A.Â
Accessory buildings as part of principal buildings.
(1)Â
Any accessory building attached to a principal building shall adhere
to the yard requirements of the particular district in which it is
located.
(2)Â
Porches, raised decks and accessory structures attached to the principal
building shall adhere to the yard requirements for the principal building.
B.Â
Location.
(1)Â
Swimming pools, tennis courts, other accessory structures not attached to the principal building, paved areas except driveways and other open air uses shall comply with § 176-118D, except that, if erected on a corner lot, the accessory building or structure shall be set back from any side street to comply with the setback line applying to the principal building for that side street.
(2)Â
In the case of a principal structure not a corner lot, but with more than one street frontage, accessory structures shall be set back from the rear lot line as prescribed in § 176-118D.
(3)Â
If a detached accessory building is located in the front yard, it
shall be set back at least the same distance from the street line
as required for the principal building.
(4)Â
Accessory buildings shall be on the same lot as the principal building.
The Zoning Official may approve an exception if an undeveloped lot
is contiguous, does not meet the minimum lot size standards for development,
and is in common ownership with the lot that contains the principal
building.
C.Â
Garages and carports in residential districts. Garages and carports
for not more than three vehicles may be constructed on a lot. Not
more than one commercial registered vehicle owned or used by the resident
shall be permitted in a residential zone. This provision shall not
be deemed to limit the number of commercial cars or trucks used in
conjunction with a permitted agricultural use. A residential garage
shall not be used for commercial purposes.
D.Â
Satellite dish antennas.
(1)Â
For purposes hereof, a "satellite dish antenna" is defined in § 176-9, and includes but is not limited to such structures commonly known as "home video earth stations," "satellite dishes" or "satellite earth stations."
(2)Â
Satellite dish antennas are hereby permitted only as an accessory
use to an otherwise permitted use in the Township, subject to the
following conditions:
(a)Â
There shall be only one satellite dish antenna per lot which
shall be a maximum height of 12 feet, with the exception of those
eligible for roof mounting.
(b)Â
A satellite dish antenna shall be ground mounted, except for
dishes less than one meter in diameter, which may be roof mounted.
(c)Â
A satellite dish antenna shall not be located in a front yard and the minimum setback from side and rear property lines shall be the same as for other accessory buildings and structures, in accordance with § 176-118D.
(d)Â
A satellite dish antenna shall be screened from view so that
the dish shall not be visible from any street or adjoining or adjacent
property at ground level.
(e)Â
Only one satellite dish antenna shall be permitted for each
apartment complex, townhouse complex, shopping center or other multifamily
or multitenant residential or nonresidential property or complex.
In the case of such property or complex, the one permitted satellite
dish antenna may be placed in any common area, subject to the other
provisions of this section and chapter.
(3)Â
No satellite dish antenna shall be constructed, erected or installed
except in conformance with all provisions of this chapter and only
after a zoning permit is obtained from the Zoning Official and a construction
permit is obtained from the Construction Official. The application
for the zoning permit shall include the following information:
(4)Â
Notwithstanding any other provision herein, the approving authority
shall not impose on, or prevent, reception of satellite delivered
signals by such antenna. The approving authority shall consider the
necessity of a direct "line of sight" between the satellite and the
antenna in its deliberations.
E.Â
Sustainable energy facilities.
[Added 9-12-2012 by Ord. No. 2012-13]
(1)Â
For purposes here, "sustainable energy facilities," as defined in § 176-9, include solar and small wind generating systems designed to:
(a)Â
Provide all or a portion of the electrical power requirements
to provide power for the principal use of the property where said
system is to be located and shall not be for the generation of power
for commercial purposes, although this provision shall not be interpreted
to prohibit the sale of excess power generated from time to time from
a small wind or solar energy system designed to meet the energy needs
of the principal use. For the purposes of this subsection, the sale
of excess power shall be limited so that in no event an energy system
is generating more energy for sale than what is otherwise necessary
to power the principal use on the property.
(b)Â
Small wind and solar energy systems shall only be permitted
as an accessory use on the same lot as the principal use. All energy
systems require approval from the Zoning Officer and Construction
Office prior to installation. Applications for an energy system shall
include information demonstrating compliance with the provisions of
this subsection. In the event that the Zoning Officer or Construction
Office does not believe the provisions of this subsection will be
satisfied, an applicant may request a variance from the Planning Board.[1]
(2)Â
General conditions.
(a)Â
Small wind and solar energy systems shall not be used for displaying
any advertising except for reasonable identification of the manufacturer
or operator of the system. In no case shall any identification be
visible from a property line.
(b)Â
The design of small wind or solar energy systems shall, to the
extent reasonably possible, use materials, colors, textures, screening
and landscaping that will blend the facility into the natural setting
and existing environment.
(c)Â
All applications for a small wind or solar energy system shall
limit all clearing and soil disturbance to that which is necessary
to accommodate the wind or solar energy system.
(d)Â
An applicant shall locate a small wind or solar energy system
so that tree removal is not required to the maximum extent practical.
(e)Â
The installation of a small wind or solar system shall conform
to the National Electric Code as adopted by the New Jersey Department
of Community Affairs.
(f)Â
The installation of a small wind or solar energy system is subject
to all of the local technical requirements for purveyor's interconnection.
(g)Â
Other provisions shall not apply to small wind and solar energy
systems with regard to height. Wind and solar energy systems shall
conform to the height restrictions provided in this subsection.
(3)Â
Small wind generating systems, designed as an accessory use, are
permitted in all zoning districts subject to the following requirements:
(a)Â
Minimum lot size: one acre, provided the lot size provides the
ability of the wind turbine system to conform to the bulk requirements
listed below.
(b)Â
Minimum setbacks. All wind turbines shall be set back from all
property lines a distance equal to 100% of the height of the structure,
including the blades.
(c)Â
Maximum height. The maximum height for a wind turbine shall
not exceed 80 feet on lots of one to three acres; on lots of three
acres or more the maximum height, including blades, shall be 150 feet
above the ground surface at its highest point.
(d)Â
Wind turbines shall not be permitted in a front yard.
(e)Â
No more than one wind turbine shall be permitted per property.
(f)Â
Wind turbines shall not be permitted as a rooftop installation.
(g)Â
Noise. All wind energy systems shall comply with the following:
[1]Â
In a residential use or zone, sound levels of the wind energy
system shall not exceed 55 dBA at a common property line or 50 dBA
at the closest occupied structure.
[2]Â
In all other cases at a common property line, sound levels of
the wind energy system shall not exceed 65 dBA.
[3]Â
These levels may be exceeded during short-term events such as
utility outages and/or severe windstorms.
[4]Â
Wind turbines shall be designed with an automatic brake or other
similar device to prevent overspeeding and excessive pressure on the
tower structure.
[5]Â
Wind energy systems shall not be artificially lighted, except
to the extent required by the FAA or other applicable authority.
[6]Â
All ground-mounted electrical and control equipment shall be
labeled and secured to prevent unauthorized access.
[7]Â
The tower shall be designed and installed so as not to provide
step bolts, a ladder or other publicly accessible means of climbing
the tower, for a minimum height of eight feet above the ground.
[8]Â
All moving parts of the wind energy system shall be a minimum
of 10 feet above ground level.
[9]Â
The blades on the wind energy system shall be constructed of
a corrosive-resistant material.
[10]Â
All guy wires or any part of the wind energy system
shall be located on the same lot as the energy system.
[11]Â
Tower construction shall be in accordance with
the appropriate sections of the Uniform Construction Code as adopted
by the State of New Jersey, and any future amendments and/or revisions
to same.
[12]Â
Electromagnetic interference (EMI). Wind energy
conversion system generators and alternators shall be filtered and/or
shielded so as to prevent the emission of radio frequency energy which
would cause any harmful interference with radio and/or television
broadcasting or reception and shall comply with the provisions of
Section 47 of the Federal Code of Regulations, Part 15, and subsequent
revisions governing said emissions.
[13]Â
The structural design shall be signed and sealed
by a professional engineer, licensed in the State of New Jersey, certifying
that the structural design complies with all of the standards set
forth for safety and stability in all applicable codes then in effect
in the State of New Jersey and all sections referred to hereinabove.
[14]Â
The design calculations shall include a soil boring
at the tower location and a soils analysis. If the soils of the site
are not satisfactory for the intended construction, the plans shall
be designed to eliminate or overcome the poor soil conditions.
(4)Â
Solar energy systems as accessory uses.
(a)Â
Solar panels shall be permitted as a rooftop installation in
any zoning district. The solar panels shall not exceed a height of
16 inches from the rooftop. In no event shall the placement of the
solar panels result in a total height, including the building and
solar panels, that exceeds the maximum height permitted for the principal
building in the zoning district.
(b)Â
Solar panels shall be permitted as ground arrays in any zoning
district in accordance with the following standards:
[1]Â
All ground arrays shall be set back a minimum distance of 20
feet from all property lines in a residential zoning district or in
conformance with the bulk standards for accessory structures in commercial
districts and be shielded from view to the maximum extent practicable
without compromising operational efficiency.
[2]Â
Ground arrays shall not be permitted in a front yard.
[3]Â
Ground arrays shall not occupy more than 30% of the designated
rear or side yard area of the subject lot.
[4]Â
Ground arrays shall be located so that any glare is minimized
on adjoining properties.
[5]Â
Ground arrays shall not exceed a height of 15 feet above the
natural ground surface.
(5)Â
Abandonment.
(a)Â
A small wind energy system or solar energy system that is out
of service for a continuous twelve-month period will be deemed to
have been abandoned.
(b)Â
The Zoning Officer may issue a notice of abandonment to the
owner. The notice shall be sent via regular and certified mail, return
receipt requested, to the owner of record.
(c)Â
The owner shall have the right to respond to the notice of abandonment
within 30 days from notice receipt date.
(d)Â
If the owner provides information that demonstrates the small
wind energy or solar energy system has not been abandoned, the Zoning
Officer shall withdraw the notice of abandonment and notify the owner
that the notice has been withdrawn.
(e)Â
Any abandoned system shall be removed at the owner's sole expense
within six months after the owner receives the notice of abandonment
from the Township. If the system is not removed within the six months
of receipt of notice from the Township notifying the owner of such
abandonment, the Township may remove the system as set forth below.
(f)Â
When an owner of a wind or solar energy system has been identified
to remove same and has not done so six months after receiving said
notice, then the Township may remove such system and place a lien
upon the property for the cost of the removal. If removed by the owner,
a demolition permit shall be obtained and the facility shall be removed.
Upon removal, the site shall be cleaned, restored and revegetated
to blend with the existing surrounding vegetation at the time of abandonment.
(6)Â
Limitations for principal solar energy systems/facilities.
[Added 3-13-2013 by Ord. No. 2013-1]
(a)Â
Solar energy systems or facilities shall be permitted in accordance
with the provisions of this chapter, provided that public service
infrastructure necessary to support the solar energy facility is available,
or can be provided without any off-site development in the Preservation
Area District or a forest area.
(b)Â
Should the development of new or expansion of existing on-site
or off-site infrastructure be necessary to accommodate a principal
solar energy system or facility, clearing shall be limited to that
which is necessary to accommodate the use in accordance with N.J.A.C.
7:50-6.23. New rights-of-way shall be limited to a maximum width of
20 feet, unless additional width is necessary to address specific
safety or reliability concerns.
A.Â
All agricultural activities and fish and wildlife management activities,
including the preparation of land and the planting, nurturing and
harvesting of crops, shall be carried out in accordance with recommended
management practices established for the particular agricultural activity
by the New Jersey Department of Agricultural, the Natural Resources
Conservation Service, and the New Jersey Agricultural Experimental
Station at Rutgers University.
B.Â
In the Agricultural District a resource conservation plan shall be submitted in accordance with § 176-108.
C.Â
Right to farm. All agricultural operations in the AG District shall
be exempt from any ordinance or regulation which inhibits efficient
crop production, including, but not limited to, ordinances and regulations
imposing time limits on operation, dust limits and odor restrictions,
except those ordinances and regulations that are strictly necessary
for the maintenance of public health.
All apartment, townhouse or condominium units must have central
heating and air-conditioning systems with independent controls for
each unit. If central air conditioning is not feasible, application
may be made to the Planning Board for approval of individual units.
A.Â
All development shall adhere to the relevant air quality standards
of N.J.A.C. 7:27 et seq. Adherence to the standards of this section
shall be determined by means of an air quality simulation model approved
by the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection pursuant
to N.J.A.C. 7:27-18.3.
B.Â
Any application for a proposed development that will generate substantial vehicular traffic or space heating emissions, in addition to the submission requirements of Article VII, shall submit a traffic study and air quality report in accordance with § 176-109, containing information relative to the impact of the proposed development on air quality, to ensure that all state ambient air quality standards in N.J.A.C. 7:27 et seq. for carbon monoxide shall not be exceeded at places of maximum concentration and at sensitive receptors.
C.Â
No smoke shall be emitted from any chimney or other source visible
gray greater than No. 1 on the Ringelmann Smoke Chart as published
by the U.S. Bureau of Mines. Smoke of a shade not darker than No.
2 on the Ringelmann Chart may be emitted for not more than four minutes
in any thirty-minute time period. These provisions, applicable to
visible gray smoke, also shall apply to visible smoke of a different
color, but with an equivalent apparent opacity.
D.Â
No emission of dust, dirt, fly ash, fumes, vapors and gases shall
be made which can cause any damage to health, animals or vegetation
or other forms of property or which can cause any noticeable soiling
at point. No emission of liquid or solid particles from any chimney,
etc., shall exceed 0.3 grains per cubic foot of the covering gas at
any point. For measurement of the amount of particles in gases resulting
from combustion, standard correction shall be applied to a stack temperature
of 500° and 50% excess air.
[Amended 9-12-2018 by Ord. No. 2018-24]
A.Â
Agricultural animals. Agricultural animals, as defined in § 176-9 of this chapter, with the exception of horses, may be kept and maintained only if the following conditions are met.
(1)Â
The lot on which the agricultural animals are to be located is at
least five acres in size.
(2)Â
The lot on which the agricultural animals are to be located is qualified,
pursuant to the Farmland Assessment Act of 1964 (N.J.S.A. 54:4-23.1
et seq.) as land actively devoted to agricultural use.
(3)Â
A farm management plan prepared in accordance with the guidelines
of the U.S. Department of Agricultural, Natural Resources Conservation
Service, is filed with the Township.
(4)Â
The use of the animals directly relates to the agricultural use for
which the farmland assessment has been granted.
(5)Â
Appropriate shelter, as defined in § 176-9 of this chapter, shall be provided for all agricultural animals.
(6)Â
No shipping container, crate, truck body, van or other similar enclosures
shall be utilized for sheltering or housing of the agricultural animals.
B.Â
Horses. Horses are permitted on lots in all zoning districts of one
acre or more, exclusive of buffers, easements and other specific restrictions,
if the following conditions are met:
C.Â
General requirements.
(1)Â
All animals and animal shelters and stables shall be kept in a clean
and sanitary condition and maintained to eliminate objectionable odors
and accumulation of flies. Bedding straw and manure shall be properly
disposed on a regular basis.
(2)Â
Fencing shall be provided and maintained to prevent the animals from leaving the premises in which they are maintained. All fences shall be constructed of material as defined in § 176-9 of this chapter and in such a manner as to prevent the escape of animals.
(3)Â
Shelters and stables for animals shall not be located closer than
50 feet to any property line. Shelters and stables for animals shall
not be located in a front yard.
(4)Â
Minimum stall, stable or shelter size for each horse shall be 100
square feet (10 feet by 10 feet).
(5)Â
Manure shall be removed daily from all interior shelters and stables.
Once manure is removed, it should be handled in one of the following
manners:
(a)Â
Used immediately by incorporation into the soil of a garden
or by spreading on neighboring fields. If manure is to spread on neighboring
fields, application is not to exceed 10 tons per acre or the latest
recommendations from the state's land grant college.
(b)Â
Incorporated into a composting procedure so that odors, flies
and other vermin do not create a problem. A manure pile does not qualify
as a composting procedure.
(c)Â
Stored in a rain-free, well-drained, screened and fly- and vermin-free
storage area located at least 50 feet or more from the property line
until the manure can be handled in any of the above alternatives.
(6)Â
All structures and stables shall meet existing building codes, and
all fencing shall meet existing codes.
No apartment, condominium or townhouse dwelling unit shall be
constructed unless the dwelling is part of an approved site plan and
unless the following minimum standards are met in addition to the
other applicable requirements of this chapter:
A.Â
General requirements.
(1)Â
Each complex of buildings shall have an architectural theme with
appropriate variations in design to provide attractiveness and compatibility
with adjacent land uses. Such variations in design shall result from
the use of landscaping and the orientation of buildings to the natural
features of the site and to other buildings, as well as from varying
unit widths, using different exterior materials, changing roof lines
and roof designs, varying building heights and changing window types,
shutters, doors, porches and exterior colors. Architectural elevations
shall be submitted to the Board for review and approval.
(2)Â
All dwelling units shall be connected to approved and functioning
water and sanitary sewer systems prior to the issuance of a certificate
of occupancy.
(3)Â
There shall be a parking area set aside on the same site as the building
and located within 150 feet of the nearest entrance of the building.
(4)Â
Dwelling units shall have access to a master television antenna system
and individual units may not erect individual external television
antennas.
(7)Â
Open space shall be set aside, with access from a public right-of-way
for the use and enjoyment of the residents. Such open space may be
dedicated to and accepted by the Township; put into common ownership
pursuant to the Condominium Act of 1970; or transferred to a homeowners'
or open space association representing the owners of the individual
lots. Nothing herein shall be construed to require the Township to
accept a dedication of property to the Township.
(8)Â
Each one-bedroom dwelling unit shall contain not less than 850 square
feet of usable space; each two-bedroom dwelling unit shall contain
not less than 1,000 square feet of usable space; each efficiency dwelling
unit shall contain not less than 600 square feet of usable space;
any dwelling unit having more than two-bedrooms shall require 200
additional square feet per additional bedroom. Such measurement may
not include stairwells, but may include halls.
(9)Â
Each dwelling unit shall be provided with 600 cubic feet of storage
space, which space may be located in the basement.
(10)Â
No floor area of a room having more than 1/2 of its height below
the average finished grade immediately adjacent to the structure shall
be accountable toward meeting the minimum floor area requirement for
dwelling units.
(11)Â
No commercial, industrial, business or professional use shall
be permitted in any apartment building, condominium or townhouse unless
approved by the Planning Board that such use is compatible with the
general residential nature of the building and compatible with the
appropriate use of adjoining lands.
C.Â
Townhouses.
(1)Â
No townhouse unit shall be less than 20 feet wide. No more than six
units per townhouse building shall be permitted.
(2)Â
The front facade of any structure shall not continue on the same
plane for a distance of more than the width of two adjacent dwelling
units. Offset between front facade planes shall be at least four feet
and not more than 20 feet.
(3)Â
Each dwelling unit shall consist of at least two stories.
(4)Â
Every dwelling unit shall have direct access to the private area
that is provided for that dwelling unit.
(5)Â
All units shall be offered, on a non-rental basis by the original
developer or sponsor, so that each individual dwelling unit, when
initially built, shall be for sale.
(6)Â
Under no circumstances shall the arrangement of townhouse lots require
the crossing of one lot in order to achieve access to another.
Bikeways shall be required at the Board's discretion, depending
on the probable volume of bicycle traffic, the site's location with
relation to other populated areas, or its location with respect to
any overall bike route planning adopted by the Township. Bicycle traffic
shall be separated from motor vehicle and pedestrian traffic as much
as possible.
A.Â
Bicycle lanes, where provided, shall be placed in the outside lane
of a roadway, adjacent to the curb or shoulder. When on-street parking
is permitted, the bicycle lane shall be between the parking lane and
the outer lane of moving vehicles. Lanes shall be delineated with
markings, preferably striping. Raised reflector or curbs shall not
be used.
B.Â
Dimensions and construction specifications of bicycle paths shall
be determined by the number and type of users and the location and
purpose of the bicycle path. A minimum of eight feet paved width should
be provided for two-way bicycle traffic and a five feet width for
one-way traffic.
C.Â
Bicycle lanes shall be four feet wide, or wide enough to allow safe
passage of bicycles and motorists.
D.Â
Bicycle-safe drainage grates shall be used in the construction of
all residential streets.
Block length and width, or acreage within bounding roads, shall
be designed to accommodate density and bulk requirements of a particular
zoning district and to provide for convenient access, circulation
and control. When an application involves the creation of new blocks
and lots, it will not be deemed complete unless the blocks and lots
shown on any subdivision or site plan have been certified true and
correct by the Township Tax Assessor in writing.
A.Â
Function and materials. Buffering shall provide a year round visual screen in order to minimize adverse impacts from a site on an adjacent property or from adjacent areas. It may consist of fencing, a mixture of deciduous trees and evergreens, berms, rocks, boulders, mounds, or combinations to achieve the stated objectives. Any required landscaping in a buffer area shall comply with the vegetation standards specified in § 176-72.
B.Â
When required.
(1)Â
Buffering shall be required when topographical or other barriers
do not provide reasonable screening and when the Planning Board determines
there is a need to shield the site from adjacent properties and to
minimize adverse impacts, such as incompatible land uses, noise, glaring
light, and traffic. No drainage basin shall be located within the
required landscaped portion of any buffer area. In small lot developments,
when building design and placement do not provide privacy, the Planning
Board may require landscaping, fences, or walls to ensure privacy
and screen dwelling units.
(2)Â
Where required, buffers shall be measured from side and rear property
lines, excluding access driveways, and shall not be counted as part
of any required front yard area. Buffers may be counted as part of
any required side or rear yard area conditioned that no deviation
shall occur to the type, size and width of the buffer.
C.Â
Dimensions.
(1)Â
Where more intensive land uses abut less intensive uses a landscaped
buffer strip of 50 feet, but not to exceed 10% of the lot area, in
width shall be required.
(2)Â
Lots with rear yards abutting a street shall have a landscaped buffer
strip of 15 feet, but not to exceed 10% of the lot area. Fencing may
be placed in this buffer strip.
(3)Â
Garbage collection, recycling and utility areas, and loading and
unloading areas shall be screened around their perimeter by a landscaped
buffer strip a minimum of five feet wide. Such screening shall be
by an extension of the building, a fence, berm, wall, evergreen planting,
or combination thereof, and shall not be less than four feet in height.
(4)Â
Where residential subdivisions abut higher order streets, adjacent
lots should front on lower order streets, and a landscaped buffer
area shall be provided along the property line abutting the road.
The buffer strip shall be a minimum of 15 feet wide, but not exceed
10% of the lot area, and include both trees and shrubs.
(5)Â
Parking area perimeters shall be buffered from adjoining residential
uses or zones by twenty-five-foot-wide landscaped buffer areas that
include both trees and shrubs.
D.Â
Design. Arrangement of plantings in buffers shall provide maximum
protection to adjacent properties and avoid damage to existing plant
material. Possible arrangements include planting in parallel, serpentine,
or broken rows. If planted berms are used, the minimum top width shall
be four feet and the maximum side slope shall be 2:1.
E.Â
Planting specifications. Plant materials shall be sufficiently large
and planted in such a fashion that a screen at least eight feet in
height shall be produced within three growing seasons. All plantings
shall be installed according to accepted horticultural standards.
(1)Â
The preservation of natural wooded tracts shall be an integral part
of all site plans and subdivisions and may be calculated as part of
the required buffer area, provided that the growth is of a density
and the area is of a width to serve the purpose of a buffer.
(2)Â
Shrubs and hedges used in screen planting shall be at least three
feet in height when planted and shall be of such density to obscure,
throughout the full course of the year, the glare of automobile headlights
emitted from the premises.
(3)Â
Except for existing preserved or transplanted vegetation, evergreen
species shall be at least six feet in height at the time of planting.
Deciduous trees shall be at least 2Â 1/2 inches caliper and a
minimum of 10 feet in height at the time of planting.
(4)Â
Screen plantings shall be placed in accordance with § 176-60B and shall be no closer than 10 feet from any street or five feet from any interior property line at maturity.
(5)Â
All vegetation contained within a landscaped buffer shall be deed
restricted against removal, destruction or any modification other
than that normally required for maintenance.
F.Â
Maintenance. Plantings shall be watered regularly and in a manner
appropriate for the specific plant species through the first growing
season. Dead or dying plants shall be replaced by the developer or
owner during the next planting season. No buildings, structures, storage
of materials, or parking shall be permitted within the landscaped
buffer area; buffer areas shall be maintained and kept free of all
debris, rubbish, weeds, and tall grass.
G.Â
Scenic corridors.
(1)Â
No buildings shall be located within 200 feet of any river, lake,
pond, or stream.
(2)Â
All structures within 1,000 feet of the center line of the Mullica
River from Medford Road to Sandy Causeway Road shall be designed to
avoid visual impacts as viewed from the river.
(3)Â
No buildings shall be located within 200 feet of the center line
of any public paved road in the Preservation, Rural Residential and
Recreation/Conservation Districts, except for those roads which provide
for internal circulation within residentially developed areas.
(4)Â
No approval or permit shall be issued for development along the scenic
corridors as designated above, other than for establishments for the
sale of agricultural products, unless the applicant demonstrates that
all buildings are set back at least 200 feet from the center line
of the scenic corridor, except that:
(a)Â
If compliance with the two-hundred-foot setback is constrained by environmental or other physical considerations, such as wetlands or active agricultural operations, the building shall be set back as close to 200 feet as practical; provided, however, that the location of the building conforms to the requirements for wetlands as specified in § 176-103, and the site shall be landscaped to provide screening between the building and the corridor.
