmental impact statement shall apply to both applications
for preliminary or final approval where no environmental impact statement
has been previously submitted for any section or sections of a development
heretofore or hereafter receiving preliminary or tentative approval.
C. Contents of environmental impact statement.
(1)
The environmental impact statement shall contain the following
information:
(a)
Plan and description of development and proposed use of site.
A project description, which shall specify what proposed complete
with maps and drawings, said maps and drawings to be drawn at a minimum
scale of one inch equals 100 feet. The description shall include but
not be limited to the following:
[3] Depth to seasonally high-water table.
[8] Adjacent natural streams.
[9] Relationship to surrounding utilities.
[10] Method and schedule of construction.
[11] Solid waste generation and disposal.
[14] Pollution to be generated.
(b)
Inventory of existing environmental conditions on the site and
in the area affected by the proposed development, including the location
of testing, shall be provided and shall describe:
[1] Water quality, water supply hydrology, groundwater
level and condition.
[a] Surface water and groundwater studies for all applicants
shall include the analysis of the state standards for residential
cleanup and, without limitation, the following performed by a New
Jersey State certified laboratory facility: pH, nitrates, total suspended
solids, total phosphates, BOD, fecal coliform, chlorides, turbidity.
[b] Any applicant whose property lies in a watershed
affected by any upstream manufacturing or commercial establishment
or whose property itself is such a manufacturing or commercial establishment
shall include, in addition to the provisions hereinabove, the analysis
of the following: arsenic, cadmium, chromium, copper, iron, lead,
zinc, mercury.
[3] Noise characteristics and levels.
[5] Soils and properties thereof, including capabilities
and limitations.
[11] On-site and off-site sewerage systems, public
and private.
[12] Vegetation. A separate map of existing vegetation
shall be submitted with a scale identical to the development plan(s)
in accordance with the Tree Preservation Ordinance.
[13] Wildlife and wildlife habitat.
[15] Historical and archaeological sites.
(2)
The applicant may consult the Borough's Environmental Resources
Inventory for reference to the extent that the Borough's inventory
is relevant to the tract and affected area.
(3)
Assessment of the environmental impact of the project.
(a)
An assessment of the environmental impact of the project upon
the factors described hereinabove based on environmental data shall
be submitted and shall include an evaluation of water use, liquid
and solid waste disposal and the effects of liquid and solid waste
on the quality and quantity of surface water and groundwater. The
assessment shall include an evaluation of the compatibility in use
and scale of the project with employment, shopping, schools, roads,
open space and police and fire protection. All potential impacts are
to be defined to include but not be limited to:
[1] Impact on geological and soil stability.
[2] Impact on soil erodability.
[3] Impact on groundwater, aquifers and aquifer recharge
areas.
[4] Impact on streams and lands within or near the
site, whether man-made or natural.
[5] Impact on vegetation and wildlife.
[6] Displacement of families or individuals.
(b)
Damage to plant, tree and wildlife systems, displacement of
existing farms and increase in sedimentation and siltation should
be evaluated.
(c)
Any data submitted by the application with the application or
to other agencies including, but not limited to the New Jersey Department
of Environmental Protection, the Camden County Board of Health and
the Camden County Soil Conservation District, having jurisdiction
over one or more of the environmental elements specified in this section
shall be accepted by the Land Use Board as fulfilling the data requirements
for the EIS, to the extent applicable.
(d)
Evaluate any unusual environmental impacts and damages to natural
resources both on the tract and in the affected area.
(e)
Describe the steps to be taken to minimize environmental impacts
during construction and during operation with particular emphasis
upon air or water pollution. The description of steps to be taken
shall be accompanied by appropriate maps, schedules and other explanatory
data as may be needed to clarify and explain the actions to be taken.
(f)
Alternatives. The applicant should provide a statement of alternatives
to the proposed project, consistent with the zoning on the site, which
might avoid some or all of the unusual environmental effects of the
proposed project. The statement shall include the reasons for the
acceptability or nonacceptability of each alternative.
(g)
Water supply. A showing that an adequate potable water supply
is available and not threatened by nearby use of other land and the
following;
[1] Location and depth, insofar as such information
is practically available, of all private and public water supplies
within 200 feet of the site or in the affected area, whichever is
greater.
[2] Location, depth and adequacy of proposed water
supplies to serve the proposed project.
[3] Geologic description of subsurface conditions,
including expected groundwater yields, using published geologic reports
or a statement by a geologist.
(h)
A summary of stormwater impacts taken from the stormwater report.
(j)
Air pollution. A showing that emissions from point sources will
be in compliance with state and federal laws and regulation and a
description of the means by which dust will be controlled during construction.
(k)
A list of all licenses, permits and other approvals required
by municipal, county or state law and the status of each. Where wetlands
are present, a copy of the letter of interpretation and any general
permits must be submitted with the EIS.
(4)
Environmental criteria in reviewing applications for development.
(a)
The Land Use Board shall consider the impact of the applicant's
proposal upon all aspects of the environment, including but not limited
to: sewage disposal, water quality, water supply, wetlands, preservation
of trees and vegetation, protection of watercourses and wetlands,
protection of air resources, protection of aquifers, protection of
public lands and their uses and ecosystems, the presence of nuisance
factors, archeological factors.
(b)
The Board's determination upon any application for development
shall consider the environmental impacts affecting the subject property.
In reaching a conclusion on the acceptability of an environmental
impact or the protective measures to be taken, the Board shall accept
approvals obtained by the applicant from other agencies having jurisdiction
over one or more of the elements insofar as such approvals satisfactorily
address environmental impacts identified under this article, such
as the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection and Energy,
the Camden County Board of Health, the Camden County Soil Conservation
Service, and the Borough Environmental Commission.
[Added 5-17-2022 by Ord. No. 2022-08]
All fences erected in the Borough of Clementon, County of Camden
and State of New Jersey, shall be subject to the following regulations:
A. A fence
permit is hereby required for the installation of any fence in the
Borough of Clementon. The fee for each fence permit issued shall be
$75.
[Amended 11-21-2023 by Ord. No. 2023-17]
B. The
term "fence" shall include walls not part of other structures, but
shall not include any temporary plantings or enclosures intended for
weather protection. Except where specifically provided herein to the
contrary, none of the restrictions or provisions shall apply to living
fences.
C. No solid
fence shall be permitted within the front yard of any property.
D. No fence
higher than four feet shall be erected in any front yard in a residential
zone, and no fence exceeding six feet shall be permitted in the side
and rear yards without the approval of the Joint Land Use Board.
E. With
the exception of rear property lines, no fences higher than four feet
shall be erected along a public right-of-way. Any fence erected along
a public right-of-way shall be set back at least five feet from the
property line.
F. All
fences shall be erected with the face or finished side away from the
property and the structural side toward the interior of the property.
Fence gates shall have a latch and shall open into the property and
not onto the sidewalk, street or other adjacent property.
G. Any
use required to be screened shall be contained within a fence or wall
six feet high or a visual screen consisting of evergreen or evergreen-type
hedge or shrubs, spaced at intervals of not more than six feet, located
and maintained in good condition within 10 feet of the property line.
H. Fences
shall be erected in a manner as to permit the flow of natural drainage
and shall not cause surface water to be blocked or dammed to create
ponding.
I. Fences
higher than six feet, such as those required around a tennis court,
may be permitted in a residential zone by the Joint Land Use Board.
However, such a fence shall meet minimum side and rear yard requirements
for an accessory building. For fences required around a swimming pool,
elevation shall be a minimum of four feet above ground level.