(b)Â
If an applicant for development approval demonstrates that more
than 50% of the existing development patterns of the corridor are
such that buildings are set back less than 200 feet within 1,000 feet
of the site proposed for development, then a setback shall be established
for the proposed development that is consistent with the established
development pattern, provided the site is landscaped to provide screening
between the building and the corridor.
H.Â
Screening.
(1)Â
No more than 10 automobiles, trucks or other motor vehicles, whether
or not they are in operating condition, shall be stored on any lot
unless such motor vehicles are adequately screened from adjacent residential
uses and scenic corridors. Where permitted, all vehicles not in operating
condition shall be stored only if the gasoline tanks of such vehicles
are drained. This section shall not apply to vehicles that are in
operating condition and maintained for agricultural purposes on an
agriculturally used parcel.
(2)Â
Each off-street parking lot area shall have a minimum area equivalent
to one parking space for every 30 spaces landscaped with approximately
1/2 of said area having shrubs no higher than three feet and the other
half having trees with branches no lower than seven feet. Such landscaped
areas shall be distributed throughout the parking area in order to
break the view of parked cars in a manner not impairing visibility.
All areas between the parking area(s) and the building(s) shall be
landscaped. Shade trees shall be planted at a rate of one tree per
five parking stalls.
A.Â
The capital improvement program in each year's annual municipal budget,
as mandated by N.J.S.A. 40A:4-43, is incorporated herein as the annual
capital improvement program for the Township.
B.Â
Where available, in the discretion of the Planning Board and subject to the requirements of § 176-28, in order to promote the public health, safety and welfare in potable water and safe water supply, all developments approved after the effective date of this chapter shall, where available, use public water in lieu of individual wells. If individual wells are used, they shall be a minimum of 100 feet in depth, unless the well penetrates an impermeable clay aquiclude, in this case the well shall be drilled and cased to at least 50 feet. All private wells shall be designed and installed in accordance with the standards of the Township, county or state agency having jurisdiction.
C.Â
In order to provide for sufficient residentially zoned property to be eligible for an increase in density to accommodate transferred development credits and to ensure sufficient revenues to provide for the repayment of Township obligations for capital improvements and infrastructure necessary to accommodate said increased densities; to promote compliance with the energy conservation standards in § 176-63; to regulate growth so development occurs on lands suitable for development based on analysis of the natural resource inventory and considering the cumulative impact on developable lands as a result of construction; to encourage the desired growth and densities only in areas where the Master Plan anticipates development and the growth of services to serve said development; and to achieve a sufficient variation in the quality and type of tax rebates among residential, commercial and industrial development to reduce the demand on various Township services, including schools occasioned by predominately residential development, the following standards shall apply with regard to public sewer:
(1)Â
Unless otherwise permitted by this chapter, no extension of the public
sewer system will be permitted outside the regional growth area of
the Township, and any extension shall be consistent with the latest
revision of the Waterford Township Wastewater Management Plan.
(3)Â
At the time of approval of any development proposed to utilize public
sewer, the Township Administrator, or his designee, in conjunction
with calculations to be supplied by the Township Engineer and the
Municipal Utilities Authority, shall provide the approving authority
an estimate of the then remaining sewer capacity and the effect of
approval of the development on the limitations established above.
The Township Committee shall monitor approvals utilizing public sewer
in accordance with the above limitations and may periodically revise
the allocations above based on actual experience with developments
proposed to be serviced by public sewer.
(4)Â
Provided that the design and performance standards of this chapter are met and provided further that the minimum lot size, density, open space and zoning requirements for the district in which the development is located are met, proposed developments utilizing public sewer may still be approved by the Board if the limitations specified in § 176-53C(2) hereinabove are exceeded, if a variance is applied for and granted by the Planning Board. The Board shall be guided by the goals set forth in this subsection when making said determination and, as long as the committed capacity is not exceeded, variances for this subsection shall be granted to residential developments that have increased densities by the utilization of PDCs.
A.Â
No person shall apply any herbicide to any road or public utility
right-of-way within the Township unless necessary to protect an adjacent
agricultural activity.
C.Â
All storage facilities for deicing chemicals shall be lined to prevent
leaking into the soil and shall be covered with an impermeable surface
that shields the facility from precipitation.
D.Â
In accordance with the CMP, no hazardous, toxic, chemical, petroleum
(including oil spill pollutants), septic or nuclear waste shall be
stored, discharged or disposed of on any land within the Township.
Liquid or dewatered sludge may only be applied as a part of a land
application program for agricultural purposes when also approved by
the NJDEP.
E.Â
No use, activity, operation or device concerned with the utilization
or storage of radioactive materials shall be established, modified,
constructed or used without there having first been obtained valid
permits and certificates from the Office of Radiation Protection,
New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection. Proof of compliance
with this requirement shall be the submission of duplicate copies
of said permits and certificates.
Local communication facilities, where permitted under Article XI, shall comply with the following conditions:
A.Â
There must be a demonstrated need for the facility to serve the local
communication needs of the Pinelands, including those related to public
health and safety, as well as a demonstrated need to locate the facility
in the Pinelands in order to provide adequate service to meet these
needs.
B.Â
The supporting structure shall be designed to accommodate the needs
of any other local communications provider which has identified a
need to locate a facility within an overlapping service area.
C.Â
The antenna shall utilize an existing communications or other suitable
structure to the extent practicable.
D.Â
If an existing communications or other suitable structure cannot
be utilized, the antenna and any necessary supporting structure shall
be located such that it:
(1)Â
Meets technical operating requirements;
(2)Â
Minimizes visual impacts as viewed from publicly dedicated roads
and highways and from other areas frequented by the public by, in
order of decreasing priority:
(3)Â
Avoids, to the maximum extent practicable, visual impacts as viewed
from any river, lake, pond, or stream.
(4)Â
Minimizes visual impacts from existing residential dwellings located on contiguous parcels through adherence to the buffer and setback requirements in § 176-52.
(5)Â
The antenna and any supporting structure does not exceed 200 feet
in height but, if of a lesser height, shall be designed so that its
height can be increased to 200 feet if necessary to accommodate other
local communications facilities in the future.
(6)Â
The location of any antenna shall not interfere with any air traffic
lane for Philadelphia International, Atlantic City International,
or any other airport within proximity.
A.Â
Applicability. All development in Waterford Township shall demonstrate
conformance to the design and performance standards of this article.
The streets, drainage, rights-of-way, school sites, public parks,
playgrounds and playfields, scenic areas, historic sites and flood
control basins shown on the Master Plan shall be considered in the
approval of all development. To the extent consistent with the reasonable
utilization of land, site design shall promote the conservation of
energy through the use of planning practices designed to reduce energy
consumption and to provide for maximum utilization of renewable energy
sources.
B.Â
Approvals required.
(1)Â
No use shall be made of any lands or buildings in the Township until
all required approvals are obtained through an application for development
for a subdivision, site plan, planned development, conditional use,
zoning variance or direction for the issuance of a permit pursuant
to N.J.S.A. 40:55D-34 or 40:55D-36, or until the applicant has obtained
written certification from the Zoning Official that the proposed use
is either an exempt site plan or exempt subdivision as defined in
this chapter or that no approvals are otherwise necessary.
(2)Â
No construction or other physical alteration of any lands or buildings in the Township shall be made without compliance with the preconditions to commencement of construction and the obtaining of all required permits required pursuant to Article II and the Uniform Construction Code. No use shall be made of any lands or buildings in the Township pending any appeal pursuant to § 176-18K and L.
(3)Â
No building or structure shall be erected, reconstructed, demolished, altered or restored, no use shall be made of any land, and no development shall be approved, unless the building, structure, use or development meets the design and performance standards specified in this chapter for all developments and the design and performance standards specified in this chapter for the specific type or class of use proposed, and meets the applicable zoning requirements specified in this chapter unless a zoning variance is granted in accordance with N.J.S.A. 40:55D-70 and § 176-105D.
(4)Â
In addition to each and every other approval requirement of this chapter, no person shall carry out any development until an application for such development has been submitted to the Commission and a certificate of filing has been issued by the Commission. This requirement shall not apply to the development of single-family homes on existing lots of record pursuant to § 176-14C or to those activities listed in § 176-14A(2).
C.Â
Planning studies. On occasion the Township Committee may authorize
the Planning Board to complete specialized planning studies in conjunction
with the Master Plan. Upon adoption of any such study into the Master
Plan by resolution of the Planning Board, the standards, goals and
recommendations of said planning study shall be considered by the
approving authority in evaluating any application for development
proposed for the area or zone covered by such studies, and the applicant
shall address such standards, goals and recommendations of the study
in the application for development.
D.Â
Character of the land. Land which the approving authority finds to
be in areas having severe or moderate soil characteristics, particularly
as the land relates to flooding, improper drainage, steep slopes soil
conditions, adverse topography or other features which can reasonably
be expected to be harmful to the health, safety and general welfare
of present or future inhabitants of the development and/or its surrounding
areas shall not be subdivided, and site plans shall not be approved
unless adequate and acceptable methods are formulated by the developer
to solve the problems by methods meeting the requirements of this
chapter.
E.Â
Plats straddling municipal boundaries. Whenever a development abuts
or crosses a municipal boundary, access to those lots within the Township
shall be from within the Township as the general rule. Whenever access
to a development is required across land in an adjoining municipality
as the exception, the approving authority shall require documentation
that such access is legally established and that the access road is
adequately improved, conforms to sound planning principles, and will
not create a hardship upon the furnishing of municipal services, such
as police and fire protection, snow removal, school bus service, and
trash collection.
A.Â
Residential dwelling units on 3.2 acre lots are permitted in the
Recreation/Conservation, Agricultural and Preservation Districts,
provided that:
(1)Â
The dwelling unit will be the principal residence of the property
owner or a member of the immediate family of the property owner;
(2)Â
The individual whose principal residence the dwelling unit will be
has not developed a dwelling unit under this section within the previous
five years; and
(3)Â
The parcel of land on which the dwelling is to be located has been
in continuous ownership since February 7, 1979, of the person whose
principal residence the dwelling unit will be, a member of that person's
immediate family, or a partnership or corporation in which members
of that person's immediate family collectively own more than a majority
interest in such partnership or corporation.
(4)Â
The person whose principal residence the dwelling unit will be has
resided in the Pinelands for at least five years and that person or
one or more members of that person's immediate family has resided
in the Pinelands for a total of at least 20 years.
B.Â
Residential dwelling units on lots of 1.0 acre are permitted in the
Recreation/Conservation, Agricultural and Preservation Districts,
provided that:
(2)Â
The lot to be developed existed as of February 8, 1979, or was created
as a result of an approval granted by the Pinelands Development Review
Board or by the Commission pursuant to the interim rules and regulations
prior to January 14, 1981.
(3)Â
The applicant qualifies for and receives a variance, from the Township, from the 3.2 acre lot size requirement set forth in § 176-57A above.
(4)Â
The applicant purchases and redeems 0.25 PDC.
(5)Â
Any PDCs allocated to the lot to be developed are reduced pursuant to § 176-15A(2)(c).
A.Â
Concrete curb and gutter, concrete curb, or bituminous concrete curb
shall be installed along every street within a development; at all
intersections with Township roads, state and county highways; where
stormwater velocities exceed the erosion velocities specified in the
"New Jersey Soil Erosion and Sediment Control" standards; and for
traffic channelization and control. The standard curb section to be
used shall not be more than 20 feet in length, with a scored joint
every 10 feet, and shall be set in accordance with approved lines
and grades.
B.Â
Where curbing is not required, edge definition and stabilization
shall be furnished for safety reasons, and to prevent pavement unraveling.
C.Â
Where drainage inlets are constructed but curbs are not required,
curbing must be provided at least 10 feet on each side of the inlet,
set back one foot from the extension of the pavement.
D.Â
Radial curbs shall be formed in an arc segment, in a smooth curve.
Chord segments are prohibited.
E.Â
All curbing shall be eight inches at the base by 18 inches in height
and six inches at the top with a six inches reveal. Concrete used
shall be Class B concrete having a twenty-eight-day compressive strength
of 4,500 pounds per square inch and shall be air entrained.
F.Â
Depressed curb ramps for the handicapped shall be installed at all
radii in accordance with the requirements of New Jersey Public Laws
Chapter 5, Sections 200 and 201, and requirements set forth in Title
23, United States Code, "Highways", Section 402, Paragraph (b)(I)(F).
[Amended 1-6-2007 by Ord. No. 2006-19]
A.Â
Scope and purpose.
(1)Â
Purpose.
(a)Â
It is hereby determined that:
[1]Â
Land development projects and associated disturbance of vegetation
and soil and changes in land cover, including increases in impervious
cover, alter the hydrologic response of local watersheds and increase
stormwater runoff rates and volumes. If inadequately or improperly
managed, this stormwater runoff can deplete groundwater resources
and increase flooding, stream channel erosion, and sediment transport
and deposition.
[2]Â
This stormwater runoff contributes to increased quantities of
waterborne pollutants.
[3]Â
Increases of stormwater runoff, soil erosion and nonpoint source
pollutants have occurred in the past as a result of land development,
and contribute to the degradation of the water resources of the Township
of Waterford.
[4]Â
All lands of the Township of Waterford lie within the Pinelands
Area, and therefore, development in the Township of Waterford is subject
to the requirements of the Pinelands Protection Act (N.J.S.A. 13:18A-1
et seq.) and the implementing regulations and minimum standards contained
in the Pinelands Comprehensive Management Plan (N.J.A.C. 7:50-1.1
et seq.) (CMP). The purpose and intent of these regulations and standards
is to promote orderly development of the Pinelands so as to preserve
and protect the significant and unique natural, ecological, agricultural,
archaeological, historical, scenic, cultural and recreational resources
of the Pinelands.
[5]Â
Pinelands Area resources are to be protected in accordance with
Pinelands Comprehensive Management Plan at N.J.A.C. 7:50 et seq.,
New Jersey's Stormwater Management Rules at N.J.A.C. 7:8-1.1 et seq.,
and New Jersey's surface water quality antidegradation policies contained
in the New Jersey Surface Water Quality Standards at N.J.A.C. 7:9B-1.1
et seq. Permitted uses shall maintain the ecological character and
quality of the Pinelands, including good water quality and natural
rates and volumes of flow.
[6]Â
Increased stormwater rates and volumes and the sediments and
pollutants associated with stormwater runoff from future development
projects within the Pinelands Area have the potential to adversely
affect the Township of Waterford's streams and water resources and
the streams and water resources of downstream municipalities.
[7]Â
Stormwater runoff, soil erosion and nonpoint source pollution
can be controlled and minimized through the regulation of stormwater
runoff from development sites.
[8]Â
It is in the public interest to regulate the discharge of stormwater runoff from major development projects, as defined in Subsection G of this section, conducted within the Pinelands Area, as provided in this section, in order to control and minimize increases in stormwater runoff rates and volumes, to maintain groundwater recharge, and to control and minimize soil erosion, stream channel erosion and nonpoint source pollution associated with stormwater runoff.
(b)Â
Therefore, it is the purpose of this section to establish minimum
stormwater management requirements and controls for major development,
consistent with the statewide stormwater requirements at N.J.A.C.
7:8, the regulations and standards contained in the Pinelands CMP,
and the provisions of the adopted Master Plan and land use ordinances
of the Township of Waterford.
(2)Â
Goals and techniques.
(a)Â
Through this section, the Township of Waterford has established
the following goals for stormwater control:
[1]Â
To reduce flood damage, including damage to life and property;
[2]Â
To minimize any increase in stormwater runoff from new development;
[3]Â
To reduce soil erosion from any development or construction
project;
[4]Â
To assure the adequacy of existing and proposed culverts and
bridges, and other in-stream structures;
[5]Â
To maintain groundwater recharge;
[6]Â
To minimize any increase in nonpoint pollution;
[7]Â
To maintain the integrity of stream channels for their biological
functions, as well as for drainage;
[8]Â
To restore, protect, maintain and enhance the quality of the
streams and water resources of the Township of Waterford and the ecological
character and quality of the Pinelands Area;
[9]Â
To minimize pollutants in stormwater runoff from new and existing
development in order to restore, protect, enhance and maintain the
chemical, physical and biological integrity of the surface and groundwaters
of the Township of Waterford, to protect public health and to enhance
the domestic, municipal, recreational, industrial and other uses of
water; and
[10]Â
To protect public safety through the proper design
and operation of stormwater management basins.
(b)Â
In order to achieve the goals for stormwater control set forth
in this section, the Township of Waterford has identified the following
management techniques:
[1]Â
Implementation of multiple stormwater management best management
practices (BMPs) may be necessary to achieve the performance standards
for stormwater runoff quantity and rate, groundwater recharge, erosion
control, and stormwater runoff quality established through this section.
[2]Â
Compliance with the stormwater runoff quantity and rate, groundwater
recharge, erosion control, and stormwater runoff quality standards
established through N.J.A.C. 7:8-1.1 et seq., and this section shall
be accomplished to the maximum extent practicable through the use
of nonstructural BMPs, before relying on structural BMPs. Nonstructural
BMPs are also known as low impact development (LID) techniques.
[3]Â
Nonstructural BMPs shall include both environmentally sensitive
site design and source controls that prevent pollutants from being
placed on the site or from being exposed to stormwater.
[4]Â
Source control plans shall be developed based upon physical
site conditions and the origin, nature and the anticipated quantity
or amount of potential pollutants.
[5]Â
Structural BMPs, where necessary, shall be integrated with nonstructural
stormwater management strategies and proper maintenance plans.
[6]Â
When using structural BMPs, multiple stormwater management measures,
smaller in size and distributed spatially throughout the land development
site, shall be used wherever possible to achieve the performance standards
for water quality, quantity and groundwater recharge established through
this section before relying on a single, larger stormwater management
measure to achieve these performance standards.
(3)Â
Applicability. This section shall apply to:
(a)Â
All site plans and subdivisions for major developments occurring
within the Pinelands Area that require preliminary or final site plan
or subdivision review; and
(b)Â
All major development projects undertaken by the Township of
Waterford.[1]
[1]
This clause is intended to provide consistency with DEP's
stormwater management requirements. As per normal practice, all development
within the Pinelands Area which is undertaken by a Pinelands Area
municipality shall comply with all of the requirements of the CMP.
(4)Â
Procedures. In addition to other development review procedures set forth in the Code of the Township of Waterford, major developments located within the Pinelands Area shall comply with the stormwater management requirements and specifications set forth in this section. New agricultural development that meets the definition of major development in Subsection G of this section shall be submitted to the appropriate Soil Conservation District for review and approval in accordance with the requirements of N.J.A.C. 7:8-5.4(b).
(5)Â
Compatibility with other permit and ordinance requirements.
(a)Â
Development approvals issued for subdivisions and site plans
pursuant to this section are to be considered an integral part of
development approvals under the subdivision and site plan review process
and do not relieve the applicant of the responsibility to secure required
permits or approvals for activities regulated by any other applicable
ordinance, code, rule, regulation, statute, act or other provision
of law.
(b)Â
In their interpretation and application, the provisions of this
section shall be held to be the minimum requirements for the promotion
of the public health, safety, and general welfare. This section is
not intended to interfere with, abrogate, or annul any other ordinances,
rule or regulation, statute, or other provision of law except that,
where any provision of this section imposes restrictions different
from those imposed by any other ordinance, rule or regulation, or
other provision of law, the more restrictive or stringent provisions
or higher standards shall control.
(c)Â
In the event that a regional stormwater management plan(s) is
prepared and formally adopted pursuant to N.J.A.C. 7:8-1.1 et seq.
for any drainage area(s) or watershed(s) of which the Township of
Waterford is a part, the stormwater provisions of such a plan(s) shall
be adopted by the Township of Waterford within one year of the adoption
of a regional stormwater management plan (RSWMP) as an amendment to
an Areawide Water Quality Management Plan. Local ordinances proposed
to implement the RSWMP shall be submitted to the Commission for certification
within six months of the adoption of the RSWMP per N.J.A.C. 7:8 and
the Pinelands CMP (N.J.A.C. 7:50).
B.Â
Requirements for a site development stormwater plan.
(1)Â
Submission of site development stormwater plan.
(a)Â
Whenever an applicant seeks municipal approval of a site development that is subject to this section, the applicant shall submit all of the required components of the checklist for the site development stormwater plan at § 176-59B(3) below as part of the applicant's application for subdivision or site plan approval. These required components are in addition to any other information required under any provisions of Chapter 176, Land Use, Development and Zoning, or by the Pinelands Commission pursuant to N.J.A.C. 7:50-1.1 et seq.
(b)Â
The applicant shall demonstrate that the site development project
meets the standards set forth in this section.
(c)Â
The applicant shall submit three copies of the materials listed in the checklist for site development stormwater plans in accordance with § 176-59C(3) of this chapter.
(2)Â
Site development stormwater plan approval. The applicant's site development
stormwater plan shall be reviewed as a part of the subdivision or
site plan review process by the municipal board or official from which
municipal approval is sought. That municipal board or official shall
consult the engineer retained by the Planning Board to determine if
all of the checklist requirements have been satisfied and to determine
if the project meets the standards set forth in this section.[2]
(3)Â
Checklist requirements. Any application for approval of a major development
shall include at least the following information. All required engineering
plans shall be submitted to the Township of Waterford and the Pinelands
Commission in CAD format 15 or higher, registered and rectified to
NJ State Plane Feet NAD 83 or Shape Format NJ State Plan Feet NAD
83, and all other documents shall be submitted in both paper and commonly
used electronic file formats such as PDF, word processing, database
or spreadsheet files. Three copies of each item shall be submitted.
(a)Â
Topographic base map. The applicant shall submit a topographic
base map of the site which extends a minimum of 300 feet beyond the
limits of the proposed development, at a scale of one inch equals
200 feet or greater, showing one-foot contour intervals. The map shall
indicate the following: existing surface water drainage, shorelines,
steep slopes, soils, highly erodible soils, perennial or intermittent
streams that drain into or upstream of any Category One or Pinelands
waters, wetlands and floodplains along with their appropriate buffer
strips, marshlands and other wetlands, pervious or vegetative surfaces,
existing surface and subsurface human-made structures, roads, bearing
and distances of property lines, and significant natural and man-made
features not otherwise shown. The Township of Waterford or the Pinelands
Commission may require upstream tributary drainage system information
as necessary.
(b)Â
Environmental site analysis. The applicant shall submit a written
description along with the drawings of the natural and human-made
features of the site and its environs. This description should include:
[1]Â
A discussion of environmentally critical areas, soil conditions,
slopes, wetlands, waterways and vegetation on the site. Particular
attention should be given to unique, unusual or environmentally sensitive
features and to those that provide particular opportunities for or
constraints on development; and
[2]Â
Detailed soil and other environmental conditions on the portion
of the site proposed for installation of any stormwater BMPs, including,
at a minimum: soils report based on on-site soil tests; locations
and spot elevations in plan view of test pits and permeability tests;
permeability test data and calculations; and any other required soil
data (e.g., mounding analyses results) correlated with location and
elevation of each test site; cross-section of proposed stormwater
BMP with side-by-side depiction of soil profile drawn to scale and
seasonal high water table elevation identified; and any other information
necessary to demonstrate the suitability of the specific proposed
structural and nonstructural stormwater management measures relative
to the environmental conditions on the portion(s) of the site proposed
for implementation of those measures.
(c)Â
Project description and site plan(s). The applicant shall submit
a map (or maps) at the scale of the topographical base map indicating
the location of existing and proposed buildings, roads, parking areas,
utilities, structural facilities for stormwater management and sediment
control, and other permanent structures. The map(s) shall also clearly
show areas where alterations will occur in the natural terrain and
cover, including lawns and other landscaping, and seasonal high groundwater
elevations. A written description of the site plan and justification
for proposed changes in natural conditions shall also be provided.
(d)Â
Land use planning and source control plan.
[1]Â
The applicant shall submit a detailed land use planning and source control plan which provides a description of how the site will be developed to meet the erosion control, groundwater recharge and stormwater runoff quantity and quality standards at § 176-59D through use of nonstructural or low-impact development techniques and source controls to the maximum extent practicable before relying on structural BMPs. The land use planning and source control plan shall include a detailed narrative and associated illustrative maps and/or plans that specifically address how each of the following nine nonstructural strategies identified in Subchapter 5 of the NJDEP Stormwater Management Rules (N.J.A.C. 7:8-5) and set forth below Subsection B(3)(d)[1][a] through [i] will be implemented to the maximum extent practicable to meet the standards at Subsection D of this section on the site. If one or more of the nine nonstructural strategies will not be implemented on the site, the applicant shall provide a detailed rationale establishing a basis for the contention that use of the strategy is not practicable on the site.
[a]Â
Protect areas that provide water quality benefits
or areas particularly susceptible to erosion and sediment loss;
[b]Â
Minimize impervious surfaces and break up or disconnect
the flow of runoff over impervious surfaces;
[c]Â
Maximize the protection of natural drainage features
and vegetation;
[d]Â
Minimize the decrease in the predevelopment time
of concentration;
[e]Â
Minimize land disturbance, including clearing and
grading;
[f]Â
Minimize soil compaction and all other soil disturbance;
[g]Â
Provide low-maintenance landscaping that provides
for the retention and planting of native plants and minimizes the
use of lawns, fertilizers and pesticides, in accordance with N.J.A.C.
7:50-6.24;
[h]Â
Provide vegetated open-channel conveyance systems
discharging into and through stable vegetated areas; and
[i]Â
Provide other source controls to prevent or minimize
the use or exposure of pollutants at the site in order to prevent
or minimize the release of those pollutants into stormwater runoff.
These source controls shall include, but are not limited to:
[i]Â
Site design features that help to prevent accumulation
of trash and debris in drainage systems;
[ii]Â
Site design features that help to prevent discharge
of trash and debris from drainage systems;
[iii]Â
Site design features that help to prevent and/or
contain spills or other harmful accumulations of pollutants at industrial
or commercial developments; and
[iv]Â
Applying fertilizer in accordance with the requirements
established under the Soil Erosion and Sediment Control Act, N.J.S.A.
4:24-39 et seq., and implementing rules, when establishing vegetation
after land disturbance.
[2]Â
For sites where stormwater will be generated from high pollutant loading areas or where stormwater will be exposed to source material, as defined in Subsection G of this section, the applicant shall also demonstrate in the land use planning and source control plan that the requirements of Subsection D have been met.
[3]Â
The use of nonstructural strategies to meet the performance standards in Subsection D of this section is not required for development sites creating less than one acre of disturbance. However, each application for major development and any other application where the Township of Waterford otherwise requires a landscaping plan shall contain a landscaping or revegetation plan in accordance with the CMP standards at N.J.A.C. 7:50-6.24(c). In addition, the applicant shall demonstrate that, at a minimum, existing trees and vegetation on the development site will be preserved and protected according to the minimum standards established by provisions of Chapter 176, Land Use, Development and Zoning, or by conditions of zoning or variance approval.
(e)Â
Stormwater management facilities map. The applicant shall submit
a map, at the same scale as the topographic base map, depicting the
following information:
[1]Â
The total area to be disturbed, paved and/or built upon, proposed
surface contours, land area to be occupied by the stormwater management
facilities and the type of vegetation thereon, and details of the
proposed plan to manage and dispose of stormwater; and
[2]Â
Details of all stormwater management facility designs, during
and after construction, including discharge provisions, discharge
capacity for each outlet at different levels of detention (if applicable)
and emergency spillway provisions with maximum discharge capacity
of each spillway.
(f)Â
Calculations (groundwater recharge and stormwater runoff rate, volume and quality). The applicant shall submit comprehensive hydrologic and hydraulic design calculations for the predevelopment and post-development conditions for the design storms specified in Subsection C. The standards for groundwater recharge and stormwater runoff rate, volume and quality required by Subsection D shall be met using the methods, calculations and assumptions provided in Subsection C.
(g)Â
Inspection, maintenance and repair plan. The applicant shall submit a detailed plan describing how the proposed stormwater management measure(s) shall meet the maintenance and repair requirements of Subsection F of this section. Said plan shall include, at a minimum, the following elements:
[1]Â
The frequency with which inspections will be made;
[2]Â
The specific maintenance tasks and requirements for each proposed
structural and nonstructural BMP;
[3]Â
The name, address and telephone number for the entity responsible
for implementation of the maintenance plan;
[4]Â
The reporting requirements; and
[5]Â
Copies of the inspection and maintenance reporting sheets.
(h)Â
Exception from submission requirements. An exception may be granted from submission of any of these required components [except Subsection B(3)(g) above, Inspection, maintenance, and repair plan] if its absence will not materially affect the review process. However, items required pursuant to the application requirements in the Pinelands CMP [N.J.A.C. 7:50-4.2(b)] shall be submitted to the NJ Pinelands Commission unless the Executive Director waives or modifies the application requirements.
C.Â
Methodologies for the calculation of stormwater runoff rate and volume,
stormwater runoff quality, and groundwater recharge.
(1)Â
Method of calculating stormwater runoff rate and volume.
(a)Â
In complying with the stormwater runoff quantity and rate standards in subsection D(2), the design engineer shall calculate the stormwater runoff rate and volume using the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) Runoff Equation, Runoff Curve Numbers, and Dimensionless Unit Hydrograph, as described in the NRCS National Engineering Handbook Part 630, Hydrology and Technical Release 55, Urban Hydrology for Small Watersheds, incorporated herein by reference, as amended and supplemented. Alternative methods of calculation may be utilized, provided such alternative methods are at least as protective as the NRCS methodology when considered on a regional stormwater management basis.
(b)Â
In calculating stormwater runoff using the NRCS methodology,
the design engineer shall separately calculate and then combine the
runoff volumes from pervious and directly connected impervious surfaces
within each drainage area within the parcel.
(c)Â
Calculation of stormwater runoff from unconnected impervious
surfaces shall be based, as applicable, upon the two-Step method described
in the current New Jersey Stormwater Best Management Practices Manual
or the NRCS methodology.
(d)Â
In calculating stormwater runoff using the NRCS methodology,
the design engineer shall use appropriate twenty-four-hour rainfall
depths as developed for the project site by the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration, available online at http://hdsc.nws.noaa.gov/hdsc/pfds/index.html.
(e)Â
When calculating stormwater runoff for predeveloped site conditions,
the design engineer shall use the following criteria:
[1]Â
When selecting or calculating runoff curve numbers (CNs) for
predeveloped project site conditions, the project site's land cover
shall be assumed to be woods in good condition. However, another land
cover may be used to calculate runoff coefficients if:
[a]Â
Such land cover has existed at the site or portion
thereof without interruption for at least five years immediately prior
to the time of application; and
[b]Â
The design engineer can document the character
and extent of such land cover through the use of photographs, affidavits,
and/or other acceptable land use records.
[2]Â
If more than one land cover has existed on the site during the
five years immediately prior to the time of application, the land
cover with the lowest runoff potential shall be used for the computations.
[3]Â
All predeveloped land covers shall be assumed to be in good
hydrologic condition and, if cultivated, shall be assumed to have
conservation treatment.
[4]Â
In calculating predeveloped site stormwater runoff, the design
engineer shall include the effects of all land features and structures,
such as ponds, wetlands, depressions, hedgerows, and culverts, that
affect predeveloped site stormwater runoff rates and/or volumes.
[5]Â
Where tailwater will affect the hydraulic performance of a stormwater
management measure, the design engineer shall include such effects
in the measure's design.
(2)Â
Method of calculating stormwater runoff quality.
(a)Â
In complying with the stormwater runoff quality standards in Subsection D(6)(a), the design engineer shall calculate the stormwater runoff rate and volume using the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) Runoff Equation, Runoff Curve Numbers, and Dimensionless Unit Hydrograph, as described in the NRCS National Engineering Handbook Part 630, Hydrology and Technical Release 55, Urban Hydrology for Small Watersheds, as amended and supplemented.
(b)Â
The design engineer shall also use the NJDEP Water Quality Design
Storm, which is 1.25 inches of rainfall falling in a nonlinear pattern
in two hours. Details of the water quality design storm are shown
in Table 1.
(c)Â
Calculation of runoff volumes, peak rates, and hydrographs for
the water quality design storm may take into account the implementation
of nonstructural and structural stormwater management measures.
Table 1: Water Quality Design Storm Distribution1
| ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Time
(minutes)
|
Cumulative Rainfall
(inches)
|
Time
(minutes)
|
Cumulative Rainfall
(inches)
| |
0
|
0.0000
|
65
|
0.8917
| |
5
|
0.0083
|
70
|
0.9917
| |
10
|
0.0166
|
75
|
1.0500
| |
15
|
0.0250
|
80
|
1.0840
| |
20
|
0.0500
|
85
|
1.1170
| |
25
|
0.0750
|
90
|
1.1500
| |
30
|
0.1000
|
95
|
1.1750
| |
35
|
0.1330
|
100
|
1.2000
| |
40
|
0.1660
|
105
|
1.2250
| |
45
|
0.2000
|
110
|
1.2334
| |
50
|
0.2583
|
115
|
1.2417
| |
55
|
0.3583
|
120
|
1.2500
| |
60
|
0.6250
|
1
|
Source: N.J.A.C. 7:8-5.5(a).
|
(d)Â
Total suspended solids (TSS) reduction calculations.
[1]Â
If more than one stormwater BMP in series is necessary to achieve
the required 80% TSS reduction for a site, the applicant shall utilize
the following formula to calculate TSS reduction:
R = A + B - (A x B)/100
|
Where:
| ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
R
|
=
|
Total TSS percent load removal from application of both BMPs;
| ||
A
|
=
|
The TSS percent removal rate applicable to the first BMP; and
| ||
B
|
=
|
The TSS percent removal rate applicable to the second BMP.
|
[2]Â
If there is more than one on-site drainage area, the 80% TSS
removal rate shall apply to each drainage area, unless the runoff
from the subareas converge on site, in which case the removal rate
can be demonstrated through a calculation using a weighted average.
(e)Â
TSS removal rates for stormwater BMPs.
[1]Â
For purposes of TSS reduction calculations, Table 2 presents the presumed removal rates for certain BMPs designed in accordance with the New Jersey BMP Manual. The BMP Manual may be obtained from the address identified in Subsection K or found on the NJDEP's website at www.njstormwater.org. TSS reduction shall be calculated based on the removal rates for the BMPs in Table 2.
[2]Â
Alternative stormwater management measures, removal rates and
methods of calculating removal rates may be used if the design engineer
provides documentation demonstrating the capability of these alternative
rates and methods to the Township of Waterford. Any alternative stormwater
management measure, removal rate or method of calculating the removal
rate shall be subject to approval by the Township of Waterford and
a copy shall be provided to the following:
[a]Â
The Division of Watershed Management, New Jersey
Department of Environmental Protection, PO Box 418, Trenton, NJ, 08625-0418;
and
[b]Â
The New Jersey Pinelands Commission, PO Box 7,
New Lisbon, NJ, 08064.
Table 2: Pollutant Removal Rates for BMPs1
| |||
---|---|---|---|
Best Management Practice
|
TSS Percent Removal Rate
|
Total Phosphorus Percent Removal Rate
|
Total Nitrogen Percent Removal Rate
|
Bioretention systems
|
90
|
60
|
30
|
Constructed stormwater wetland
|
90
|
50
|
30
|
Extended detention basin
|
40 to 60 (final rate based upon detention time; see New Jersey
BMP Manual, Ch. 9)
|
20
|
20
|
Infiltration basin
|
80
|
60
|
50
|
Manufactured treatment device
|
Pollutant removal rates as certified by NJDEP; see § 176-59C
|
Pollutant removal rates as certified by NJDEP; see § 176-59C
|
Pollutant removal rates as certified by NJDEP; see § 176-59C
|
Pervious paving systems
|
80 (porous paving)
|
60
|
50
|
80 (permeable pavers with storage bed)
| |||
0 - volume reduction only (permeable pavers without storage
bed)
|
0 - volume reduction only (permeable pavers without storage
bed)
|
0 - volume reduction only (permeable pavers without storage
bed)
| |
Sand filter
|
80
|
50
|
35
|
Vegetative filter strip (for filter strips with multiple vegetated
covers, the final TSS removal rate should be based upon a weighted
average of the adopted rates shown in Table 2, based upon the relative
flow lengths through each cover type)
|
60 (turf grass)
|
30
|
30
|
70 (native grasses, meadow and planted woods)
| |||
80 (indigenous woods)
| |||
Wet pond/retention basin
|
50 to 90 (final rate based upon pool volume and detention time;
see NJ BMP Manual)
|
50
|
30
|
1
|
Source: 7:8-5.5(c) and New Jersey BMP Manual Chapter 4.
|
(f)Â
Nutrient removal rates for stormwater BMPs. For purposes of post-development nutrient load reduction calculations, Table 2 presents the presumed removal rates for certain BMPs designed in accordance with the New Jersey BMP Manual. If alternative stormwater BMPs are proposed, the applicant shall demonstrate that the selected BMPs will achieve the nutrient removal standard required in Subsection D(6).
(3)Â
Methods of calculating groundwater recharge.
(a)Â
If complying with the groundwater recharge standards contained in Subsection D(3)(a)[1], the design engineer may calculate groundwater recharge in accordance with the New Jersey Groundwater Recharge Spreadsheet (NJGRS) computer program incorporated herein by reference as amended and supplemented. Information regarding the methodology is available in Subsection J(1) or from the New Jersey BMP Manual.
(b)Â
Alternative groundwater recharge calculation methods to meet
these requirements may be used upon approval by the Municipal Engineer.
(c)Â
If complying with the groundwater recharge standards contained in Subsection D(3)(a)[2], the design engineer shall:
[1]Â
Calculate stormwater runoff volumes in accordance with the USDA
Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) methodology, including
the NRCS Runoff Equation and Runoff Curve Numbers, as described in
the NRCS National Engineering Handbook Part 630, Hydrology and Technical
Release 55, Urban Hydrology for Small Watersheds, as amended and supplemented;
and
[2]Â
Use appropriate two-year, twenty-four-hour rainfall depths as
developed for the project site by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration, available online at http://hdsc.nws.noaa.gov/hdsc/pfds/index.html.
(d)Â
When calculating groundwater recharge or stormwater runoff for
predeveloped site conditions, the design engineer shall use the following
criteria:
[1]Â
When selecting land covers or calculating runoff curve numbers
(CNs) for predeveloped project site conditions, the project site's
land cover shall be assumed to be woods. However, another land cover
may be used to calculate runoff coefficients if:
[a]Â
Such land cover has existed at the site or portion
thereof without interruption for at least five years immediately prior
to the time of application; and
[b]Â
The design engineer can document the character
and extent of such land cover through the use of photographs, affidavits,
and/or other acceptable land use records.
[2]Â
If more than one land cover, other than woods, has existed on
the site during the five years immediately prior to the time of application,
the land cover with the lowest runoff potential (including woods)
shall be used for the computations.
[3]Â
All predeveloped land covers shall be assumed to be in good
hydrologic condition and, if cultivated, shall be assumed to have
conservation treatment.
D.Â
Stormwater management performance standards for major development.
(1)Â
Nonstructural stormwater management strategies.
(a)Â
To the maximum extent practicable, the performance standards in Subsection D for major development shall be met by incorporating the nine nonstructural strategies identified in Subchapter 5 of the NJ Stormwater Management Rules (N.J.A.C. 7:8-5), and set forth in Subsection B(3)(d)[1], into the design. The applicant shall identify within the land use planning and source control plan required by Subsection B(3)(d) of this section how each of the nine nonstructural measures will be incorporated into the design of the project to the maximum extent practicable.
(b)Â
If the applicant contends that it is not practical for engineering, environmental or safety reasons to incorporate any of the nine nonstructural strategies into the design of a particular project, the applicant shall provide a detailed rationale establishing a basis for the contention that use of the strategy is not practical on the site. This rationale shall be submitted in accordance with the checklist requirements established by Subsection B to the Township of Waterford. A determination by the Township of Waterford that this rationale is inadequate or without merit shall result in a denial of the application unless one of the following conditions are met:
[1]Â
The land use planning and source control plan is amended to
include a description of how all nine nonstructural measures will
be implemented on the development site, and the amended plan is approved
by the Township of Waterford;
[2]Â
The land use planning and source control plan is amended to provide an alternative nonstructural strategy or measure that is not included in the list of nine nonstructural measures, but still meets the performance standards in Subsection D, and the amended plan is approved by the Township of Waterford; or
[3]Â
The land use planning and source control plan is amended to
provide an adequate rationale for the contention that use of the particular
strategy is not practical on the site, and the amended plan is approved
by the Township of Waterford.
(c)Â
In addition to all other requirements of this section, each applicant shall demonstrate that, at a minimum, existing trees and vegetation on the development site will be preserved, protected and maintained according to the minimum standards established by provisions of Chapter 176, Land Use, Development and Zoning, or by conditions of zoning or variance approval. Existing trees and vegetation shall be protected during construction activities in accordance with the "Standard for Tree Protection During Construction" provided in the NJ State Soil Conservation Committee Standards for Soil Erosion and Sediment Control in New Jersey, which is incorporated herein by reference as amended and supplemented.
(d)Â
In addition to all other requirements of this section, each
application for major development, and any other application where
the Township of Waterford otherwise requires a landscaping plan, shall
contain a landscaping or revegetation plan in accordance with the
Pinelands CMP standards at N.J.A.C. 7:50-6.24(c).
(e)Â
Any land area used as a nonstructural stormwater management measure to meet the performance standards in Subsection D shall be dedicated to a government entity; shall be subjected to a conservation easement filed with the appropriate County Clerk's office; or shall be subjected to an equivalent form of restriction approved by the Township of Waterford that ensures that that measure or equivalent stormwater management measure is maintained in perpetuity, as detailed in Subsection F of this section.
(f)Â
Guidance for nonstructural stormwater management strategies is available in the New Jersey BMP Manual, which may be obtained from the address identified in Subsection K(1) or found on the NJDEP's website at www.njstormwater.org.
(g)Â
Exception for major development sites creating less than one acre of disturbance. The use of nonstructural strategies to meet the performance standards in Subsection D of this section is not required for major development creating less than one acre of disturbance. However, the following requirements shall be met:
[1]Â
Each application for major development and any other application
where the Township of Waterford otherwise requires a landscaping plan
shall contain a landscaping or revegetation plan prepared in accordance
with the Pinelands CMP standards [N.J.A.C. 7:50-6.24(c)];
[2]Â
Each applicant shall demonstrate that, at a minimum, existing trees and vegetation on the development site will be preserved and protected according to the minimum standards established by provisions of Chapter 176, Land Use, Development and Zoning, or by conditions of zoning or variance approval; and
[3]Â
Existing trees and vegetation shall be protected during construction
activities in accordance with the "Standard for Tree Protection During
Construction" provided in the NJ State Soil Conservation Committee
Standards for Soil Erosion and Sediment Control in New Jersey, which
is incorporated herein by reference as amended and supplemented.
(2)Â
Stormwater runoff quantity and rate standards.
(a)Â
There shall be no direct discharge of stormwater runoff from
any point or nonpoint source to any wetland, wetlands transition area
or surface water body. In addition, stormwater runoff shall not be
directed in such a way as to increase the volume and/or rate of discharge
into any surface water body from that which existed prior to development
of the site.
(b)Â
To the maximum extent practical, there shall be no direct discharge
of stormwater runoff onto farm fields so as to protect farm crops
from damage due to flooding, erosion and long-term saturation of cultivated
crops and cropland.
(c)Â
For all major developments, the total runoff volume generated
from the net increase in impervious surfaces by a ten-year, twenty-four-hour
storm shall be retained and infiltrated on site.
(d)Â
In addition, the design engineer, using the assumptions and factors for stormwater runoff and groundwater recharge calculations contained in Subsection C, shall either:
[1]Â
Demonstrate through hydrologic and hydraulic analysis that the
post-developed stormwater runoff hydrographs from the project site
for the two-, ten-, and one-hundred-year storms do not exceed, at
any point in time, the site's predeveloped runoff hydrographs for
the same storms;
[2]Â
Demonstrate through hydrologic and hydraulic analysis that under
post-developed site conditions:
[a]Â
There is no increase in predeveloped stormwater
runoff rates from the project site for the two-, ten-, and one-hundred-year
storms; and
[b]Â
Any increased stormwater runoff volume or change
in stormwater runoff timing for the two-, ten-, and one-hundred-year
storms will not increase flood damage at or downstream of the project
site. When performing this analysis for predeveloped site conditions,
all off-site development levels shall reflect existing conditions.
When performing this analysis for post-developed site conditions,
all off-site development levels shall reflect full development in
accordance with current zoning and land use ordinances; or
[3]Â
Demonstrate that the peak post-developed stormwater runoff rates
from the project site for the two-, ten-, and one-hundred-year storms
are 50%, 75% and 80%, respectively, of the site's peak predeveloped
stormwater runoff rates for the same storms. Peak outflow rates from
on-site stormwater measures for these storms shall be adjusted where
necessary to account for the discharge of increased stormwater runoff
rates and/or volumes from project site areas not controlled by the
on-site measures. These percentages do not have to be applied to those
portions of the project site that are not proposed for development
at the time of application, provided that such areas are:
(e)Â
In tidal flood hazard areas, a stormwater runoff quantity analysis in accordance with Subsection D(2)(d)[1], [2] and [3] above shall only be applied if the increased volume of stormwater runoff could increase flood damages below the point of discharge.
(3)Â
Groundwater recharge standards.
(a)Â
For all major developments, with the exception of those described in Subsection D(3)(d), below, the design engineer, using the assumptions and factors for stormwater runoff and groundwater recharge calculations contained in Subsection C, shall either:
[1]Â
Demonstrate through hydrologic and hydraulic analysis that the
post-developed project site maintains 100% of the site's predeveloped
average annual groundwater recharge volume; or
[2]Â
Demonstrate through hydrologic and hydraulic analysis that any
increase in the project site's stormwater runoff volume for the two-year,
twenty-four-hour storm from predeveloped to post-developed conditions
is infiltrated on site.
(b)Â
The design engineer shall assess the hydraulic impact on the
groundwater table and design the project site and all site groundwater
recharge measures so as to avoid adverse hydraulic impacts. Adverse
hydraulic impacts include, but are not limited to: raising the groundwater
table so as to cause surface ponding; flooding of basements and other
subsurface structures and areas; preventing a stormwater infiltration
basin from completely draining via infiltration within 72 hours of
a design storm event; and interference with the proper operation of
subsurface sewage disposal systems and other surface and subsurface
facilities in the vicinity of the groundwater recharge measure.
(c)Â
The standards for groundwater recharge required by this section shall be met using the methods, calculations and assumptions provided in Subsection C.
(d)Â
Exceptions.
[1]Â
The preceding groundwater recharge standards shall not apply
to sites that create less than one acre of disturbance.
[2]Â
The following types of stormwater shall not be recharged:
[a]Â
Stormwater from areas of high pollutant loading.
High pollutant loading areas in industrial and commercial developments
where solvents and/or petroleum products are loaded/unloaded, stored
or applied; areas where hazardous materials are expected to be present
in greater than reportable quantities as defined by the United States
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) at 40 CFR 302.4; areas recharge
would be inconsistent with department approved remedial action work
plan or landfill closure plan and areas with high risks for spills
of toxic materials, such as gas stations and vehicle maintenance facilities;
and
[b]Â
Industrial stormwater exposed to source material.
"Source material" means any material(s) or machinery, located at an
industrial facility that is directly or indirectly related to process,
manufacturing or other industrial activities, which could be a source
of pollutants in any industrials stormwater discharge to groundwater.
Source materials include, but are not limited to, raw materials; intermediate
products; final products; waste materials; by-products; industrial
machinery, fuels, and lubricants; solvents and detergents that are
related to process, manufacturing, or other industrial activities
that are exposed to stormwater.
(4)Â
Erosion control standards. The minimum design and performance standards
for erosion control are those established under the Soil Erosion and
Sediment Control Act, N.J.S.A. 4:24-39 et seq., and its implementing
regulations, N.J.A.C. 2:90-1.1 through 1.4.
(5)Â
Stormwater runoff quality standards.
(a)Â
There shall be no direct discharge of stormwater runoff from
any point or nonpoint source to any wetland, wetland transition area
or surface water body.
(b)Â
Stormwater management measures shall be designed to reduce the
total suspended solids (TSS) load in the stormwater runoff from the
post-developed site by 80% expressed as an annual average.
(c)Â
Stormwater management measures shall also be designed to reduce
the nutrient load in the stormwater runoff from the post-developed
site by the maximum extent practicable. In achieving this reduction,
the design of the development site shall include nonstructural and
structural stormwater management measures that optimize nutrient removal
while still achieving the groundwater recharge, runoff quantity and
rate, and TSS removal standards in this section.
(d)Â
The standards for stormwater runoff quality required by this section shall be met using the methods, calculations, assumptions and pollutant removal rates provided in Subsection C.
(e)Â
Exceptions.
(6)Â
Additional stormwater quality standards for high pollutant loading
areas and areas where stormwater runoff is exposed to source material.
(b)Â
For a major development in areas described in Subsection D(6)(a)[1] or [2] above, in addition to the infiltration requirements specified in Subsection D(2)(b) and the groundwater recharge requirements specified in Subsection D(3), the applicant shall demonstrate in the land use planning and source control plan required in Subsection B(3)(d) that the following requirements have been met:
[1]Â
The extent of the areas described in Subsection D(6)(a)[1] and [2] above have been minimized on the development site to the maximum extent practicable;
[2]Â
The stormwater runoff from the areas described in Subsection D(6)(a)[1] and [2] above is segregated to the maximum extent practicable from the stormwater runoff generated from the remainder of the site such that commingling of the stormwater runoff from the areas described in Subsection D(6)(a)[1] and [2] above and the remainder of the site will be minimized;
[3]Â
The amount of precipitation falling directly on the areas described in Subsection D(6)(a)[1] and [2] above is minimized to the maximum extent practicable by means of a canopy, roof or other similar structure that reduces the generation of stormwater runoff; and
[4]Â
The stormwater runoff from or commingled with the areas described in Subsection D(6)(a)[1] and [2] above for the water quality design storm, defined in Subsection C(2), Table 1, shall be subject to pretreatment by one or more of the following stormwater BMPs, designed in accordance with the New Jersey BMP Manual to provide 90% TSS removal:
[a]Â
Bioretention system;
[b]Â
Sand filter;
[c]Â
Wet ponds which shall be hydraulically disconnected
by a minimum of two feet of vertical separation from the seasonal
high water table and shall be designed to achieve a minimum 80% TSS
removal rate;
[d]Â
Constructed stormwater wetlands; and/or
[e]Â
Media filtration system manufactured treatment
device with a minimum 80% TSS removal as verified by the New Jersey
Corporation for Advanced Technology and as certified by NJDEP.
[5]Â
If the potential for contamination of stormwater runoff by petroleum products exists on site, prior to being conveyed to the pretreatment BMP required in Subsection D(4)(b)[4] above, the stormwater runoff from the areas described in Subsection D(6)(a)[1] and [2] above shall be conveyed through an oil/grease separator or other equivalent manufactured filtering device to remove the petroleum hydrocarbons. The applicant shall provide the reviewing agency with sufficient data to demonstrate acceptable performance of the device.
(7)Â
Threatened and endangered species and associated habitat standards.
Stormwater management measures shall address the impacts of the development
on habitat for threatened and endangered species, in accordance with
N.J.A.C. 7:8-5.2(c), 7:50-6.27, 7:50-6.33 and 7:50-6.34.
(8)Â
Exceptions and mitigation requirements.
(a)Â
Exceptions from strict compliance from the groundwater recharge,
stormwater runoff quantity, and stormwater runoff quality requirements
established by this section may be granted, at the discretion of the
Township of Waterford, and subject to approval by the Pinelands Commission,
provided that all of the following conditions are met:
[1]Â
The exception is consistent with that allowed by the Township
of Waterford;
[2]Â
The Township of Waterford has an adopted an effective municipal
stormwater management plan in accordance with N.J.A.C. 7:8-4.4, which
includes a mitigation plan in accordance with N.J.A.C. 7:8-4.2(c)11,
and is also certified by the Pinelands Commission. The mitigation
plan shall identify what measures are necessary to offset the deficit
created by granting the exception and the municipality shall submit
a written report to the county review agency and the NJDEP describing
the exception and the required mitigation. Guidance for developing
municipal stormwater management plans, including mitigation plans,
is available from the NJDEP, Division of Watershed Management, and
the New Jersey BMP Manual.
[3]Â
The applicant demonstrates that mitigation, in addition to the requirements of mitigation plan discussed in Subsection D(8)(a)[2] above, will be provided consistent with one of the following options:
[a]Â
Mitigation may be provided off site, but within
the Pinelands Area and within the same drainage area as the development
site, and shall meet or exceed the equivalent recharge, quality or
quantity performance standard which is lacking on the development
site due to the exception; or
[b]Â
In lieu of the required mitigation, a monetary
in lieu contribution may be provided by the applicant to the Township
of Waterford in accordance with the following:
[i]Â
The amount of the in lieu contribution shall be determined by
the Township of Waterford, but the maximum in lieu contribution required
shall be equivalent to the cost of implementing and maintaining the
stormwater management measure(s) for which the exception is granted;
[ii]Â
The in lieu contribution shall be used to fund an off-site stormwater control mitigation project(s) located within the Pinelands Area, within the same drainage area as the development site, and shall meet or exceed the equivalent recharge, quality or quantity performance standards which is lacking on the development site. Such mitigation project shall be identified by the Township of Waterford in the Township of Waterford's adopted municipal stormwater management plan. The stormwater control project to which the monetary contribution will be applied shall be identified by the Township of Waterford at the time the exception is granted. The applicant shall amend the project description and site plan required in Subsection B(3)(c) to incorporate a description of both the standards for which an on-site exception is being granted and of the selected off-site mitigation project.
[iii]Â
The Township of Waterford shall expend the in
lieu contribution to implement the selected off-site mitigation project
within five years from the date that payment is received. Should the
Township of Waterford fail to expend the in lieu contribution within
the required time frame, the mitigation option provided in Subsection
D(8)(a)[3][b] shall be void and the Township of Waterford shall be
prohibited from collecting in lieu contributions.
(b)Â
An exception from strict compliance granted in accordance with Subsection D(8)(a) above shall not constitute a waiver of strict compliance from the requirements of the Pinelands Comprehensive Management Plan at N.J.A.C. 7:50. An applicant should contact the Pinelands Commission to determine whether a waiver of strict compliance is also required in accordance with N.J.A.C. 7:50, Subchapter 4, Part V.
E.Â
Design, construction, and safety standards for structural stormwater
management measures.
(1)Â
General design and construction standards.
(a)Â
Structural stormwater management measures shall be designed
to meet the standards established in this subsection. These standards
have been developed to protect public safety, conserve natural features,
create an aesthetically pleasing site and promote proper on-site stormwater
management. Where directed by the Township of Waterford, the applicant
shall be required to retrofit any existing substandard basin directly
impacted by the proposed development in order to comply with the standards
outlined in this subsection.
(b)Â
The following structural stormwater management measures may
be utilized as part of a stormwater management system at a major land
development in the Pinelands, provided that the applicant demonstrates
that they are designed, constructed and maintained so as to meet the
standards and requirements established by this subsection. If alternative
stormwater management measures are proposed, the applicant shall demonstrate
that the selected measures will achieve the standards established
by this subsection.
[1]Â
Bioretention systems;
[2]Â
Constructed stormwater wetlands;
[3]Â
Extended detention basins;
[4]Â
Infiltration basins;
[5]Â
Vegetated filter strips;
[6]Â
Infiltration basins and trenches;
[7]Â
Wet ponds with suitable liners;
[8]Â
Pervious paving systems; and
[9]Â
Manufactured treatment devices, provided their pollutant removal
rates are verified by the New Jersey Corporation for Advanced Technology
and certified by the NJDEP.
(c)Â
Structural stormwater management measures shall be designed
to take into account the existing site conditions, including environmentally
critical areas, wetlands, flood-prone areas, slopes, depth to seasonal
high water table, soil type, permeability and texture, and drainage
area and drainage patterns.
(d)Â
Structural stormwater management measures shall be designed
and constructed to be strong, durable, and corrosion resistant (measures
that are consistent with the relevant portions of the residential
site improvement standards at N.J.A.C. 5:21-7.3, 7.4, and 7.8 shall
be deemed to meet this requirement); to minimize and facilitate maintenance
and repairs; and to ensure proper functioning.
(e)Â
For all stormwater management measures at a development site, each applicant shall submit a detailed inspection, maintenance and repair plan consistent with the requirements of Subsection E of this section.
(f)Â
To the maximum extent practicable, the design engineer shall
design structural stormwater management measures on the development
site in a manner that:
[1]Â
Limits site disturbance, maximizes stormwater management efficiencies,
and maintains or improves aesthetic conditions;
[2]Â
Utilizes multiple stormwater management measures, smaller in
size and distributed spatially throughout the land development site,
instead of a single larger structural stormwater management measure;
[3]Â
Incorporates pretreatment measures. Pretreatment can extend
the functional life and increase the pollutant removal capability
of a structural stormwater management measure. Pretreatment measures
may be designed in accordance with the New Jersey BMP Manual or other
sources approved by the Municipal Engineer.
(g)Â
Stormwater management basins shall be designed in a manner that
complements and mimics the existing natural landscape, including,
but not limited to, the following design strategies:
[1]Â
Use of natural, nonwetland wooded depressions for stormwater
runoff storage; and
[2]Â
Establishment of attractive landscaping in and around the basin
that mimics the existing vegetation and incorporates native Pinelands
plants, including, but not limited to, the species listed in N.J.A.C.
7:50-6.25 and 6.26.
(h)Â
Stormwater management basins shall be designed with gently sloping
sides. The maximum allowable basin side slope shall be five horizontal
to one vertical.
(i)Â
Guidance on the design and construction of structural stormwater
management measures may be found in the New Jersey BMP Manual. Other
guidance sources may also be used upon approval by the Municipal Engineer.
(j)Â
After all construction activities and required field testing
have been completed on the development site, as-built plans depicting
design and as-built elevations of all stormwater management measures
shall be prepared by a licensed land surveyor and submitted to the
Municipal Engineer. Based upon the Municipal Engineer's review of
the as-built plans, all corrections or remedial actions deemed by
the Municipal Engineer to be necessary due to the failure to comply
with the standards established by this section and/or any reasons
of public health or safety, shall be completed by the applicant. In
lieu of review by the Municipal Engineer, the Township of Waterford
reserves the right to engage a professional engineer to review the
as-built plans. The applicant shall pay all costs associated with
such review.
(2)Â
Design and construction standards for stormwater infiltration BMPs.
(a)Â
Stormwater infiltration BMPs, such as bioretention systems with
infiltration, dry wells, infiltration basins, pervious paving systems
with storage beds, and sand filters with infiltration, shall be designed,
constructed and maintained to completely drain the total runoff volume
generated by the basin's maximum design storm within 72 hours after
a storm event. Runoff storage for greater times can render the BMP
ineffective and may result in anaerobic conditions, odor and both
water quality and mosquito breeding problems.
(b)Â
Stormwater infiltration BMPs shall be designed, constructed
and maintained to provide a minimum separation of at least two feet
between the elevation of the lowest point of the bottom of the infiltration
BMP and the seasonal high water table.
(c)Â
A stormwater infiltration BMP shall be sited in suitable soils
verified by field testing to have permeability rates between one and
20 inches per hour. If such site soils do not exist or if the design
engineer demonstrates that it is not practical for engineering, environmental
or safety reasons to site the stormwater infiltration BMP(s) in such
soils, then the stormwater infiltration BMP(s) may be sited in soils
verified by field testing to have permeability rates in excess of
20 inches per hour, provided that a bioretention system, designed,
installed and maintained in accordance with the New Jersey BMP Manual,
is installed to meet one of the following conditions:
[1]Â
The bioretention system is constructed as a separate measure
designed to provide pretreatment of stormwater and to convey the pretreated
stormwater into the infiltration BMP; or
[2]Â
The bioretention system is integrated into and made part of
the infiltration BMP and, as such, does not require an underdrain
system. If this option is selected, the infiltration BMP shall be
designed and constructed so that the maximum water depth in the bioretention
system portion of the BMP during treatment of the stormwater quality
design storm is 12 inches in accordance with the New Jersey BMP Manual.
(d)Â
The minimum design permeability rate for the soil within a BMP that relies on infiltration shall be 0.5 inch per hour. A factor of safety of two shall be applied to the soil's field-tested permeability rate to determine the soil's design permeability rate. For example, if the field-tested permeability rate of the soil is four inches per hour, its design permeability rate would be two inches per hour. The minimum design permeability rate for the soil within a stormwater infiltration basin shall also be sufficient to achieve the minimum seventy-two-hour drain time described in Subsection E(2)(a) above. The maximum design permeability shall be 10 inches per hour.
(e)Â
A soil's field tested permeability rate shall be determined
in accordance with the following:
[1]Â
The predevelopment field test permeability rate shall be determined according to the methodologies provided in Subsection J(3)(c);
[2]Â
The results of the required field permeability tests shall demonstrate
a minimum tested infiltration rate of one inch per hour;
[3]Â
After all construction activities have been completed on the site and the finished grade has been established in the infiltration BMP, post-development field permeability tests shall also be conducted according to the methodologies provided in Subsection J(3)(c) of this section;
[4]Â
If the results of the post-development field permeability tests
fail to achieve the minimum required design permeability rates in
five above utilizing a factor of safety of two, the stormwater infiltration
BMP shall be renovated and retested until such minimum required design
permeability rates are achieved; and
[5]Â
The results of all field permeability tests shall be certified
by a professional engineer and transmitted to the Municipal Engineer.
(f)Â
To help ensure maintenance of the design permeability rate over
time, a six-inch layer of K5 soil shall be placed on the bottom of
a stormwater infiltration BMP. This soil layer shall meet the textural
and permeability specifications of a K5 soil as provided at N.J.A.C.
7:9A, Appendix A, Figure 6, and be certified to meet these specifications
by a professional engineer licensed in the State of New Jersey. The
depth to the seasonal high water table shall be measured from the
bottom of the K5 sand layer.
(g)Â
The design engineer shall assess the hydraulic impact on the
groundwater table and design the project site and all stormwater infiltration
basins so as to avoid adverse hydraulic impacts. Adverse hydraulic
impacts include, but are not limited to: raising the groundwater table
so as to cause surface ponding; flooding of basements and other subsurface
structures and areas; preventing a stormwater infiltration basin from
completely draining via infiltration within 72 hours of a design storm
event; and interference with the proper operation of subsurface sewage
disposal systems and other surface and subsurface structures in the
vicinity of the stormwater infiltration basin.
(h)Â
The design engineer shall conduct a mounding analysis, as defined in Subsection G, of all stormwater infiltration BMPs. The mounding analysis shall be conducted in accordance with the requirements in Subsection J(3)(c)[1]. Where the mounding analysis identifies adverse impacts, the stormwater infiltration BMP shall be redesigned or relocated, as appropriate.
(i)Â
Stormwater infiltration BMPs shall be constructed in accordance
with the following:
[1]Â
To avoid sedimentation that may result in clogging and reduce
the basin's permeability rate, stormwater infiltration basins shall
be constructed according to the following:
[a]Â
Unless the conditions in Subsection E(2)[1][b]
below are met, a stormwater infiltration BMP shall not be placed into
operation until its drainage area is completely stabilized. Instead,
upstream runoff shall be diverted around the BMP and into separate,
temporary stormwater management facilities and sediment basins. Such
temporary facilities and basins shall be installed and utilized for
stormwater management and sediment control until stabilization is
achieved in accordance with the standards for soil erosion and sediment
control in New Jersey, which is incorporated herein by reference as
amended and supplemented.
[b]Â
If the design engineer determines that, for engineering, environmental or safety reasons, temporary stormwater management facilities and sediment basins cannot be constructed on the site, the stormwater infiltration basin may be placed into operation prior to the complete stabilization of its drainage area, provided that the basin's bottom during this period is constructed at a depth at least two feet higher than its final design elevation. All other infiltration BMP construction requirements in this subsection shall be followed. When the drainage area is completely stabilized, all accumulated sediment shall be removed from the infiltration BMP, which shall then be excavated to its final design elevation in accordance with the construction requirements of this subsection and the performance standards in Subsection D.
[2]Â
To avoid compaction of subgrade soils of BMPs that rely on infiltration, no heavy equipment, such as backhoes, dump trucks or bulldozers, shall be permitted to operate within the footprint of the BMP. All excavation required to construct a stormwater infiltration BMP shall be performed by equipment placed outside the BMP. If this is not possible, the soils within the excavated area shall be renovated and tilled after construction is completed to reverse the effects of compaction. In addition, post-development soil permeability testing shall be performed in accordance with Subsection E(2)(e) of this section.
[3]Â
Earthwork associated with stormwater infiltration BMP construction,
including excavation, grading, cutting or filling, shall not be performed
when soil moisture content is above the lower plastic limit.
(3)Â
Safety standards for structural stormwater management measures.
(a)Â
If a structural stormwater management measure has an outlet
structure, escape provisions shall be incorporated in or on the structure.
Escape provisions means the permanent installation of ladders, steps,
rungs, or other features that provide readily accessible means of
ingress and egress from the outlet structure.
(b)Â
A trash rack is a device intended to intercept runoff-borne
trash and debris that might otherwise block the hydraulic openings
in an outlet structure of a structural stormwater management measure.
Trash racks shall be installed upstream of such outlet structure openings
as necessary to ensure proper functioning of the structural stormwater
management measure in accordance with the following:
[1]Â
The trash rack should be constructed primarily of bars aligned
in the direction of flow with one inch spacing between the bars to
the elevation of the water quality design storm. For elevations higher
than the water quality design storm, the bars shall be spaced no greater
than 1/3 the width of the hydraulic opening it is protecting or six
inches, whichever is less. Transverse bars aligned perpendicular to
flow should be sized and spaced as necessary for rack stability and
strength.
[2]Â
The trash rack shall not adversely affect the hydraulic performance
of either the outlet structure opening it is protecting or the overall
outlet structure.
[3]Â
The trash rack shall have sufficient net open area under clean
conditions to limit the peak design storm velocity through it to a
maximum of 2.5 feet per second.
[4]Â
The trash rack shall be constructed and installed to be rigid,
durable, and corrosion resistant, and shall be designed to withstand
a perpendicular live loading of 300 pounds per square foot.
(c)Â
An overflow grate is a device intended to protect the opening
in the top of a stormwater management measure outlet structure. If
an outlet structure has an overflow grate, such grate shall meet the
following requirements:
[1]Â
The overflow grate shall be secured to the outlet structure
but removable for emergencies and maintenance;
[2]Â
The overflow grate spacing shall be no more than two inches
across the smallest dimension; and
[3]Â
The overflow grate shall be constructed and installed to be
rigid, durable, and corrosion resistant, and shall be designed to
withstand a perpendicular live loading of 300 pounds per square foot.
(d)Â
The maximum side slope for an earthen dam, embankment, or berm
shall not be steeper than five horizontal to one vertical.
(e)Â
Safety ledges shall be constructed on the slopes of all new structural stormwater management measures having a permanent pool of water deeper than 2Â 1/2 feet. Such safety ledges shall be comprised of two steps. Each step shall be four feet to six feet in width. One step shall be located approximately 2Â 1/2 feet below the permanent water surface, and the second step shall be located one to 1Â 1/2 feet above the permanent water surface. See Subsection E(3)(e)[1] below, for an illustration of safety ledges in a stormwater management basin.
F.Â
Inspection, maintenance and repair of stormwater management measures.
(2)Â
General inspection, maintenance and repair plan.
(a)Â
The design engineer shall prepare an inspection, maintenance and repair plan for the stormwater management measures, including both structural and nonstructural measures incorporated into the design of a major development. This plan shall be submitted as part of the checklist requirements established in Subsection B(3). Inspection and maintenance guidelines for stormwater management measures are available in the New Jersey BMP Manual.
(b)Â
The inspection, maintenance and repair plan shall contain the
following:
[1]Â
Accurate and comprehensive drawings of the site's stormwater
management measures;
[2]Â
Specific locations of each stormwater management measure identified
by means of longitude and latitude as well as block and lot number;
[3]Â
Specific preventative and corrective maintenance tasks and schedules
for such tasks for each stormwater BMP;
[4]Â
Cost estimates, including estimated cost of sediment, debris
or trash removal; and
[5]Â
The name, address and telephone number of the person or persons
responsible for regular inspections and preventative and corrective
maintenance (including repair and replacement). If the responsible
person or persons is a corporation, company, partnership, firm, association,
municipality or political subdivision of this state, the name and
telephone number of an appropriate contact person shall also be included.
(c)Â
The person responsible for inspection, maintenance and repair identified under Subsection F(2)(b) above shall maintain a detailed log of all preventative and corrective maintenance performed for the site's stormwater management measures, including a record of all inspections and copies of all maintenance-related work orders in the inspection, maintenance and repair plan. Said records and inspection reports shall be retained for a minimum of five years.
(d)Â
If the inspection, maintenance and repair plan identifies a
person other than the developer (for example, a public agency or homeowners'
association) as having the responsibility for inspection and maintenance,
the plan shall include documentation of such person's agreement to
assume this responsibility, or of the developer's obligation to dedicate
a stormwater management measure to such person under an applicable
ordinance or regulation.
(e)Â
If the person responsible for inspection, maintenance and repair identified under Subsection F(2)(c) above is not a public agency, the maintenance plan and any future revisions based on Subsection F(2)(f) below shall be recorded upon the deed of record for each property on which the maintenance described in the maintenance plan shall be undertaken.
(f)Â
The person responsible for inspection, maintenance and repair identified under Subsection F(2)(b) above shall evaluate the effectiveness of the inspection, maintenance and repair plan at least once per year and update the plan and the deed as needed.
(h)Â
The person responsible for inspection, maintenance and repair identified under Subsection F(2)(b) above shall retain and make available, upon request by any public entity with administrative, health, environmental or safety authority over the site the inspection, maintenance and repair plan and the documentation required by Subsection F(2)(b) and (c) above.
(3)Â
Responsibility for inspection, repair and maintenance shall not be
assigned or transferred to the owner or tenant of an individual property
in a residential development or project, unless such owner or tenant
owns or leases the entire residential development or project.
(4)Â
Preventative and corrective maintenance shall be performed to maintain
the function of the stormwater management measure, including, but
not limited to: repairs or replacement to any associated appurtenance
of the measure; removal of sediment, debris, or trash; restoration
of eroded areas; snow and ice removal; fence repair or replacement;
restoration of vegetation; repair or replacement of linings; and restoration
of infiltration function.
(5)Â
Stormwater management measure easements shall be provided by the
property owner as necessary for facility inspections and maintenance
and preservation of stormwater runoff conveyance, infiltration, and
detention areas and facilities. The purpose of the easement shall
be specified in the maintenance agreement.
(6)Â
In the event that the stormwater management measure becomes a public
health nuisance or danger to public safety or public health, or if
it is in need of maintenance or repair, the Township of Waterford
shall so notify the responsible person in writing. Upon receipt of
that notice, the responsible person shall have 14 days to effect maintenance
and repair of the facility in a manner that is approved by the Municipal
Engineer or the Municipal Engineer's designee. The Township of Waterford,
at its discretion, may extend the time allowed for effecting maintenance
and repair for good cause. If the responsible person fails or refuses
to perform such maintenance and repair within the allowable time,
the Township of Waterford may immediately proceed to do so with its
own forces and equipment and/or through contractors. The costs and
expenses of such maintenance and repair by the Township of Waterford
shall be entered on the tax roll as a special charge against the property
and collected with any other taxes levied thereon for the year in
which the maintenance and repair was performed.
(7)Â
Requirements for inspection, maintenance and repair of stormwater
BMPs that rely on infiltration. If a stormwater infiltration BMP is
incorporated into the design of a major development, the applicant
shall include the following requirements in its inspection, maintenance
and repair plan:
(a)Â
Once per month (if needed): mow side slopes, remove litter and
debris, stabilize eroded banks, repair erosion at inflow structure(s);
(b)Â
After every storm exceeding one inch of rainfall: ensure that
infiltration BMPs drain completely within 72 hours after the storm
event. If stored water fails to infiltrate 72 hours after the end
of the storm, corrective measures shall be taken. Raking or tilling
by light equipment can assist in maintaining infiltration capacity
and break up clogged surfaces;
(c)Â
Four times per year (quarterly): inspect stormwater infiltration
BMPs for clogging and excessive debris and sediment accumulation within
the BMP, remove sediment (if needed) when completely dry;
(d)Â
Two times per year: inspect for signs of damage to structures,
repair eroded areas, check for signs of petroleum contamination and
remediate;
(e)Â
Once per year: inspect BMPs for unwanted tree growth and remove,
if necessary, disc or otherwise aerate bottom of infiltration basin
to a minimum depth of six inches; and
(f)Â
After every storm exceeding one inch of rainfall: inspect and,
if necessary, remove and replace K5 sand layer and accumulated sediment,
to restore original infiltration rate;
(g)Â
Additional guidance for the inspection, maintenance and repair
of stormwater infiltration BMPs can be found in the New Jersey BMP
Manual.
(8)Â
Maintenance guarantee.
(a)Â
The applicant shall provide a maintenance guarantee in accordance
with N.J.S.A. 40:55D-53 to ensure that all stormwater management measures
required under the provisions of this section will be maintained in
accordance with the specifications established herein.
(b)Â
Additionally, for those stormwater management measures that
are to be inspected, maintained and repaired by a public agency, the
Township of Waterford shall collect an prepaid fee from the applicant
in the amount the Township of Waterford determines is needed to provide
long-term inspection, maintenance and repair of all stormwater management
measures. This prepaid fee shall be placed in a dedicated cash management
account and expended by the Township of Waterford for the sole purpose
of conducting inspection, maintenance and repair activities for all
stormwater management measures required under the applicant's major
development application approval. The calculation of the fee shall
be based upon the inspection, maintenance and repair plan (plan) required
to be prepared by the applicant and approved by the Township of Waterford.
The plan shall include an estimate of the present value of the cost
to inspect, maintain and repair the stormwater management measure(s)
in accordance with the plan for the useful life of those measure(s).
The Township of Waterford shall furnish the applicant their published
hourly rates as prescribed by their Salary Ordinance for public works'
and other personnel having responsibilities associated with stormwater
management. Added to this fee shall be an amount mutually determined
by the Township of Waterford and the applicant to account for the
reconstruction/reconditioning of stormwater management measures that
are based on the reasonable life expectancies of those facilities.
After an agreed number of years, depending on the type of measure(s),
the measure(s) will need to be reconstructed/reconditioned. The amount
shall be based on the future value of the measure(s) being reconstructed/reconditioned.
Both inflation rates and bank interest rates shall be based on the
ten-year average published in the Wall Street Journal or other approved
publication. Interest accruing in the account must also be accounted
for at an agreed upon interest rate, to arrive at an amount. The costs
for reconstructing/reconditioning the measure(s) shall be taken from
the engineer's probable cost estimate that is utilized to determine
the amount of the required performance guarantee. It is acceptable
to attach a percentage of failure to certain line items in the estimate.
(c)Â
Additionally, for those stormwater management measures that
are to be inspected, maintained and repaired by a homeowners' association,
condominium association or some other form of nonpublic ownership,
no fee shall be collected by the Township of Waterford. Instead, the
ownership entity shall establish and maintain a fund for the annual
inspection and testing program, annual maintenance and repair program
and annual contribution to a contingency fund for long-term reconstruction/reconditioning.
The initial costs agreed to for the annual inspection and testing
program and annual maintenance and repair program shall be based upon
actual itemized proposals offered to the applicant by prospective
vendors. The annual cost expended on inspection, testing and maintenance
shall be reported to the Township of Waterford to verify that maintenance
is not being deferred and to inform the Township of Waterford on the
magnitude of those services. The contingency fund shall require sufficient
funds to be committed for long-term reconstruction/reconditioning
of the stormwater management measure(s). Major reconstruction/reconditioning
activities will necessitate proper financial planning. After an agreed
number of years, depending on the type of measure(s), the measure(s)
will need to be reconstructed/reconditioned. The contingency fund
in the financial schedule shall be based on the future value of the
measure being reconstructed/reconditioned. Both inflation rates and
bank interest rates shall be based on the ten-year average published
in the Wall Street Journal or other approved publication. Interest
accruing in the account must also be accounted for at an agreed upon
interest rate, to arrive at an annual contribution amount.
G.Â
AQUACULTURE
CERTIFICATION
COMPACTION
CONSTRUCTION
COUNTY REVIEW AGENCY
DESIGN ENGINEER
DESIGN PERMEABILITY
DEVELOPMENT
(1)Â
(a)Â
(b)Â
(c)Â
(d)Â
(e)Â
(f)Â
(g)Â
(h)Â
(i)Â
(2)Â
DEVELOPMENT, MAJOR
DEVELOPMENT, MINOR
DRAINAGE AREA
ENVIRONMENTALLY CRITICAL AREA
EXCEPTION
EXTENDED DETENTION BASIN
FINISHED GRADE
GRADING
GROUNDWATER
GROUNDWATER MOUNDING ANALYSIS
HEAVY EQUIPMENT
HIGH POLLUTANT LOADING AREA
IMPERVIOUS SURFACE
INFILTRATION
IN LIEU CONTRIBUTION
INSTALL
MITIGATION
NEW JERSEY STORMWATER BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICES MANUAL
NJDEP
NJPDES
NJPDES PERMIT
NONPOINT SOURCE
NONSTRUCTURAL BMP
NUTRIENT
PERMEABILITY
PERMEABLE
PERSON
PINELANDS COMMISSION or COMMISSION
PINELANDS CMP
POINT SOURCE
POLLUTANT
PROFESSIONAL ENGINEER
RECHARGE
REPLICATE
SAND
SEASONALLY HIGH WATER TABLE
SEDIMENT
SITE
SOIL
SOURCE MATERIAL
STORMWATER
STORMWATER INFILTRATION BMP
STORMWATER MANAGEMENT MEASURE
STORMWATER RUNOFF
SUITABLE SOIL
SURFACE WATER
TIDAL FLOOD HAZARD AREA
TIME OF CONCENTRATION
TOTAL SUSPENDED SOLIDS
TOWNSHIP OF WATERFORD
WATERS OF THE STATE
WATER TABLE
WELL
WETLANDS
WET POND
Definitions. Unless specifically defined below, words or phrases
used in this section shall be interpreted so as to give them the meaning
they have in common usage and to give this section its most reasonable
application. When used in this section, the following terms shall
have the meanings herein ascribed to them:
The propagation, rearing and subsequent harvesting of aquatic
organisms in controlled or selected environments, and their subsequent
processing, packaging and marketing, including, but not limited to,
activities to intervene in the rearing process to increase production
such as stocking, feeding, transplanting and providing for protection
from predators.
Either a written statement signed and sealed by a licensed
New Jersey professional engineer attesting that a BMP design or stormwater
management system conforms to or meets a particular set of standards
or to action taken by the Commission pursuant to N.J.A.C. 7:50-3,
Part II or Part IV. Depending upon the context in which the term is
use, the terms "certify" and "certified" shall be construed accordingly.
The increase in soil bulk density caused by subjecting soil
to greater-than-normal loading. Compaction can also decrease soil
infiltration and permeability rates.
The construction, erection, reconstruction, alteration, conversion,
demolition, removal or equipping of buildings, structures or components
of a stormwater management system, including, but not limited to,
collection inlets, stormwater piping, swales and all other conveyance
systems, and stormwater BMPs.
An agency designated by the County Board of Chosen Freeholders
to review municipal stormwater management plans and implementing ordinance(s).
The county review agency may either be:
A person professionally qualified and duly licensed in New
Jersey to perform engineering services that may include, but not necessarily
be limited to, development of project requirements, creation and development
of project design and preparation of drawings and specifications.
The tested permeability rate with a factor of safety of two
applied to it (e.g., if the tested permeability rate of the soils
is four inches per hour, the design rate would be two inches per hour).
The change of or enlargement of any use or disturbance of any
land, the performance of any building or mining operation, the division
of land into two or more parcels, and the creation or termination
of rights of access or riparian rights including, but not limited
to:
A change in type of use of a structure or land;
A reconstruction, alteration of the size, or material change
in the external appearance of a structure or land;
A material increase in the intensity of use of land, such as
an increase in the number of businesses, manufacturing establishments,
offices or dwelling units in a structure or on land;
Commencement of resource extraction or drilling or excavation
on a parcel of land;
Demolition of a structure or removal of trees;
Commencement of forestry activities;
Deposit of refuse, solid or liquid waste or fill on a parcel
of land;
In connection with the use of land, the making of any material
change in noise levels, thermal conditions, or emissions of waste
material; and
Alteration, either physically or chemically, of a shore, bank,
or floodplain, seacoast, river, stream, lake, pond, wetlands or artificial
body of water.
In the case of development on agricultural land, i.e., lands
used for an agricultural use or purpose as defined at N.J.A.C. 7:50-2.11,
"development" means any activity that requires a state permit; any
activity reviewed by the County Agricultural Boards (CAB) and the
State Agricultural Development Committee (SADC), and municipal review
of any activity not exempted by the Right to Farm Act, N.J.S.A. 4:1C-1
et seq.
Any division of land into five or more lots; any construction
or expansion of any housing development of five or more dwelling units;
any construction or expansion of any commercial or industrial use
or structure on a site of more than three acres; or any development,
grading, clearing or disturbance of an area in excess of 5,000 square
feet. "Disturbance" for the purpose of this section is the placement
of impervious surface or exposure and/or movement of soil or bedrock
or clearing, cutting or removing of vegetation.
All development other than major development.
A geographic area within which stormwater, sediments, or
dissolved materials drain to a BMP, a stormwater management system,
a particular receiving water body or a particular point along a receiving
water body.
An area or feature which is of significant environmental
value, including, but not limited to: stream corridors; natural heritage
priority sites; habitat of endangered or threatened animal species;
threatened or endangered plants of the Pinelands pursuant to N.J.A.C.
7:5-6.27(a); large areas of contiguous open space or upland forest;
steep slopes; and well head protection and groundwater recharge areas.
T & E habitat constitutes habitat that is critical for the survival
of a local population of threatened and endangered species or habitat
that is identified using the Department's Landscape Project as approved
by the Department's Endangered and Nongame Species Program, whichever
is more inclusive. Threatened and endangered wildlife shall be protected
in conformance with N.J.A.C. 7:50-6.33.
The approval by the approving authority of a variance or
other material departure from strict compliance with any section,
part, phrase or provision of this section. An exception may be granted
only under certain specific, narrowly defined conditions described
herein and does not constitute a waiver of strict compliance with
any section, part, phrase or provision of the Pinelands Comprehensive
Management Plan (N.J.A.C. 7:50-1.1 et seq.).
A facility constructed through filling and/or excavation
that provides temporary storage of stormwater runoff. It has an outlet
structure that detains and attenuates runoff inflows and promotes
the settlement of pollutants. An extended detention basin is normally
designed as a multistage facility that provides runoff storage and
attenuation for both stormwater quality and quantity management. The
term "stormwater detention basin" shall have the same meaning as "extended
detention basin."
The elevation of the surface of the ground after completion
of final grading, either via cutting, filling or a combination thereof.
Modification of a land slope by cutting and filling with
the native soil or redistribution of the native soil which is present
at the site.
Water below the land surface in a zone of saturation.
A test performed to demonstrate that the groundwater below
a stormwater infiltration basin will not mound up, encroach on the
unsaturated zone, break the surface of the ground at the infiltration
area or downslope, and create an overland flow situation.
Equipment, machinery, or vehicles that exert ground pressure
in excess of eight pounds per square inch.
An area in an industrial or commercial development site where
solvents and/or petroleum products are loaded/unloaded, stored, or
applied; where pesticides are loaded/unloaded or stored; where hazardous
materials are expected to be present in greater than "reportable quantities"
as defined by the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
at 40 CFR 302.4; where recharge would be inconsistent with NJDEP-approved
remedial action work plan or landfill closure plan; and/or where a
high risk exists for spills of toxic materials, such as gas stations
and vehicle maintenance facilities. The term "HPLA" shall have the
same meaning as "high pollutant loading area."
A surface that has been covered with a layer of material
so that it is highly resistant to infiltration by water.
The process by which precipitation enters the soil through
its surface.
A monetary fee collected by the Township of Waterford in
lieu of requiring strict on-site compliance with the groundwater recharge,
stormwater runoff quantity and/or stormwater runoff quality standards
established in this section.
To assemble, construct, put in place or connect components
of a stormwater management system.
Acts necessary to prevent, limit, remedy or compensate for
conditions that may result from those cases where an applicant has
demonstrated the inability or impracticality of strict compliance
with the stormwater management requirements set forth in N.J.A.C.
7:8, in an adopted regional stormwater management plan, or in a local
ordinance which is as protective as N.J.A.C. 7:8, and an exception
from strict compliance is granted by the Township of Waterford and
the Pinelands Commission.
Guidance developed by the New Jersey Department of Environmental
Protection, in coordination with the New Jersey Department of Agriculture,
the New Jersey Department of Community Affairs, the New Jersey Department
of Transportation, Municipal Engineers, County Engineers, consulting
firms, contractors, and environmental organizations to address the
standards in the New Jersey Stormwater Management Rules, N.J.A.C.
7:8. The BMP manual provides examples of ways to meet the standards
contained in the rule. An applicant may demonstrate that other proposed
management practices will also achieve the standards established in
the rules. The manual, and notices regarding future versions of the
manual, are available from the Division of Watershed Management, NJDEP,
PO Box 418, Trenton, New Jersey 08625; and on the NJDEP's website,
www.njstormwater.org. The term "New Jersey BMP Manual" shall have
the same meaning as "New Jersey Stormwater Best Management Practices
Manual."
The New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection.
The New Jersey Pollutant Discharge Elimination System as
set forth in N.J.S.A. 58:10A-1 et seq. and in N.J.A.C. 7:14A.
A permit issued by the NJDEP pursuant to the authority of
the Water Pollution Control Act, N.J.S.A. 58:10A-1 et seq., and N.J.A.C.
7:14A for a discharge of pollutants.
Any human-made or human-induced activity, factor, or condition,
other than a point source, from which pollutants are or may be discharged;
Any human-made or human-induced activity, factor, or condition, other
than a point source, that may temporarily or permanently change any
chemical, physical, biological, or radiological characteristic of
waters of the state from what was or is the natural, pristine condition
of such waters, or that may increase the degree of such change; or
any activity, factor, or condition, other than a point source, that
contributes or may contribute to water pollution. The term "NPS" shall
have the same meaning as "nonpoint source."
A stormwater management measure, strategy or combination
of strategies that reduces adverse stormwater runoff impacts through
sound site planning and design. Nonstructural BMPs include such practices
as minimizing site disturbance, preserving important site features,
reducing and disconnecting impervious cover, flattening slopes, utilizing
native vegetation, minimizing turf grass lawns, maintaining natural
drainage features and characteristics and controlling stormwater runoff
and pollutants closer to the source. The term "low-impact development
technique" shall have the same meaning as "nonstructural BMP."
A chemical element or compound, such as nitrogen or phosphorus,
which is essential to and promotes the development of organisms.
The rate at which water moves through a saturated unit area
of soil or rock material at hydraulic gradient of one, determined
as prescribed in N.J.A.C. 7:9A-6.2 (Tube Permeameter Test), N.J.A.C.
6.5 (Pit Bailing Test) or N.J.A.C. 6.6 (Piezometer Test). Alternative
permeability test procedures may be accepted by the approving authority,
provided the test procedure attains saturation of surrounding soils,
accounts for hydraulic head effects on infiltration rates, provides
a permeability rate with units expressed in inches per hour and is
accompanied by a published source reference. Examples of suitable
sources include hydrogeology, geotechnical, or engineering text and
design manuals, proceedings of American Society for Testing and Materials
(ASTM) symposia, or peer-review journals. Neither a soil permeability
class rating test, as described in N.J.A.C. 7:9A-6.3, nor a percolation
test, as described in N.J.A.C. 7:9A-6.4, are acceptable tests for
establishing permeability values for the purpose of complying with
this section.
Having a permeability of one inch per hour or faster. The
terms "permeable soil," "permeable rock" and "permeable fill" shall
be construed accordingly.
Any individual, corporation, company, partnership, firm,
association, municipality or political subdivision of this state subject
to municipal jurisdiction pursuant to the Municipal Land Use Law,
N.J.S.A. 40:55D-1 et seq.
The Commission created pursuant Section 5 of the Pinelands
Protection Act, N.J.S.A. 13:18A-5.
The New Jersey Pinelands Comprehensive Management Plan (N.J.A.C.
7:50 1.1 et seq).
Any discernible, confined, and discrete conveyance, including,
but not limited to, any pipe, ditch, channel, tunnel, conduit, well,
discrete fissure, container, rolling stock, concentrated animal feeding
operation, landfill leachate collection system, vessel, or other floating
craft, from which pollutants are or may be discharged. This term does
not include return flows from irrigated agriculture.
Any dredged spoil, solid waste, incinerator residue, filter
backwash, sewage, garbage, refuse, oil, grease, sewage sludge, munitions,
chemical wastes, biological materials, medical wastes, radioactive
substances (except those regulated under the Atomic Energy Act of
1954, as amended (42 U.S.C. § 2011 et seq.), thermal waste,
wrecked or discarded equipment, rock, sand, suspended solids, cellar
dirt, industrial, municipal, agricultural, and construction waste
or runoff, or other residue discharged directly or indirectly to the
land, groundwaters or surface waters of the state, or to a domestic
treatment works. "Pollutant" includes both hazardous and nonhazardous
pollutants.
A person licensed to practice professional engineering in
the State of New Jersey pursuant to N.J.S.A. 48:8-27 et seq.
The amount of water from precipitation that infiltrates into
the ground and is not evapotranspired.
One of two or more soil samples or tests taken at the same
location (within five feet of each other) and depth, within the same
soil horizon or substratum. In the case of fill material, replicate
tests are tests performed on subsamples of the same bulk sample packed
to the same bulk density.
A particle size category consisting of mineral particles which are between 0.05 and 2.0 millimeters in equivalent spherical diameter. Also, a soil textural class having 85% or more of sand and a content of silt and clay such that the percentage of silt plus 1.5 times the percentage of clay does not exceed 15, as shown in Subsection J(3)(a) (USDA Soil Textural Triangle).
The upper limit of the shallowest zone of saturation which
occurs in the soil, identified as prescribed in N.J.A.C. 7:9A-5.8.
Solid material, mineral or organic, that is in suspension,
is being transported, or has been moved from its site of origin by
air, water or gravity as a product of erosion.
The lot or lots upon which a major development is to occur
or has occurred.
All unconsolidated mineral and organic material of any origin
which is not a rock substratum, including sediments below the biologically
active and/or weathered zones.
Any material(s) or machinery, located at an industrial facility
that is directly or indirectly related to process, manufacturing or
other industrial activities, which could be a source of pollutants
in any industrial stormwater discharge to groundwater. Source materials
include, but are not limited to, raw materials; intermediate products;
final products; waste materials; by-products; industrial machinery
and fuels, and lubricants, solvents, and detergents that are related
to process, manufacturing, or other industrial activities that are
exposed to stormwater.
Water resulting from precipitation (including rain and snow)
that runs off the land's surface, is transmitted to the subsurface,
or is captured by separate storm sewers or other sewage or drainage
facilities, or conveyed by snow removal equipment.
A basin or other facility constructed within permeable soils
that provides temporary storage of stormwater runoff. An infiltration
BMP does not normally have a structural outlet to discharge runoff
from the stormwater quality design storm. Instead, outflow from an
infiltration BMP is through the surrounding soil. The terms "infiltration
measure" and "infiltration practice" shall have the same meaning as
"stormwater infiltration basin."
Any structural or nonstructural strategy, practice, technology,
process, program, or other method intended to control or reduce stormwater
runoff and associated pollutants, or to induce or control the infiltration
or groundwater recharge of stormwater or to eliminate illicit or illegal
nonstormwater discharges into stormwater conveyances. This includes,
but is not limited to, structural and nonstructural stormwater best
management practices described in the New Jersey BMP Manual and designed
to meet the standards for stormwater control contained within this
section. The terms "stormwater best management practice" and "stormwater
BMP" shall have the same meaning as "stormwater management measure."
Water flow on the surface of the ground or in storm sewers,
resulting from precipitation.
Unsaturated soil, above the seasonally high water table,
which contains less than 50% by volume of coarse fragments and which
has a tested permeability rate of between one and 20 inches per hour.
Any waters of the state which are not groundwater.
A flood hazard area, which may be influenced by stormwater
runoff from inland areas, but which is primarily caused by the Atlantic
Ocean.
The time it takes for runoff to travel from the hydraulically
most distant point of the drainage area to the point of interest within
a watershed.
The insoluble solid matter suspended in water and stormwater
that is separable by laboratory filtration in accordance with the
procedure contained in the "Standard Methods for the Examination of
Water and Wastewater" prepared and published jointly by the American
Public Health Association, American Water Works Association and the
Water Pollution Control Federation. The term "TSS" shall have the
same meaning as "total suspended solids."
The Planning Board or other board, agency or official of
the Township of Waterford with authority to approve or disapprove
subdivisions, site plans, construction permits, building permits or
other applications for development approval. For the purposes of reviewing
development applications and ensuring compliance with the requirements
of this section, the Township of Waterford may designate the Municipal
Engineer or other qualified designee to act on behalf of the Township
of Waterford.[3]
The ocean and its estuaries, all springs, streams and bodies
of surface and groundwater, whether natural or artificial, within
the boundaries of New Jersey or subject to its jurisdiction.
The upper surface of a zone of saturation.
A bored, drilled or driven shaft, or a dug hole, which extends
below the seasonally high water table and which has a depth which
is greater than its largest surface dimension.
Those lands which are inundated or saturated by water at
a magnitude, duration and frequency sufficient to support the growth
of hydrophytes. Wetlands include lands with poorly drained or very
poorly drained soils as designated by the National Cooperative Soils
Survey of the Natural Resources Conservation Service of the United
States Department of Agriculture. Wetlands include coastal wetlands
and inland wetlands, including submerged lands. The "New Jersey Pinelands
Commission Manual for Identifying and Delineating Pinelands Area Wetlands:
A Pinelands Supplement to the Federal Manual for Identifying and Delineating
Jurisdictional Wetlands," dated January 1991, as amended, may be utilized
in delineating the extent of wetlands based on the definitions of
wetlands and wetlands soils contained in this section, N.J.A.C. 7:50
2.11, 6.4 and 6.5. The term "wetland" shall have the same meaning
as "wetlands."
A stormwater facility constructed through filling and/or
excavation that provides both permanent and temporary storage of stormwater
runoff. It has an outlet structure that creates a permanent pool and
detains and attenuates runoff inflows and promotes the settling of
pollutants. A stormwater retention basin can also be designed as a
multistage facility that also provides extended detention for enhanced
stormwater quality design storm treatment and runoff storage and attenuation
for stormwater quantity management. The term "stormwater retention
basin" shall have the same meaning as "wet pond."
H.Â
J.Â
Appendices.
(1)Â
Methods for calculating groundwater recharge.
(a)Â
The New Jersey Geological Survey Report GSR-32: A Method for
Evaluating Ground-Water Recharge Areas in New Jersey. Available at
http://www.njgeology.org/geodata/dgs99-2.htm.
(b)Â
The New Jersey Groundwater Recharge Spreadsheet (NJGRS). Available
in the New Jersey BMP Manual, Chapter 6, at http://www.njstormwater.org/bmp_manual2.htm.
(2)Â
NJDEP nonstructural strategies point system. The New Jersey Stormwater Management Rules at N.J.A.C. 7:8-5.2(a), and Subsection D(1) of this section require nonstructural stormwater management strategies to be incorporated into the site design of a major development. A total of nine strategies are to be used to the maximum extent practical to meet the groundwater recharge, stormwater quality and stormwater quantity requirements of the rules prior to utilizing structural stormwater management measures. The New Jersey Nonstructural Stormwater Management Strategies Point System (NSPS) provides a tool to assist planners, designers and regulators in determining that the strategies have been used to the maximum extent practical at a major development as required by the rules. Refer online to http://www.njstormwater.org for information on the NSPS.
(3)Â
Soils.
(b)Â
A-HORIZON
ARTESIAN ZONE OF SATURATION
CHROMA
CLAY
CLAY LOAM
COARSE FRAGMENT
COUNTY SOIL SURVEY REPORT
DIRECT SUPERVISION
EQUIVALENT SPHERICAL DIAMETER
EXCESSIVELY COARSE HORIZON
EXCESSIVELY COARSE SUBSTRATUM
EXTREMELY FIRM CONSISTENCE
FIRM CONSISTENCE
HARD CONSISTENCE
HUE
HYDRAULICALLY RESTRICTIVE HORIZON
HYDRAULICALLY RESTRICTIVE SUBSTRATUM
LOAMY SAND
LOWER PLASTIC LIMIT
MOTTLING
MUNSELL SYSTEM
O-HORIZON
PERCHED ZONE OF SATURATION
PIEZOMETER
PLATY STRUCTURE
REGIONAL ZONE OF SATURATION
SANDY CLAY
SANDY LOAM
SILT
SILT LOAM
SILTY CLAY
SILTY CLAY LOAM
SOIL AGGREGATE
SOIL COLOR
SOIL CONSISTENCE
SOIL HORIZON
SOIL LOG
SOIL MAPPING UNIT
SOIL PHASE
SOIL PROFILE
SOIL SERIES
SOIL STRUCTURAL CLASS
SOIL STRUCTURE
SOIL TEST PIT
SOIL TEXTURAL CLASS
SOIL TEXTURE
STATIC WATER LEVEL
SUBSTRATUM
UNSUITABLE SOIL
USDA SYSTEM OF CLASSIFICATION
VALUE
VERY FIRM CONSISTENCE
VERY HARD CONSISTENCE
ZONE OF SATURATION
Definitions. For the purposes of this Appendix, the following
terms shall have the meanings herein ascribed to them.
The uppermost mineral horizon in a normal soil profile. The
upper part of the A-horizon is characterized by maximum accumulation
of finely divided, dark colored organic residues, known as humus,
which are intimately mixed with the mineral particles of the soil.
A zone of saturation which exists immediately below a hydraulically
restrictive horizon, and which has an upper surface which is at a
pressure greater than atmospheric, either seasonally or throughout
the year.
The relative purity or strength of a color, a quantity which
decreases with increasing grayness. Chroma is one of the three variables
of soil color as defined in the Munsell system of classification.
A particle size category consisting of mineral particles which are smaller than 0.002 millimeters in equivalent spherical diameter. Also, a soil textural class having more than 40% clay, less than 45% sand, and less than 40% silt, as shown in Subsection J(3)(a) (USDA Soil Textural Triangle).
A soil textural class having 27% to 40% clay and 20% to 45% sand, as shown in Subsection J(3)(a) (USDA Soil Textural Triangle).
A rock fragment contained within the soil which is greater
than two millimeters in equivalent spherical diameter or which is
retained on a two-millimeter sieve.
A report prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture,
Natural Resources Conservation Service, which includes maps showing
the distribution of soil mapping units throughout a particular county
together with narrative descriptions of the soil series shown and
other information relating to the uses and properties of the various
soil series.
Control over and direction of work carried out by others
with full knowledge of and responsibility for such work.
Of a particle means the diameter of a sphere which has a
volume equal to the volume of the particle.
A horizon of limited thickness within the soil profile which
provides inadequate removal of pollutants from stormwater due to a
high-coarse fragment content, excessively coarse texture and/or excessively
rapid permeability.
A substratum below the soil profile which extends beyond
the depth of soil profile pits and borings and which provides inadequate
removal of pollutants from stormwater due to a high-coarse fragment
content, excessively coarse texture and/or excessively rapid permeability.
A type of soil material whose moist aggregated mass crushes
only under very strong pressure; cannot be crushed between the thumb
and forefinger and shall be broken apart bit by bit.
A type of soil material whose moist aggregated mass crushes
under moderate pressure between the thumb and forefinger but resistance
is distinctly noticeable.
A type of soil material whose dry aggregated mass is moderately
resistant to pressure, can be broken in the hands without difficulty
but is barely breakable between the thumb and forefinger.
The dominant spectral color, one of the three variables of
soil color defined within the Munsell system of classification.
A horizon within the soil profile which slows or prevents
the downward or lateral movement of water and which is underlain by
permeable soil horizons or substrata. Any soil horizon which has a
saturated permeability less than one inch per hour is hydraulically
restrictive.
A substratum below the soil profile which slows or prevents
the downward or lateral movement of water and which extends beyond
the depth of profile pits or borings or to a massive substratum. A
substratum which has a saturated permeability less than one inch per
hour is hydraulically restrictive.
A soil textural class, as shown in Subsection J(3)(a) (USDA Soil Textural Triangle), that has a maximum of 85% to 90% sand with a percentage of silt, plus 1.5 times the percentage of clay not in excess of 15; or a minimum of 70% to 85% sand with a percentage of silt, plus 1.5 times the percentage of clay not in excess of 30.
The moisture content corresponding to the transition between
the plastic and semisolid states of soil consistency. This corresponds
to the lowest soil moisture content at which the soil can be molded
in the fingers to form a rod or wire, 1/8 inch in thickness, without
crumbling.
A color pattern observed in soil consisting of blotches or
spots of contrasting color. The term "mottle" refers to an individual
blotch or spot. The terms "color variegation," "iron depletion" and
"iron concentration" are equivalent to the term "mottling." Mottling
due to redoximorphic reactions is an indication of seasonal or periodic
and recurrent saturation.
A system of classifying soil color consisting of an alphanumeric
designation for hue, value and chroma, such as "7.5 YR 6/2," together
with a descriptive color name, such as "strong brown."
A surface horizon, occurring above the A-horizon in some
soils, which is composed primarily of undecomposed or partially decomposed
plant remains which have not been incorporated into the mineral soil.
A zone of saturation which occurs immediately above a hydraulically
restrictive horizon and which is underlain by permeable horizons or
substrata which are not permanently or seasonally saturated.
A device consisting of a length of metal or plastic pipe,
open at the bottom or perforated within a specified interval, and
used for the determination of depth to water, permeability or hydraulic
head within a specific soil horizon or substratum.
Characterized by a soil aggregate which has one axis distinctly
shorter than the other two and are oriented with the short axis vertical.
A zone of saturation which extends vertically without interruption
below the depth of soil borings and profile pits.
A soil textural class having 35% or more of clay and 45% or more of sand, as shown in Subsection J(3)(a) (USDA Soil Textural Triangle).
A soil textural class, as shown in Subsection J(3)(a) (USDA Soil Textural Triangle), that has a maximum of 20% clay, and the percentage of silt plus twice the percentage of clay exceeds 30, and contains 52% or more sand; or less than 7% clay, less than 50% silt, and between 43% and 52% sand.
A particle size category consisting of mineral particles which are between 0.002 and 0.05 millimeters in equivalent spherical diameter. It also means a soil textural class having 80% or more of silt and 12% or less of clay, as shown in Subsection J(3)(a) (USDA Soil Textural Triangle).
A soil textural class having 50% or more of silt and 12% to 27% of clay; or 50% to 80% of silt and less than 12% of clay, as shown in Subsection J(3)(a) (USDA Soil Textural Triangle).
A soil textural class having 40% or more of clay and 40% or more of silt, as shown in Subsection J(3)(a) (USDA Soil Textural Triangle).
A soil textural class having 27% to 40% of clay and less than 20% of sand, as shown in Subsection J(3)(a) (USDA Soil Textural Triangle).
A naturally occurring unit of soil structure consisting of
particles of sand, silt, clay, organic matter, and coarse fragments
held together by the natural cohesion of the soil.
The soil color name and Munsell color designation determined
by comparison of the moist soil with color chips contained in a Munsell
soil color book.
The resistance of a soil aggregate or clod to being crushed
between the fingers or broken by the hands. Terms for describing soil
consistence described are in N.J.A.C. 7:9A-5.3(h).
A layer within a soil profile differing from layers of soil
above and below it in one or more of the soil morphological characteristics,
including color, texture, coarse fragment content, structure, consistence
and mottling.
A description of the soil profile which includes the depth,
thickness, color, texture, coarse fragment content, mottling, structure
and consistence of each soil horizon or substratum.
An area outlined on a map in a county soil survey report
and marked with a letter symbol designating a soil phase, a complex
of two or more soil phases, or some other descriptive term where no
soil type has been identified.
A specific type of soil which is mapped by the Natural Resources
Conservation Service and which belongs to a soil series described
within the county soil survey report.
A vertical cross-section of undisturbed soil showing the
characteristic horizontal layers or horizons of the soil which have
formed as a result of the combined effects of parent material, topography,
climate, biological activity and time.
A grouping of soil types possessing a specific range of soil
profile characteristics which are described within the county soil
survey report. Each soil series may consist of several soil phases
which may differ in slope, texture of the surface horizon or stoniness.
One of the shape classes of soil structure described in N.J.A.C.
7:9A-5.3(g).
The naturally occurring arrangement, within a soil horizon,
of sand, silt and clay particles, coarse fragments and organic matter,
which are held together in clusters or aggregates of similar shape
and size.
An excavation made for the purpose of exposing a soil profile
which is to be described.
One of the classes of soil texture defined within the USDA
system of classification. (Soil Survey Manual, Agricultural Handbook
No. 18, USDA Soil Conservation Service 1962.)
The relative proportions of sand, silt and clay in that portion
of the soil which passes through a sieve with two-millimeter openings.
The depth below the ground surface or the elevation with
respect to some reference level, of the water level observed within
a soil profile pit or boring, or within a piezometer, after this level
has stabilized or become relatively constant with the passage of time.
A layer of soil or rock material present below the soil profile
and extending beyond the depth of soil borings or profile pits.
All soil other than suitable soil.
The system of classifying soil texture used by the United States Department of Agriculture which defines 12 soil textural classes based upon the weight percentages of sand, silt and clay in that portion of the soil which passes through a sieve with two-millimeter openings. The soil textural classes are shown graphically on the USDA Soil Textural Triangle, as shown in Subsection J(3)(a).
The relative lightness or intensity of a color, one of the
three variables of soil color defined within the Munsell system of
classification.
Characterized by a moist soil which crushes under strong
pressure; barely crushable between thumb and forefinger.
Characterized by a dry soil which is resistant to pressure,
can be broken in the hands only with difficulty; not breakable between
the thumb and forefinger.
A layer within or below the soil profile which is saturated
with groundwater either seasonally or throughout the year. This includes
both regional and perched zones.
(c)Â
Methods for assessing soil suitability for infiltration stormwater
management BMPs. The results of a subsurface investigation shall serve
as the basis for the site selection and design of stormwater infiltration
BMPs. The subsurface investigation shall include, but not be limited
to, a series of soil test pits and soil permeability tests conducted
in accordance with the following:
[1]Â
All soil test pits and soil permeability results shall be performed
under the direct supervision of a professional engineer. All soil
logs and permeability test data shall be accompanied by a certification
by a professional engineer. The results and location (horizontal and
vertical) of all soil test pits and soil permeability tests, both
passing and failing, shall be reported to the Township of Waterford.
[2]Â
During all subsurface investigations and soil test procedures,
adequate safety measures shall be taken to prohibit unauthorized access
to the excavations at all times. It is the responsibility of persons
performing or witnessing subsurface investigations and soil permeability
tests to comply with all applicable federal, state and local laws
and regulations governing occupational safety.
[3]Â
A minimum of two soil test pits shall be excavated within the
footprint of any proposed infiltration BMP to determine the suitability
and distribution of soil types present at the site. Placement of the
test pits shall be within 20 feet of the basin perimeter, located
along the longest axis bisecting the BMP. For BMPs larger than 10,000
square feet in area, a minimum of one additional soil test pit shall
be conducted within each additional area of 10,000 square feet. The
additional test pit(s) shall be placed approximately equidistant to
other test pits, so as to provide adequate characterization of the
subsurface material. In all cases, where soil and or groundwater properties
vary significantly, additional test pits shall be excavated in order
to accurately characterize the subsurface conditions below the proposed
infiltration BMP. Soil test pits shall extend to a minimum depth of
eight feet below the lowest elevation of the basin bottom or to a
depth that is at least two times the maximum potential water depth
in the proposed infiltration BMP, whichever is greater.
[4]Â
A soil test pit log shall be prepared for each soil test pit.
The test pit log shall, at a minimum, provide the elevation of the
existing ground surface, the depth and thickness (in inches) of each
soil horizon or substratum, the dominant matrix or background and
mottle colors using the Munsell system of classification for hue,
value and chroma, the appropriate textural class as shown on the USDA
textural triangle, the volume percentage of coarse fragments (larger
than two millimeters in diameter), the abundance, size, and contrast
of mottles, the soil structure, soil consistence, and soil moisture
condition, using standard USDA classification terminology for each
of these soil properties. Soil test pit logs shall identify the presence
of any soil horizon, substratum or other feature that exhibits an
in-place permeability rate less than one inch per hour.
[5]Â
Each soil test pit log shall report the depth to seasonally
high water level, either perched or regional, and the static water
level based upon the presence of soil mottles or other redoximorphic
features, and observed seepage or saturation. Where redoxomorphic
features, including soil mottles resulting from soil saturation, are
present, they shall be interpreted to represent the depth to the seasonal
high water table unless soil saturation or seepage is observed at
a higher level. When the determination of the seasonally high water
table shall be made in ground previously disturbed by excavation,
direct observation of the static water table during the months of
January through April shall be the only method permitted.
[6]Â
Any soil horizon or substratum which exists immediately below
a perched zone of saturation shall be deemed by rule to exhibit unacceptable
permeability (less than one inch per hour). The perched zone of saturation
may be observed directly, inferred based upon soil morphology, or
confirmed by performance of a hydraulic head test as defined at N.J.A.C.
7:9A-5.9.
[7]Â
Stormwater infiltration BMPs shall not be installed in soils
that exhibit artesian groundwater conditions. A permeability test
shall be conducted in all soils that immediately underlie a perched
zone of saturation. Any zone of saturation which is present below
a soil horizon which exhibits an in-place permeability of less than
0.2 inch per hour shall be considered an artesian zone of saturation
unless a minimum one-foot thick zone of unsaturated soil, free of
mottling or other redoximorphic features and possessing a chroma of
four or higher, exists immediately below the unsuitable soil.
[8]Â
A minimum of one permeability test shall be performed at each
soil test pit location. The soil permeability rate shall be determined
using test methodology as prescribed in N.J.A.C. 7:9A-6.2 (Tube Permeameter
Test), 6.5 (Pit Bailing Test) or 6.6 (Piezometer Test). When the tube
permeameter test is used, a minimum of two replicate samples shall
be taken and tested. Alternative permeability test procedures may
be accepted by the approving authority provided the test procedure
attains saturation of surrounding soils, accounts for hydraulic head
effects on infiltration rates, provides a permeability rate with units
expressed in inches per hour and is accompanied by a published source
reference. Examples of suitable sources include hydrogeology, geotechnical
or engineering text and design manuals, proceedings of American Society
for Testing and Materials (ASTM) symposia, or peer-review journals.
Neither a soil permeability class rating test, as described in N.J.A.C.
7:9A-6.3, nor a percolation test, as described in N.J.A.C. 7:9A-6.4,
are acceptable tests for establishing permeability values for the
purpose of complying with this section.
[9]Â
Soil permeability tests shall be conducted on the most hydraulically
restrictive horizon or substratum to be left in place below the basin
as follows. Where no soil replacement is proposed, the permeability
tests shall be conducted on the most hydraulically restrictive horizon
or substratum within four feet of the lowest elevation of the basin
bottom or to a depth equal to two times the maximum potential water
depth within the basin, whichever is greater. Where soil replacement
is proposed, the permeability tests shall be conducted within the
soil immediately below the depth of proposed soil replacement or within
the most hydraulically restrictive horizon or substratum to a depth
equal to two times the maximum potential water depth within the basin,
whichever is greater. Permeability tests may be performed on the most
hydraulically restrictive soil horizons or substrata at depths greater
than those identified above based upon the discretion of the design
or testing engineer. The tested infiltration rate should then be divided
by two to establish the soil's design permeability rate. Such division
will provide a one-hundred-percent safety factor to the tested rate.
[10]Â
The minimum acceptable tested permeability rate
of any soil horizon or substratum shall be one inch per hour. Soil
materials that exhibit tested permeability rates slower than one inch
per hour shall be considered unsuitable for stormwater infiltration.
The maximum reportable tested permeability rate of any soil horizon
or substratum shall be no greater than 20 inches per hour regardless
of the rate attained in the test procedure.
[11]Â
After all construction activities have been completed
on the development site and the finished grade has been established
in the infiltration BMP, a minimum of one permeability test shall
be conducted within the most hydraulically restrictive soil horizon
or substratum below the as-built BMP to ensure the performance of
the infiltration BMP is as designed. Hand tools and manual permeability
test procedures shall be used for the purpose of confirming BMP performance.
In addition, the infiltration BMP shall be flooded with water sufficient
to demonstrate the performance of the BMP. Test results shall be certified
to the Municipal Engineer.
[12]Â
A groundwater mounding analysis shall be provided
for each stormwater infiltration BMP. The groundwater mounding analysis
shall calculate the maximum height of the groundwater mound based
upon the volume of the maximum design storm. The professional engineer
conducting the analysis shall provide the Municipal Engineer with
the methodology and supporting documentation for the mounding analysis
used and shall certify to the Township of Waterford, based upon the
analysis, that the groundwater mound will not cause stormwater or
groundwater to break out to the land surface or cause adverse impact
to adjacent surface water bodies, wetlands or subsurface structures,
including, but not limited to, basements and septic systems. If there
is more than one infiltration BMP proposed, the model shall indicate
if and how the mounds will interact. The mounding analysis shall be
calculated using the most restrictive soil horizon that will remain
in place within the explored aquifer thickness unless alternative
analyses is authorized by the Municipal Engineer. The mounding analysis
shall be accompanied by a cross section of the infiltration BMP and
surrounding topography and the mound analysis shall extend out to
the point(s) at which the mound intersects with the preexisting maximum
water table elevation.
(4)Â
Pretreatment measures for infiltration BMPs. By reducing incoming
velocities and capturing coarser sediments, pretreatment can extend
the functional life and increase the pollutant removal capability
of infiltration measures. Therefore, the installation of pretreatment
measures is recommended for all development sites. Pretreatment measures
may include, but are not limited to, the following:
(5)Â
Collection and conveyance.
(a)Â
Bicycle-safe inlet grates. Site development plans that incorporate
site design features that help to prevent discharge of trash and debris
from drainage systems shall comply with the following standard to
control passage of solid and floatable materials through storm drain
inlets. For purposes of this subsection, "solid and floatable materials"
means sediment, debris, trash, and other floating, suspended, or settleable
solids.
[1]Â
Design engineers shall use either of the following grates whenever
they use a grate in pavement or another ground surface to collect
stormwater from that surface into a storm drain or surface water body
under that grate:
[a]Â
The New Jersey Department of Transportation (NJDOT)
bicycle safe grate, which is described in Chapter 2.4 of the NJDOT
Bicycle Compatible Roadways and Bikeways Planning and Design Guidelines
(April 1996); or
[b]Â
A different grate, if each individual clear space
in that grate has an area of no more than seven square inches, or
is no greater than 0.5 inch across the smallest dimension. Examples
of grates subject to this standard include grates in grate inlets,
the grate portion (non-curb-opening portion) of combination inlets,
grates on storm sewer manholes, ditch grates, trench grates, and grates
of spacer bars in slotted drains. Examples of ground surfaces include
surfaces of roads (including bridges), driveways, parking areas, bikeways,
plazas, sidewalks, lawns, fields, open channels, and stormwater basin
floors.
[2]Â
Whenever design engineers use a curb-opening inlet, the clear
space in that curb opening (or each individual clear space, if the
curb opening has two or more clear spaces) shall have an area of no
more than seven square inches, or be no greater than two inches across
the smallest dimension.
[3]Â
This standard does not apply:
[a]Â
Where the review agency determines that this standard
would cause inadequate hydraulic performance that could not practicably
be overcome by using additional or larger storm drain inlets that
meet these standards;
[b]Â
Where flows from the water quality design storm as specified in Subsection C are conveyed through any device (e.g., end-of-pipe netting facility, manufactured treatment device, or a catch basin hood) that is designed, at a minimum, to prevent delivery of all solid and floatable materials that could not pass through one of the following:
[c]Â
Where flows are conveyed through a trash rack that has parallel bars with one inch spacing between the bars, to the elevation of the water quality design storm as specified in Subsection C of this section; or
[d]Â
Where the NJDEP determines, pursuant to the New
Jersey Register of Historic Places Rules at N.J.A.C. 7:4-7.2(c), that
action to meet this standard is an undertaking that constitutes an
encroachment or will damage or destroy the New Jersey Register listed
historic property.
(b)Â
Catch basins. Catch basins are storm drain inlets with or without
sumps. Catch basins may provide pretreatment for other stormwater
BMPs by capturing large sediments. The sediment and pollutant removal
efficiency of catch basins depends on the size of the sump and the
performance of routine maintenance to retain the available sediment
storage space in the sump. Where catch basins with sumps are proposed,
the minimum two-foot separation between the bottom of the sump and
seasonally high water table shall be provided.
(c)Â
Open or perforated conveyance piping. Where adequate separation
to the seasonal high water table exists, stormwater from the development
site may be conveyed to a stormwater basin via a system of perforated
pipes. These pipes may be made of PVC or corrugated metal and are
available with perforations of varying size and spacing. Perforated
pipe specifications shall be certified by a professional engineer.
A professional engineer shall certify that perforated conveyance piping
will not act to intercept the seasonal high water table and convey
groundwater to the stormwater basin. All open or perforated stormwater
conveyance systems shall be installed with a minimum separation of
two feet from the seasonal high water table.
K.Â
Additional sources for technical guidance.
(1)Â
NJDEP Technical Guidance Sources.
(a)Â
New Jersey BMP Manual. Available from the Division of Watershed
Management, New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, PO
Box 418, Trenton, New Jersey 08625; or online at http://www.njstormwater.org.
(b)Â
NJDEP Stormwater Management Facilities Maintenance Manual. Available
from the Division of Watershed Management, New Jersey Department of
Environmental Protection, PO Box 418, Trenton, New Jersey 08625; or
online at http://njedl.rutgers.edu/ftp/PDFs/1188.pdf.
(2)Â
Additional Guidance Sources.
(a)Â
New Jersey Pinelands Commission, PO Box 7, 15 Springfield Road,
New Lisbon, New Jersey 08064; phone: 609-894-7300; website: http://www.state.nj.us/pinelands.
(b)Â
State Soil Conservation Committee Standards for soil Erosion
and Sediment Control in New Jersey. Available from all State Soil
Conservation Districts, including the Camden Soil Conservation District,
423 Commerce Lane, Suite 1, West Berlin, 08091; phone: (856) 767-6299,
fax: (856) 767-1676.
(c)Â
Camden Soil Conservation Districts.
(d)Â
New Jersey Department of Transportation, PO Box 600, Trenton,
NJ 08625-0600; phone: 609-530-3536; website: http://www.state.nj.us/transportation.
A.Â
Utility easements along property lines or elsewhere for public purposes
may be required. Such easements shall be a minimum of 20 feet wide
for one utility, with another five feet for each additional utility,
and shall be located in consultation with the companies and Township
departments concerned and, to the fullest extent possible, shall be
centered on or adjacent to lot lines. Utility easements along street
lines shall be a minimum of 10 feet wide.
B.Â
No plantings will be permitted along public rights-of-way or within
utility easements where such plantings will contact utility lines
or wires or where plantings will require routine maintenance to prevent
contact with utility wires.
C.Â
Conservation easements and floodplains shall be indicated on the
preliminary and final plats and shown in such a manner that their
boundaries can be accurately determined. The removal of trees and
ground cover shall be prohibited in such easements except for the
following purposes:
(1)Â
The removal of dead or diseased trees;
(2)Â
Limited thinning of trees and brush to encourage the most desirable
growth;
(3)Â
Removal of trees to allow for structures designed to impound water
or convey stormwater;
(4)Â
The removal of trees for the construction of suction pipes;
(5)Â
The removal of trees in areas to be flooded in the creation of ponds
and lakes; and
(6)Â
The installation and maintenance of utilities.
D.Â
The boundary line of any easement shall be monumented at its intersection
with all existing or proposed street lines, except when a lot line
forms the side or center line of the easement.
E.Â
Whenever the internal grading of a lot is part of the design of the
drainage of stormwater systems, as by swale, berm or other topographical
feature designed to intercept or direct water, the same shall be designed
as an easement on the map to be filed, or shall be dedicated by recorded
instrument, in such a way as to give notice to future owners of said
property and to ensure continued maintenance of such drainage feature.
The recorded instrument or filed map shall contain a metes-and-bounds
description of the easement, as well as an outline of the rights of
the grantee in such easement, including but not limited to construction,
reconstruction, replacement, repair, maintenance and enlargement of
the facilities within the easement.
A.Â
Electronic equipment, including all devices for transferring and
receiving electronic signals, shall be shielded so that there is no
interference with any radio or television reception beyond the operators'
property or dwelling unit as a result of the operation of such equipment.
B.Â
All electric or electronic devices shall be subject to the provision
of Public Law 90-602, 90th Congress, HR10790, dated October 18, 1968,
entitled "An Act for the Protection of Public Health and Safety from
the Dangers of Electronic Product Radiation" and the New Jersey Uniform
Construction Code.[1]
No development shall be carried out unless it is designed to
avoid irreversible adverse impacts on habitats that are critical to
the survival of any local populations of those threatened or endangered
vegetative species listed in the CMP under N.J.A.C. 7:50-6.27.
A.Â
All development shall be carried out in a manner that promotes energy
conservation and maximizes active and passive solar energy in accordance
with any applicable statutes. Such measures may include orientation
of streets, buildings, landscaping and the like to permit solar access
and the use of energy conservation building materials.
B.Â
Wherever feasible, the approving Board shall require bike paths to
be included in major site plans and major subdivisions.
A.Â
Generally.
(1)Â
A fence or wall shall be defined for the purposes of this chapter
as an artificially constructed barrier of wood, masonry, stone, wire,
metal or any other manufactured material or combination of materials,
erected for the enclosure of land and/or dividing one piece of land
from another.
(2)Â
Vegetation used in lieu of fencing shall be planted a minimum of
five feet inside the property boundaries and shall be kept trimmed
to avoid encroachment onto neighboring properties, sidewalks and streets.
No vegetation that will exceed two feet in height shall be planted
in any site triangle for streets or driveways. No vegetation that
will exceed 10 feet in height shall be planted in areas with overhead
electrical, telephone or cable wires.
B.Â
Materials and composition.
(1)Â
Any fence, wall or shrubbery which unduly cuts off light or air or
which may cause a nuisance, a fire hazard, or a dangerous condition
is hereby expressly prohibited.
(2)Â
The following fences and fencing materials are specifically prohibited:
barbed wire, short pointed fences, canvas fences, cloth fences, electrically
charged fences (except livestock containment), poultry fences, turkey
wire, temporary fences such as snow fences (except in emergency situations),
expandable or collapsible fences (except during construction of a
building), and tires.
(3)Â
All chain link fences shall be erected with the closed loop at the
top of the fence. Where privacy slats are used, they shall not be
multicolored.
(4)Â
All entrances or gates shall open onto the property.
(5)Â
The finished side of a solid fence shall face the adjacent property
or street.
(6)Â
No fence or wall shall be erected within the Township without the
owner of the premises, or his representative, obtaining a permit from
the Zoning and Construction Officials. The application form for a
permit shall be prepared by the Zoning and Construction Officials
and shall include the following information:[2]
(a)Â
The owner and address of the premises where the fence or wall
is to be erected.
(b)Â
The name and address of the company or person installing the
fence or wall.
(c)Â
A sketch or plan of the fence or wall.
(d)Â
A plot plan or survey of the premises in question, which shall
show streets abutting at the nearest intersection and shall include
the location of structures and easements.
(e)Â
If a fence or wall is to be located within an easement granted
to the Township, the property owner shall provide a signed statement
indicating that he or she is aware that the fence or wall is to be
located within an easement and that he or she agrees to remove and
later replace the fence or wall at his or her expense if such action
is required by the Township in order to conduct maintenance work.
(7)Â
Any deed restrictions affecting the property on which the fence or
wall is to be erected or constructed shall not be superseded by this
section. Moreover, no fence or wall shall be located within a conservation
easement or deed restricted buffer area unless the language of such
easement or deed restricted buffer area explicitly permits such fence
or wall.
(8)Â
All fences and walls shall be of quality materials and installed
in a good workmanlike manner. All fences and walls shall be maintained
by the owner.
(9)Â
The following fences shall be exempt from the requirements of this
section, relative to permits, fees, construction, or materials:
(a)Â
Fences accessory to farm operations, except that said exemption
shall not extend to that percentage of farm property set aside for
residential purposes as delineated upon the property record cards
of the Township.
(b)Â
Fences accessory to any public facility, park, playground or
school premises.
(c)Â
Fences approved as part of a subdivision or site plan application.
C.Â
Regulations in residential districts.
(1)Â
Fences and walls shall be placed a minimum of one foot inside the
property line in front yards and six inches inside the property lines
of side and rear yards, providing the side and rear yard areas do
not abut a street or are part of a corner lot. Fences and walls on
parcels which have a zero side yard setback requirement may be placed
on the property line. For all other properties, if adjoining property
owners agree, in writing, fencing and walls may be placed on the property
line for side and rear yards not abutting a street.
(2)Â
Fences and walls not exceeding four feet in height above ground level
may be erected in the front yard or along any property boundary adjacent
to a public right-of-way but shall not be located in the sight triangle
for driveways or streets.
(3)Â
Fences and walls not exceeding six feet in height above ground level
may be erected in yard areas extending from the front wall of a dwelling
to enclose side and rear yard areas of interior lots. In the case
of corner lots, six-foot-high fencing may be erected to enclose side
and rear yard areas if it is placed a minimum of 10 feet inside of
the property line adjacent to the side street.
(4)Â
Fences and walls on corner properties shall not be constructed of
materials that would block the view of vehicular traffic at the intersection
and shall not be located in any sight triangle for driveways or streets.
(5)Â
Barbed and/or electrified wire fences on any common property line
with another dwelling or public right-of-way are prohibited.
(7)Â
A tennis court may be surrounded by a fence a maximum of 15 feet in height in compliance with § 176-118E(2).
D.Â
Regulations in nonresidential districts.
(1)Â
Fences and walls shall be set back a minimum of one foot from any
property boundary.
(2)Â
When a landscaped buffer area is not feasible, privacy fences and
walls for commercial uses that abut existing residential uses shall
be required and shall be a minimum of six feet but no more than 10
feet in height.
(3)Â
Fences and walls on corner properties shall not be constructed of
materials that would block the view of vehicular traffic and shall
not be located in any sight triangle for driveways and streets.
(4)Â
No fence or wall shall be erected to restrict or otherwise alter
the vehicular traffic flow unless approved by the Planning Board.
A.Â
All applications for development in the Township shall demonstrate
conformance with the standards for fire hazard mitigation per N.J.A.C.
7:50-6.124.
B.Â
The potential fire hazard for any parcel of land proposed for development
shall be determined according to the following fire hazard classes:
Fire Hazard Class
|
Vegetation Type
| |
---|---|---|
Low
|
Atlantic white cedar hardwood swamps
| |
Moderate
|
Non-pine barrens forest prescribed burn areas
| |
High
|
Pine barrens forest, including mature forms of pine, pine-oak
or oak-pine
| |
Extreme
|
Immature or dwarf forms of pine-oak or oak-pine; all classes
of pine-scrub oak and pine-lowland
|
C.Â
All applications for development shall determine the appropriate
fire hazard class by referring to the vegetation map in the natural
resources inventory, supplemented by an on-site inspection to determine
true height and spacing, as is necessary.
D.Â
For lands classified as moderate, high and extreme fire hazard areas,
all roads shall conform with the following standards:
(1)Â
All new residential developments of 25 units or more shall have two
accessways of width and surface composition sufficient to accommodate
and support fire-fighting equipment.
(2)Â
All dead-end roads will terminate in a manner that provides safe
and efficient entry and exit for fire equipment.
(3)Â
The rights-of-way of all roads will be maintained so that they provide
an effective firebreak.
E.Â
The Fire Official shall require and designate public or private fire
lanes as deemed necessary for the efficient and effective use of fire
apparatus. Fire lanes shall be a minimum of 18 feet in width.
F.Â
Fire Department access shall be provided and maintained to all buildings
undergoing construction, alteration or demolition. Fire Department
access roadways shall be of an approved surface material capable of
providing emergency access and support at all times. Fire Department
access roadways shall be a minimum of 18 feet in unobstructed width.
G.Â
For lands classified as moderate, high and extreme hazard areas,
a fire hazard fuel break shall be provided around structures proposed
for human use, by selectively thinning, mowing, or pruning and maintaining
on an annual basis, the shrubs, understory trees, bushes and ground
cover and removing all dead plant material. These fuel breaks shall
be at widths, measured outward from the structure, as follows:
H.Â
Fire hazard fuel breaks within lands classified as extreme fire hazard
areas shall contain no pine tree (Pinus Species) that is within 25
feet of another pine tree.
I.Â
All applications for development of 100 or more dwelling units on
lands classified as high or extreme fire hazard areas shall have a
two-hundred-foot perimeter fuel break between all structures and the
forest in which:
(1)Â
Shrubs, understory trees, and ground cover are selectively removed,
mowed or pruned, and maintained on an annual basis;
(2)Â
All dead plant material is removed;
(3)Â
Roads, rights-of-way and wetlands are incorporated into the fuel
break to the maximum extent practicable; and
(4)Â
There is a specific program for maintenance.
J.Â
All new structures proposed for development in the Township shall
meet the following specifications:
(1)Â
Roofs and exteriors will be constructed of fire-resistant materials,
such as asphalt rag felt roofing, tiles, fire-resistant roofing shingles,
sheet iron, aluminum or brick. Fire-retardant-treated wood shingles
or shake-type roofs are prohibited in high or extreme fire hazard
areas;
(2)Â
All projections, such as balconies, decks and roof gables, shall
be constructed of fire-resistant materials or materials treated with
fire-retardant chemicals;
(3)Â
Any openings in the roof, attic and the floor shall be screened;
(4)Â
Chimneys and stovepipes which are designed to burn solid or liquid
fuels shall be equipped with screens over the outlets;
(5)Â
Flat roofs shall be permitted in areas where vegetation is higher than the roof, provided that the provisions of Subsection G of this section for modified fire hazard areas are met; and
(6)Â
Each dwelling unit shall be provided with a second floor emergency
rear exit if the height of the building exceeds 2Â 1/2 stories.
No development shall be carried out in the Pinelands Area unless
it is designed to avoid irreversible adverse impacts on habitats that
are critical to the survival of any local populations of those threatened
or endangered animal species designated by the NJDEP pursuant to N.J.S.A.
23:2A-1 et seq. All development or other authorized activity shall
be carried out in a manner which avoids disturbance to fish and wildlife
habitats that are essential to the continued nesting, resting, breeding
and feeding of significant populations of fish and wildlife.
No forestry in the Township shall be carried out by any person unless a permit for such activity has been issued by the Township Zoning Official in accordance with § 176-12F. Notwithstanding this requirement, no such permits shall be required for the following forestry activities:
A.Â
Normal and customary forestry practices on residentially improved
parcels of land that are five acres or less in size.
B.Â
Tree harvesting, provided that no more than one cord of wood per
five acres of land is harvested in any one year and that no more than
five cords of wood are harvested from the entire parcel in any one
year.
C.Â
Tree planting, provided that the area to be planted does not exceed
five acres in any one year, no soil disturbance occurs other than
that caused by the planting activity and no trees other than those
authorized by N.J.A.C. 7:50-6.25 are to be planted.
D.Â
Forest stand improvement designed to selectively thin trees and brush,
provided that no clearing or soil disturbance occurs and that the
total land area on the parcel in which the activity occurs does not
exceed five acres in any one year.
E.Â
Prescribed burning, clearing and maintaining of fire breaks.
No use shall produce a strong, dazzling light or reflection
of a strong, dazzling light or glare beyond its lot lines. Exterior
lighting shall be shielded, buffered, and directed so that glare,
direct light or reflection will not become a nuisance to adjoining
properties, units, districts, or streets.
Sources of heat, including, but not limited to, steam, gases,
vapors, products of combustion or chemical reaction shall not discharge
onto or directly contact structures, plant or animal life on neighboring
uses. No use, occupation, activity, operation or device shall cause
an increase in ambient temperature, as measured on the boundary between
neighboring uses. Further, no use shall be permitted which could cause
the temperature to rise or fall in any body of water, except that
this provision shall not apply to any sewerage treatment plant which
has received approval by the NJDEP as they may be adopted and amended.
A.Â
Planning Board powers. The Planning Board shall exercise all the powers and perform all the duties set forth in N.J.A.C. 7:50-6.153(a), including recommendations to the Township Committee for designation of historic resources, in accordance with N.J.S.A. 40:55D-1 et seq., which are determined to be significant pursuant to § 176-70D(3) below.
B.Â
Authority to issue certificates of appropriateness.
(1)Â
The standards governing the issuance of certificates of appropriateness
in N.J.A.C. 7:50-6.156(c) shall be followed by the Planning Board.
(2)Â
The Planning Board shall issue all certificates of appropriateness.[1]
[1]
Editor's Note: Original § 176-70.2C, regarding the
issuance of certificates of appropriateness by the Board of Adjustment,
which previously followed this subsection, was deleted under the authority
of Ord. No. 2003-1, adopted 1-22-2003
(3)Â
Certificates of appropriateness shall be required for the following:
(a)Â
Construction, encroachment upon, alteration, remodeling, removal,
disturbance or demolition of any resource designated by the Township
Committee or the Commission pursuant to N.J.A.C. 7:50-6.154 or any
action which renders such a site inaccessible; and
(4)Â
Applications for certificates of appropriateness shall include the
information specified in N.J.A.C. 7:50-6.156(b).
C.Â
Effect of issuance of certificate of appropriateness. The effect
of the issuance of a certification of appropriateness is as follows:
(1)Â
All subsequent development approvals shall be issued or denied in a manner consistent with the certificate of appropriateness except as provided in Subsection C(2) below.
(2)Â
A certification of appropriateness issued as a result of the cultural resource survey requirement set forth in § 176-70D below shall be effective for two years. If the resource is not designated by the Commission pursuant to N.J.A.C. 7:50-6.154 or by the Township Committee pursuant to N.J.S.A. 40:55D-1 et seq. within that two-year period, the historic resource standards of this section shall no longer apply to the resource in question until such time as the Commission designates the resource pursuant to N.J.A.C. 7:50-6.154.
D.Â
Cultural resource survey required.
(1)Â
A cultural resource survey shall accompany all applications for development in the PV District and all applications for major development in order to determine whether any significant historic resources exist on the parcel, in accordance with § 176-106.
(2)Â
This requirement for a survey may be a waived by the local approving
authority if:
(a)Â
There is sufficient evidence of significant cultural activity
on the project site or, in the case of archaeological resources, within
the vicinity;
(b)Â
The evidence of cultural activity on the site lacks the potential
for importance because further recording of the available data will
not contribute to a more comprehensive understanding of Pinelands
culture; or
(3)Â
A resource shall be deemed to be significant if it possesses integrity
of location, design, setting, materials, workmanship, feeling and
association which reflects its significance in American history, architecture,
archaeology or culture under one or more of the following criteria:
(a)Â
The presence of structures, sites or areas associated with events
of significance to the cultural, political, economic or social history
of the nation, state, local community or the Pinelands; or
(b)Â
The presence of structures, sites or areas associated with the
lives of persons or institutions of significance to the cultural,
political, economic or social history of the nation, state, local
community or the Pinelands; or
(c)Â
The presence of structures that represent the work of a master,
or that possess high artistic values, or that embody the distinctive
characteristics of a type, period or method of construction, or that
represent a distinguishable entity of significance to the architectural,
cultural, political, economic or social history of the nation, state,
local community of the Pinelands, although its components may lack
individual distinction; or
(d)Â
The presence of a site or area which has yielded or is likely
to yield significant information regarding the history or archaeological
history of the Pinelands.
F.Â
Discovery of resource during construction. If archaeological data
is discovered on site any time after construction has been commenced,
the developer shall immediately cease construction, notify the Planning
Board and Commission and take all reasonable steps to protect the
archaeological data in accordance with the "Guidelines for the Recovery
of Scientific, Prehistoric, Historic and Archaeological Data: Procedures
for Notification Reporting and Data Recovery" (36 CFR 66).
A.Â
In order to secure property improvement and maintenance of all common
open space in any proposed housing development, the landowner shall
provide for and establish an organization for the ownership and maintenance
of any common open space not dedicated to and accepted by the Township.
Such organization shall not be dissolved nor shall it dispose of any
common space, by sale or otherwise (except to an organization conceived
and established to own and maintain the common open space), without
first offering to dedicate the same to the Township or other governmental
agency designated by the Township. The Planning Board shall make findings
concerning the operation of the organization for the ownership and
maintenance of any common open space. It shall consider the following:
(1)Â
Time when organization was created.
(2)Â
Mandatory or automatic nature of membership in the organization by
resident or successor.
(3)Â
Permanence of open space safeguards.
(4)Â
Liability of organization for insurance, taxes and maintenance of
all facilities.
(5)Â
Provision of pro rata sharing of costs and assessments.
(6)Â
Capacity of the organization to administer common facilities and
preserve the benefits of common open space.
B.Â
In the event that the organization established to own and maintain
common open space, or any successor organization, shall, at any time
after establishment of the development, fail to maintain the common
open space in reasonable order and condition in accordance with the
plan, the municipality may serve written notice upon such organization
or upon the residents and owners of the development setting forth
the manner in which the organization has failed to maintain the common
open space in reasonable condition and said notice shall include a
demand that such deficiencies of maintenance be cured within 30 days,
and shall state the date and place of a hearing which shall be held
within 14 days of the notice. At such hearing, the municipality may
modify the terms of the original notice of the deficiencies and may
give an extension of time within which they shall be cured. If the
deficiencies set forth in the original notice, or in the modifications
thereof, shall not be cured within said 30 days or an extension thereof,
the municipality, in order to preserve the taxable values of the properties
within the planned development and to prevent the common open space
from becoming a public nuisance, may enter upon said common open space
and maintain the same for a period of one year. Said entry and maintenance
shall not vest in the public any rights to use the common open space
except when the same is voluntarily dedicated to the public by the
residents and owners. Before the expiration of said year, the municipality
shall, upon its initiative or upon the request of the organization
responsible for the maintenance of the common open space, call a public
hearing upon notice to such organization, or to the residents and
owners of the development, to be held by the municipal authority,
at which hearing such organization or the residents and owners of
the development shall show cause why such maintenance by the municipality
should not continue for a succeeding year. If the Township shall determine
that such organization is not ready and able to maintain said common
open space during the next succeeding year and subject to a similar
hearing and determination in each year thereafter. The decision of
the Township in any such case shall constitute a final administrative
decision subject to judicial review.
C.Â
The cost of such maintenance by the municipality shall be assessed
ratably against the properties within the development that have a
right of enjoyment of the common open space and shall become a tax
lien on said properties. The municipality at the time of entering
upon said common open space for the purpose of maintenance, shall
file a notice of such lien in the office of the County Clerk upon
the properties affected by such lien within the development.
D.Â
Membership shall be limited to and mandatory for all property owners,
condominium owners, stockholders under a cooperative development or
other owners of property or interest in the project. Required membership
and the responsibilities of the members shall be in writing between
the organization and each member in the form of a covenant with each
agreeing to liability for his pro-rata share of the organization's
costs. The organization shall be responsible for liability insurance,
taxes, maintenance and any other obligations assumed by the organization
shall not be dissolved nor shall it dispose of any of its open space
or property without offering to dedicate the same to the Township.
E.Â
The assessment levied by the organization upon each member may become
a lien on each member's property. The organization shall be allowed
to adjust the assessment to meet changing needs.
F.Â
The organization shall clearly describe in its bylaws all the rights
and obligations of each tenant and owner, including a copy of the
covenant, model deeds and articles or incorporation of the organization,
and the fact that every tenant and property owner shall have the right
to use all common property. These shall be set forth as a condition
of approval and shall be submitted to the Township Attorney prior
to the granting of final approval of the development.
G.Â
The articles of incorporation, covenants, bylaws, model deeds and
other legal instruments shall stipulate that control of the organization
shall be transferred to the members based on percentage of the dwelling
units sold and/or occupied. Further, these instruments shall clearly
indicate that in the event such organization shall fail to maintain
the common open space or common property in reasonable order and condition,
the Township may serve written notice upon such organization and shall
follow the procedures set forth in N.J.S.A. 40:55D-43b, and if it
becomes necessary for the Township to provide maintenance, the imposition
of a lien, as set forth in N.J.S.A. 40:55D-43, shall be followed.
A.Â
Conformance.
(1)Â
All development shall conform to the provisions of this section and
all other applicable provisions of this chapter.
(2)Â
Development prohibited in the vicinity of threatened or endangered
plants. No development shall be carried out by any person unless it
is designed to avoid irreversible adverse impacts on the survival
of any local populations of threatened or endangered plants of the
Pinelands designated in N.J.A.C. 7:50-6.27.
B.Â
Street (shade) trees. For all land development devoid of major trees
along arterial and collector streets of a development, and along proposed
roads and street rights-of-way where natural woods are not present,
and where, due to construction, the entire right-of-way is cleared,
the following provisions shall apply:
(1)Â
Trees shall be planted along both sides of all streets as approved
by the Planning Board.
(2)Â
Trees shall be planted at forty-foot intervals, or an equivalent
number shall be planted in an informal arrangement.
(3)Â
Trees shall be planted so that they will not interfere with utilities,
block sight easements, or obscure streetlights. Spacing between street
trees and various objects should be as follows:
Object
|
Distance (from tree)
(feet)
| |
---|---|---|
Fire hydrant
|
8
| |
Light pole
|
25
| |
Street/stop/directional signs
|
25
| |
Street corner
|
40
|
(4)Â
The caliper of the trees shall be 2Â 1/2 inches measured 12 inches
above the ground. The standing height shall be a minimum of 10 feet.
All trees shall be brought to the site balled and burlapped or other
acceptable means, free of insects and disease and true to species
and variety.
(5)Â
Developers shall use a tree root control barrier a minimum of 18
inches in depth to prevent street, sidewalk and curb hazards. The
barriers shall be installed along the edge of the sidewalk and curb,
against the finished concrete work, slightly below finished grade.
The barriers shall be backfilled with a layer of gravel then completed
with normal fill material.
(6)Â
Stripping trees from a lot or filling around trees on a lot shall
not be permitted unless it can be shown that grading requirements
necessitate removal of trees, in which case, those lots shall be replanted
with trees to reestablish the tone of the area and to conform with
adjacent lots.
(7)Â
All apartments, condominiums and townhouses must provide adequate
landscaping with at least one approved tree per unit that must be
maintained by the owner of the apartment development, the condominium
association, or the individual townhouse owners if on individual lots.
(8)Â
Wherever medial grass strips or other landscaped areas are proposed
which will be visible to the general public within the development,
the covenants and/or agreements of the maintenance of such areas by
that association shall apply.
C.Â
General landscaping provisions.
(1)Â
Landscaping provided as part of any development plan shall utilize native Pinelands vegetation, except that 20% of all trees, shrubs, and ground cover may be of nonnative, nontoxic, species. Nonnative, nontoxic species may be used only in accordance with § 176-72C(4)(d) below. Vegetation represents the most visible element of the essential character of the Pinelands and constitutes the fundamental structure of wildlife habitats. The mandatory utilization of primary Pinelands native vegetation will insure the continued integrity of the visual and ecological character of the Pinelands.
(2)Â
All clearing and soil disturbance activities, whether or not an application
for development is required pursuant to N.J.A.C. 7:50-4 and this chapter,
shall be limited to that which is necessary to accommodate an activity,
use or structure which is permitted by this chapter.
(3)Â
Where practical, all clearing and soil disturbance activities associated
with an activity, use or structure, other than agriculture, forestry
and resource extraction, shall:
(4)Â
In order to conserve water, conserve natural features and reduce
pollution from the use of fertilizers, pesticides and other soil supplements,
all landscaping or revegetation plans shall incorporate the following
elements:
(a)Â
The limits of clearing shall be identified;
(b)Â
Existing vegetation, including New Jersey's Record Trees as
published by the NJDEP in 1991 and periodically updated, shall be
incorporated into the landscape design where practical;
(c)Â
Permanent lawn or turf areas shall be limited to those specifically
intended for active human use such as play fields, golf courses and
lawns associated with a residence or other principal nonresidential
use. Existing wooded areas shall not be cleared and converted to lawns
except when directly associated with and adjacent to a proposed structure;
and
(d)Â
Shrubs and trees authorized by N.J.A.C. 7:50-6.25 shall be used for revegetation or landscaping purposes. Other shrubs and trees may be used in the following circumstances, provided they do not exceed the twenty-percent maximum nonnative vegetation permitted in § 176-72C(1):
[1]Â
When the parcel to be developed or its environs contain a predominance
of shrubs and tree species not authorized by N.J.A.C. 7:50-6.25;
[2]Â
For limited ornamental purposes around buildings and other structures;
or
[3]Â
When limited use of other shrubs or tree species is required
for proper screening or buffering.
(e)Â
When automatic irrigation systems are used they shall be fitted
with a moisture-sensing device.
(f)Â
When possible, irrigation systems shall use nonpotable water
(i.e., retained stormwater).
(g)Â
Planting beds shall be covered with mulch.
D.Â
Vegetation.
(1)Â
Trees and shrubs listed hereunder shall be utilized for landscaping
purposes:
Pitch pine
|
Shortleaf pine
|
Blackjack oak
| |
Southern red oak
|
White oak
|
Chestnut oak
| |
Scrub oak
|
Post oak
|
Trident red maple
| |
Scarlet oak
|
Black huckleberry
|
Black chokeberry
| |
Black gum
|
Red chokeberry
|
Inkberry
| |
Shadbush
|
Hayberry
|
Arrowwood
| |
Winterberry
|
Sweet pepperbush
|
Sheep laurel
| |
Sandmyrtle
|
Dangleberry
|
Lowbush blueberry
| |
Virginia pine
|
American holly
|
Atlantic white cedar
| |
Mountain laurel
|
Gray birch
|
Sweetbay magnolia
| |
Red cedar
|
Sassafras
|
Teaberry
| |
Swamp leucothoe
|
Staggerbush
|
Dwarf huckleberry
| |
Trailing arbutus
|
Bearberry
|
Black highbush blueberry
| |
Cranberry
|
Swamp azalea
| ||
Rhododendron maximum
|
Black oak
|
(2)Â
Tree and shrub species other than those listed in Subsection D(1) above may be used, provided that, of the 20% maximum nonnative vegetation permitted under § 176-72C(1), species of the heath family (Ericaceae) comprise at least 80% of the plantings.
(3)Â
In cases where 80% of native Pinelands species for landscaping is
limited due to extreme site conditions, the Planning Board may hear
arguments from the applicant with reference to the flexibility of
mandatory Pinelands vegetation requirements. In such cases, the Board
shall consider the following guidelines before granting a waiver from
the vegetation requirements:
(a)Â
The individual site conditions.
(b)Â
The extremity of the stressful nature of the site.
(c)Â
The extent of native vegetation on adjacent sites.
(d)Â
Proximity of the site to sensitive environmental areas.
(e)Â
Availability of water and/or maintenance access.
(f)Â
The extent to which proposed plans are compatible with native
species. (The use of exotic varieties shall be avoided.)
(g)Â
The extent to which a native buffer could be utilized between
the developed portions and the natural portions of the tract.
(4)Â
The Board shall not accept the unavailability of native or indigenous
species as adequate grounds for a waiver from this section.
E.Â
Ground cover and mulch.
(1)Â
All planting beds must be provided with ground cover and the type
to be used must be noted on the site plan. Where mulches are used,
a layer of black, four-mil polyethylene or its equivalent must be
used to reduce weed growth and retain moisture. Minimum required depth
of placement is four inches.
(2)Â
Ground covers are required in place of grass in small and restricted
areas, such as tree and shrub planters.
(3)Â
All ground cover areas and steep banks with slopes greater than a
3:1 gradient must be planted with an approved ground cover.
F.Â
Grasses.
(1)Â
Grasses that are adapted to drought, nutrient poor soils (such as
tall fescue, sheep fescue, chewings fescue, red fescue and smoothgrass)
and those that are native to the Pinelands (such as little bluestem,
deertongue, redtop and switchgrass) shall be utilized for landscaping
purposes. Species used for temporary cover (such as rye grass and
oats) shall be utilized to stabilize soils.
(3)Â
Cover crops shall be used to control erosion during construction
or when cover is needed for a temporary period.
Time Period
|
Options
| |
---|---|---|
0 to 6 months
|
Mulch
| |
6 to 12 months
|
Oats, winter rye
| |
1 to 2 years
|
Annual rye, perennial rye, winter rye
| |
2 or more years
|
Fescue with mixture of perennial rye
|
G.Â
Protection of existing plantings.
(1)Â
Sound existing trees, substantial clumps, and fine specimens shall
be carefully protected during construction to avoid disturbance of
the microclimate of the plantings.
(2)Â
Stockpiling of soil shall be done in open areas, and soil shall be
left undisturbed in a ten-foot radius around any tree to be preserved.
(3)Â
Temporary fences, of sturdy material, shall be erected at the drip
line to prevent encroachment, soil compaction, and damage from equipment.
If a tree has a large spread, a triangular fence may be built instead
of a fence at the drip line. These fences shall not be supported by
the plants they are protecting, but shall be self supporting.
(4)Â
The grade of land located within six feet of a tree shall not be
raised or lowered more than six inches unless compensated by welling
or retaining methods described herein. In situations of specimen trees
with shallow surface rooting, grading shall not occur within a twelve-foot
radius of the tree trunk unless excavated by hand. No equipment is
to be driven over this area, and no building materials are to be stacked
against the trees or within the area of the barrier.
(5)Â
Tree wells are to be constructed around each tree or group of trees
before any grades are increased. Wells are to be constructed of uncemented
stone, block or any other suitable material. This well should be a
minimum of three feet in diameter for four-inch or less caliper trees.
Construction is to be started at the determined distance, on existing
grade so as not to disturb roots with foundation construction. For
trees of more than four inches in diameter, add one foot to the diameter
of each additional inch of caliper measured 12 inches above natural
ground level, to a maximum of eight feet.
(6)Â
Retaining walls shall be constructed around each tree or group of
trees immediately after grade is lowered. This retaining wall is to
be constructed of pressure-treated timber or any other suitable material
subject to approval by the Township Engineer and the Planning Board.
(7)Â
No tree is to support any scaffolding, signs, temporary utility or
any other device.
H.Â
Planting procedure. Any vegetation delivered to a site, which is
not planted immediately, shall be heeled-in to prevent desiccation.
Trees and bushes should be planted according to the following recommended
horticultural procedures:
(1)Â
Plantings should be well-formed and healthy nursery grown stock.
The root ball should be inspected to ensure that it is undamaged,
of good quality soil and that it encompasses the entire root system.
(2)Â
Planting should take place when trees and bushes are dormant because
transplanting during this period greatly increases the chances of
success.
(3)Â
Planting holes should be dug two times as wide and 1Â 1/2 times
as deep as the root ball. Topsoil and subsoil should be mixed thoroughly
with sphagnum peat moss or according to the recommendations of the
county agricultural agent and a layer six inches to seven inches of
the mix placed in the bottom of the hole. Fertilizer should not be
added to the soil mix since it can burn new, tender roots, slowing
down the growth of the plant or even killing it. The soil in the bottom
of the hole should be tamped down without compacting it.
(4)Â
Plantings should be positioned in the planting hole so that trunks
are straight, and the base is at the finished grade of the new location
and at the same depth as it was when it was growing. Roots should
be spread evenly throughout the hole, and soil added carefully.
(5)Â
The backfilled soil should be tamped in place, and the hole filled
to the top of the root ball. The added soil should be tamped gently,
but not compacted, and a ring of soil two inches to three inches high
should be formed around the edge of the planting hole to aid in watering.
(6)Â
Plantings should be watered with a fertilizer-water solution, the
amount of fertilizer depending on an analysis. Watering should be
thorough and done slowly and gently to avoid damage to the soil structure.
(7)Â
Saucers shall be designed to catch and hold the maximum amount of
water, either from natural precipitation or irrigation and shall be
a minimum of four inches higher than the finished grade. The area
within the watering saucer should be filled to a depth of two inches
to three inches with mulch. Saucers placed on slopes shall be level
at the top and perpendicular to the tree trunk.
(8)Â
Tree trunks should be coated with an insecticide to reduce the chances
of attack by borers. The specific insecticide can be recommended by
the county agricultural agent.
(9)Â
All newly planted trees and shrubs should be pruned. Balled and burlapped
and container-grown plants should be shaped lightly and have broken
and damaged branches removed. Bare root plants require much heavier
pruning to reduce the water demand by the top of the plant in order
to compensate for the roots lost when the plants were dug up. One-third
to 1/2 of the leaf area should be removed by thinning the branches
and reducing their length. Pruning should retain the natural form
of the tree or shrub; the central leader or top of a newly planted
tree should never be removed, since this will destroy its natural
growth habit.
(10)Â
If properly planted, shrubs will not have to be staked, although
oversized bushes may need some support. Trees should be staked in
accordance with good nursery practice.
(11)Â
Special planting techniques may be necessary when planting in
heavy, poorly drained or sandy soils. Recommendations of the county
agricultural agent should be followed.
(12)Â
After planting, an adequate supply of water and even amount
of moisture shall be maintained. Plant conditions should be carefully
observed, and if the soil is dry three inches to six inches beneath
the surface, water should be added immediately. The water should be
applied slowly, preferably through drip irrigation, so that it soaks
in and does not run off. As a general rule, plantings in well-drained
soils should be watered one inch per week, and those in lighter sandy
soils, two inches per week, except during periods of heavy rainfall.
(13)Â
Dead or dying trees which have been transplanted by virtue of
the requirements of this section shall be replaced by the developer
during the next recommended planting season.
I.Â
Staking procedures. Trees over six feet in height must be staked
in the following manner:
(1)Â
Two stakes shall be driven a minimum of two feet into undisturbed
soil outside the planting hole.
(2)Â
After placement stakes must be 1/2 to 2/3 the height of the tree
measured from ground level.
(3)Â
Stakes shall be a minimum of two inches by two inches stock at the
thick end.
(4)Â
Stakes shall be placed in line with prevailing winds.
(5)Â
Stakes shall be attached to the tree with twelve-gauge galvanized
wire covered with rubber or plastic hose where wire is likely to come
into contact with the tree trunk. Any of the commercially available
materials designed for staking trees may be used as an alternative
with the approval of the Township Engineer. The loop in contact with
the tree shall be loose enough to permit growth and prevent girdling
for two years but shall be tightly bound to prevent slippage.
J.Â
Mulching.
(1)Â
A four-inch minimum layer of mulch shall be applied around each individual
or group of trees and shrubs.
(2)Â
Mulch shall be considered any material, organic or inorganic, of
a granular nature that is not readily subject to movement by wind
or water.
(3)Â
Wood chips partially rotted or nitrogen-enriched may be used. New
wood chips are not acceptable because of the bacterial drawings of
available nitrogen from the soil, thus preventing its use by the plants
it is intended to protect.
K.Â
Wrapping. Each deciduous tree shall be wrapped with an expandable
paper or cloth treated to last at least one year to prevent sunscald.
A.Â
General standards.
(1)Â
For minor site plans and, wherever appropriate in the discretion
of the Township Engineer, for developments with insignificant impact
with reference to lighting, the developer may submit a sample of the
actual fixture and lighting proposed for review and approval by the
Township Engineer in lieu of the engineering data required in this
section.
(2)Â
Any proposed outdoor lighting shall be shown on the site plan in
sufficient detail to allow determination of the effects at the property
line, on nearby streets, driveways, residences and overhead sky glow.
The objective of these specifications is to minimize glare and undesirable
off-site effects.
B.Â
Illumination levels. The maintained footcandles of illumination recommended
at ground level are as indicated in the following table:
Area Classification
| ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Commercial
|
Intermediate
|
Residential
| ||||
Street Hierarchy
|
Lux
|
Footcandles
|
Lux
|
Footcandles
|
Lux
|
Footcandles
|
Collector
|
13
|
1.2
|
10
|
0.9
|
6
|
0.6
|
Minor-residential subcollector
|
10
|
0.9
|
6
|
0.6
|
4
|
0.4
|
Local
|
6
|
0.6
|
4
|
0.4
|
4
|
0.4
|
Parking Illumination (Open Parking Facilities)
| ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Illumination Objectives
| ||||||
Level of Activity
|
Vehicular Traffic
|
Pedestrian Safety
|
Pedestrian Security
| |||
Lux
|
Footcandles
|
Lux
|
Footcandles
|
Lux
|
Footcandles
| |
Low
|
5
|
0.5
|
2
|
0.2
|
9
|
0.8
|
Medium
|
11
|
1
|
6
|
0.6
|
22
|
2
|
High
|
22
|
2
|
10
|
0.9
|
43
|
4
|
Pedestrianway Illumination
| |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Average Levels for Special Pedestrian Security
| |||||||
Minimum Average Level
|
Mounting Heights 3 to 5 Meters
(9 to 15 feet)
|
Mounting Heights 5 to 10 Meters
(15 to 30 feet)
| |||||
Walkways and Bikeway Classification
|
Lux
|
Footcandles
|
Lux
|
Footcandles
|
Lux
|
Footcandles
| |
Sidewalks (roadside) and Type A bikeways
| |||||||
Commercial
|
10
|
0.9
|
22
|
2.0
|
43
|
4.0
| |
Intermediate
|
6
|
0.6
|
11
|
1.0
|
22
|
2.0
| |
Residential
|
2
|
0.2
|
4
|
0.4
|
9
|
0.8
| |
Walkways distant from roadways and Type B bikeways
| |||||||
Park walkways and bikeways
|
5
|
0.5
|
6
|
0.6
|
11
|
1.0
| |
Pedestrian tunnels
|
43
|
4.0
|
54
|
5.0
|
—
|
—
| |
Pedestrian overpasses
|
3
|
0.3
|
4
|
0.4
|
—
|
—
| |
Pedestrian stairways
|
6
|
0.6
|
9
|
0.8
|
—
|
—
|
Type A Bikeway: A strip within or adjacent to a
public roadway or shoulder, used for bicycle travel.
| |
Type B Bikeway: An improved strip identified for
public bicycle travel and located away from a roadway or its adjacent
sidewalk system.
| |
Activity Level:
| |
High: Major cultural or civic events and major
regional shopping centers.
| |
Medium: Fast-food facilities, area shopping centers,
hospital parking areas, transportation parking areas, cultural, civic
or recreational events, and residential complex parking.
| |
Low: Local merchant parking, industrial employee
parking, educational facility parking.
|
C.Â
Luminaries.
(1)Â
Sharp cutoff type luminaries are recommended for the best approach
to lighting parking areas and shall be of the type that can be provided
with sharp cutoff deflectors or retractors where required to shield
light from the luminaire at angles less than the set cutoff degree
angle above nadir (from the vertical). The shielding angle shall be
selected to minimize discomforting glare to an observer's eyes from
the light source at an angle below the set cutoff. Shielding shall
also be employed to prevent spill over of undesirable light to adjoining
property.
(2)Â
LED lighting shall be utilized.
[Amended 8-9-2017 by Ord.
No. 2017-21]
(3)Â
General illumination of the exterior of buildings, including the
roof, is not permitted unless specifically approved by the Planning
Board. Objectionable spill, to the exterior, of bright and glaring
interior building light shall be avoided by the use of low-brightness
lenses on interior lighting.
(4)Â
The lighting plan shall provide for nonglare lights and recessed
lenses focused downward in parking areas.
D.Â
Light pollution or light intrusion.
(1)Â
Any outdoor lighting, such as sidewalk illumination, driveways with
no adjacent parking, the lighting of signs and permitted ornamental
lighting, shall be shown on the lighting plan in sufficient detail
to allow a determination of the effects upon adjacent properties and
traffic safety. The objectives of these specifications are to minimize
undesirable off-premises effects. No light shall shine into windows
or onto streets and driveways to interfere with or distract drivers.
To achieve these requirements, the intensity of such light sources,
light shielding and similar characteristics shall be subject to site
plan approval.
(2)Â
The maximum cutoff angle shall be used to shield light source glare
and unwanted light from adjacent properties and motorists approaching
on bounding roads and highways. Light spillage of more than 0.2 footcandles
onto adjacent properties shall be prohibited.
(3)Â
Adequate shielding shall be employed to protect properties, streets
and highways from the glare of such illumination, including luminaries
for illuminating entrances and driveways for parking areas.
(4)Â
Conflict with lighting of adjacent properties parking areas shall
be avoided. For example, if one or more adjacent areas with established
lighting systems are using mercury-vapor lamps, the submitted area
shall conform to the same lamp type, but not necessarily the same
type luminaire. However, other high-intensity discharge lamps may
be considered when there is ample reason for employing such lamps
and ample proof that a suitable method can be employed to reduce color
conflict.
E.Â
Mounting height. The maximum mounting height of pole-mounted luminaries
shall be 25 feet or the height of the building, whichever is less.
In no case shall the standards be less than 12 feet high.
F.Â
Security lighting. All parking areas and walkways thereto and appurtenant
passageways and driveways serving commercial, public, office, multiple-family
or other uses having common off-street parking and/or loading areas
shall be adequately illuminated for safety and security reasons from
sunset to sunrise. Lighting used to illuminate off-street parking
and loading areas shall be arranged to reflect the light away from
residential premises and public streets.
G.Â
Streetlighting. Plans accompanying all applications for development
shall include the location of all proposed streetlights of a type
supplied by the utility and a type and number approved by the Board
and/or Township Engineer. Streetlights shall be provided at the entrance
from collector roads, at all major changes in direction in roads,
at all intersections and anywhere else deemed necessary for safety
reasons.
(1)Â
Streetlighting shall be provided at all street intersections and
otherwise at intervals of 200 feet to 250 feet. Lighting shall be
placed on one side of the street only.
(2)Â
For normal street usage, a thirty-watt light emitting diode (LED)
fixture shall be used. For intersections of minor streets, a forty-five-watt
LED fixture shall be used. At the intersection of a minor street and
a collector street and an arterial; a ninety-watt LED fixture shall
be used.
[Amended 8-9-2017 by Ord.
No. 2017-21]
(3)Â
The maximum mounting height for streetlighting shall be 25 feet.
(4)Â
The installation of streetlighting shall be coordinated with the
local utility company.
H.Â
Pedestrian lighting. Pedestrian lighting shall be in a height range
between one foot and 12 feet high.
I.Â
Information to be submitted. The following shall be submitted for
review and approval of all lighting systems:
(1)Â
Site plan showing existing and proposed streetlights within 100 feet
of the property area to be lighted, location of all poles and luminaries,
illumination levels using photometric curve plotting or point-by-point
grid showing footcandles of illumination at each point.
(2)Â
Type of luminaries, including manufacturer's data.
(3)Â
Type and wattage of lamp, including manufacturer's data.
(4)Â
Mounting height of luminaire.
(5)Â
Photometric data and isofootcandle curves of the luminaire and lamp
proposed. Photometric data shall be from an independent testing laboratory.
Photometric curves shall be drawn to the same scale as the site plan
scale and shall show maintained foot-candle levels of illumination.
The following shall be included with photometric and luminaire data:
(6)Â
Type of pole and manufacturer's data. Applicants are encouraged to
use wooden or bronze-colored aluminum poles in keeping with the architecture
of the building and surrounding areas.
(7)Â
Pole base and foundation design and details. Anchor bolts shall be
in accordance with those recommended by the manufacturer and conform
with all state requirements.
[Amended 2-23-2016 by Ord. No. 2016-5]
A.Â
General provisions.
(1)Â
Lots shall conform to the requirements of the zoning provisions of
this chapter, and insofar as is practical, side lot lines shall either
be at right angles or radial to street lines. Notwithstanding any
other provisions of this chapter, any deviation from the provisions
specified in this section shall require variance relief in accordance
with N.J.S.A. 40:55D-70c.
(2)Â
Whenever title to two or more contiguous lots is held by the same
owner, regardless of whether or not each of said lots have been approved
as portions of a subdivision or acquired by separate conveyance or
by other operation of law, and one or more of said individual lots
should, by reason of exceptional shallowness, topographic conditions,
substandard area or yard space or similar measurements, not conform
with the minimum lot area and dimensional requirements for the zone
in which it is located, the contiguous lots of said owner shall be
considered as a single lot.
(3)Â
Each lot must front upon an approved public street with frontage
at the right-of-way in accordance with particular zoning district
in which it is located.
(4)Â
Where extra width has been dedicated for widening of existing streets,
lots shall begin at such new street lines, and all setbacks shall
be measured from such lines. Additionally, whenever the owner of a
lot existing at the time of adoption of this chapter has dedicated
or conveyed land to the Township in order to meet the minimum street
width requirements of the Official Map or Master Plan, the Construction
Official shall issue construction and occupancy permits for lots whose
depth and/or areas are rendered substandard only because of such dedication
and where the owner has no other adjacent lands to provide the minimum
requirements.
(5)Â
Except as provided in Subsection A(2) above, any existing lot on which a building or structure is located and which lot does not meet the minimum lot size, or a structure which violates any yard requirements, may construct additions to the principal building and/or construct an accessory building without an appeal for variance relief, provided:
(a)Â
The existing use(s) on the lot are conforming to the permitted
use(s) stipulated in this chapter for the lot in question;
(b)Â
The total permitted building coverage is not exceeded;
(c)Â
The accessory building or addition does not violate any other
requirements of this chapter, such as, but not limited to, height
and parking, or aggravate an already existing violation of setback
for yard requirements.
(6)Â
No residential dwelling unit in an R1, R2, R3, R4, OC, OP, NB, TC,
PHB or PI District shall be located on a parcel of less than one acre
unless served by a centralized wastewater treatment plant.
(7)Â
For administrative purposes, any application for a construction permit under the provisions of Subsection A(4) and (5) above shall be referred to the Department of Planning and Zoning for a determination as to whether or not the provisions are met. In the event that a determination cannot be made whether or not the lot qualifies for a construction permit without the submission of further application information, or, if the applicant requests exemptions from the minimum standards of this section, the application shall be reviewed and acted upon by the Planning Board as a minor site plan.
(8)Â
Where there is a question as to the suitability of a lot or lots
for their intended use due to factors such as wetlands, flood conditions
or similar circumstances, the Planning Board shall, after adequate
investigation, withhold approval of such lots.
(9)Â
No building to be used as a dwelling shall be constructed or altered
in the rear of a building situated on the same lot; nor shall any
building be constructed in front of or moved to the front of a dwelling
situated on the same lot.
(10)Â
Lots fronting on more than one street must be avoided except
in cases where proximity to major highways warrant it. In such cases,
access for the lot shall be from the minor road and the rear of the
lot shall be screened from the major road by suitable planting as
required by this chapter.
B.Â
Corner lots. Any building on a corner lot or at the intersection
of driveways, access aisles or on-lot circulation drives shall not
interfere with any required site triangle. On all corner lots, the
widths of all yards abutting upon streets shall not be less than the
minimum front yard depth required for the zone, unless otherwise provided
for in this chapter.
C.Â
Flag lots.
(1)Â
Flag lots are prohibited unless they are deemed by the Planning Board
to be in the best interest of the Township and/or for the purpose
of reducing negative impact to the natural environment.
(2)Â
Flag lots shall not be approved for subdivision applications involving
more than three lots inclusive of the original lot from which the
additional lots are being created.
(3)Â
If the Planning Board finds sufficient reason to allow the creation
of flag lots, they shall be a minimum of one acre, not including the
area found in the stem. The entire stem shall have a width of at least
35 feet on an approved public street. The length of the stem shall
not exceed 250 feet.
D.Â
Yards.
(1)Â
No area set aside for the purpose of meeting front, side or rear
yards for one building shall be considered as meeting the yard provisions
of another building.
(2)Â
On a lot extending through a block resulting in frontage on two or
more streets, excluding corner lots, the front yard shall be that
portion of the lot which abuts the street of address.
(3)Â
Corner lots shall adhere to the setback requirements of front yards
in their zoning district for both streets.
(4)Â
Front yards shall not contain clotheslines or be used for the storage
of garbage or refuse disposal units.
(5)Â
No uses other than ornamental landscaping, buffer strips and access
drives shall be permitted in front yards.
(6)Â
Sporting or recreation equipment.
[Amended 9-12-2018 by Ord. No. 2018-25]
(a)Â
No person, firm or corporation shall install any type of permanent
sporting or recreational equipment, including basketball poles and
nets, between the curb and sidewalk of any street. Permanent sporting
equipment is equipment that is affixed into the ground by means of
solid construction materials, including concrete, and is not removable
from the ground after use.
(b)Â
Portable sporting equipment is permitted to be placed in the
right-of-way grass area between the sidewalk and curb of any street.
Portable sporting equipment is equipment that is movable and is not
permanent sports equipment. All portable sporting equipment shall
comply with the following conditions:
[1]Â
The grass area between the sidewalk and curb of any street shall
be at least 36 inches wide, measured between the sidewalk and the
curb.
[2]Â
The portable sporting equipment shall not overhang the grass
area onto the sidewalk or curb as to interfere with pedestrian traffic
on the sidewalk or vehicular traffic on the street.
[3]Â
The portable sporting equipment shall be placed in a stable
position and as prescribed in the manufacturer's specifications so
as not to cause damage created by weather conditions or man-made causes.
[4]Â
The portable sporting equipment shall not be located within
the permitted area between January 1 and March 31.
(c)Â
In the absence of curb and/or sidewalk along the street, portable
sporting equipment may be permitted on the grass area along the side
of the roadway and set back at least one foot from the roadway, provided
the portable sporting equipment does not interfere with vehicular
traffic on the roadway.
(d)Â
No sporting equipment, permanent or portable, shall be located
within the paved area of any street within the Township.
(e)Â
Enforcement. This provision shall be enforced by the Zoning
Official and police officers of the Township of Waterford.
(f)Â
Violations and Penalties. Any person who violates any provision
of this subsection shall, upon conviction thereof, be subject on a
first offense to a fine not to exceed $50 and on a subsequent offense
by a fine not to exceed $500.
E.Â
Monuments.
(1)Â
Monuments shall be of the size and shape required by Section 1 of
Chapter 217 of the Laws of 2011 (N.J.S.A. 46:26B-3), as amended, and
shall be placed in accordance with said statute by the developer and
indicated on the final plat.
[Amended 2-23-2016 by Ord. No. 2016-5]
(2)Â
All lot corners shall be marked with a plastic or metal alloy pin
of permanent character, or with a drill hole where a lot corner is
covered with a concrete surface.
A.Â
Physical characteristics of the site shall be located on all base
plans, and methods for preservation shall be outlined.
(1)Â
Soil and subsoil conditions must be suitable for excavation and site
preparation.
(2)Â
The topography of the site and its drainage must be suitable for
the proposed development and designed to prevent erosion.
(3)Â
Natural features, such as lakes, streams, topsoil, trees and shrubs,
must be preserved and incorporated into the final landscaping of the
development.
(4)Â
The effects of prevailing winds, seasonal temperatures and hours
of sunlight on the physical layout and form of the proposed land use
and building must be taken into account.
B.Â
The Planning Board shall inquire into the means whereby trees and
other natural features shall be protected during construction. Clearing
a site of topsoil, trees and natural features before the developer
has received all required permits and approvals shall not be permitted.
Noise levels shall be designated and operated in accordance
with N.J.A.C. 7:29-1.2, local regulations, and those rules established
by the NJDEP as they may be adopted and amended.
The lawful use of land, buildings or structures existing when
this chapter is adopted may continue even though they do not conform
to this chapter. However, none shall be enlarged, extended, relocated,
converted to another use or altered, except in conformity with this
chapter.
A.Â
Recognized nonconforming uses. Preexisting lawful nonconforming uses, as listed in the Township's Master Plan, shall be permitted to continue. The owner/operator of any preexisting nonconforming use not listed in the Township's Master Plan shall apply to the Land Use Board in accordance with § 176-34C for a certification of preexisting use within one year of the effective date of the adoption of this chapter.
[Amended 10-11-2017 by Ord. No. 2017-22]
B.Â
Abandonment. A nonconforming use shall be considered abandoned if
it is terminated by the owner or if a nonconforming use involving
a structure is discontinued for 12 consecutive months, or if a nonconforming
use of land ceases for a period of 12 months. The subsequent use of
the abandoned building, structure and/or land shall be in conformance
with this chapter.
C.Â
Restoration. Any nonconforming building, structure or use which has
been condemned or damaged by fire, explosion, flood, windstorm or
act of God shall be examined by the Construction Official. If, in
the opinion of the Construction Official, the cost of repair is greater
than 60% of the value of replacing the entire structure, it shall
be considered completely destroyed and may be rebuilt to the original
specifications only upon approval of a variance. If the cost of repair
is less than 60% of the value of replacing the entire structure, it
may be rebuilt and used for the same purpose as before, provided that
it is rebuilt within one year and does not exceed the height, area
and volume of the original structure. The percent damaged shall be
the current replacement costs of the portion damaged or condemned,
computed as a percentage of the current total replacement cost of
the entire structure, neither to include the cost of the foundation
unless the foundation is involved in the repair.
D.Â
Repairs and maintenance. Repairs and maintenance may be made to a
nonconforming use, structure or lot, provided that the work does not
change the use, expand the building or the functional use of the building,
increase the area of a lot used for a nonconforming purpose or increase
the nonconforming purpose or nonconformity in any manner.
E.Â
In the
event a nonconforming use or structure becomes vacant, sold, leased
or if there is any other change of ownership or tenancy, a certificate
of preexisting nonconforming use shall be required from the Land Use
Board purusant to N.J.S.A. 40:55D-68 before that use may be continued.
[Added 10-11-2017 by Ord.
No. 2017-22]
Odors shall not be discernible at the lot line or beyond. Any
process which may involve the creation or emission of any odors shall
be provided with a secondary safeguard system so that control will
be maintained if the primary safeguard system should fail.
A.Â
General regulations.
(1)Â
Off-street parking areas shall be oriented to and within a reasonable
walking distance of the buildings they are designed to serve. A maximum
of 1,000 feet for employee parking; 500 feet to 800 feet for shoppers;
250 feet for nonelderly residents; 150 feet for elderly residents;
and 300 feet for guests.
(2)Â
Parking areas shall be suitably landscaped to minimize noise, glare
and other nuisance characteristics as well as to enhance the environment
and ecology of the site and surrounding area. Large parking lots shall
be broken down into sections according to type and size of development
determined by the Planning Board, separated from other sections by
landscaped dividing strips, berms, and similar elements.
(3)Â
No parking space, aisleway, or driveway (other than entrance or exit
drives) may be located within 20 feet of the cartway. Individual district
regulations may prescribe greater parking area setbacks.
(4)Â
Parking lots for commercial uses that utilize shopping carts shall
provide areas for the collection of such carts. Collection areas shall
be evenly dispersed throughout the parking lot. The collection points
shall be curbed to delineate and separate the parking area from the
collected shopping carts and shall be so designed as to not impede
the vehicular or pedestrian circulation pattern.
(5)Â
An internal collector drive shall be provided for all parking areas
in excess of 250 spaces. No parking shall have direct access to an
internal collector drive. The intersection of any internal collector
drive and drive aisle shall be 90°, unless, because of unusual
topography or lot geometry, a right angle would impede the efficient
circulation of vehicles. In no case shall such an intersection be
less than 60°.
(6)Â
Access to parking lots shall be designed to allow free flow of traffic.
There shall be adequate provision for ingress and egress from all
parking spaces to ensure ease of mobility, ample clearance, and safety
of vehicles and pedestrians. Ingress and egress shall be limited to
one per street frontage up to a maximum of two per site, with the
following exceptions:
(a)Â
Two entrance drives on one public street shall be permitted
for lots or premises with frontage in excess of 300 feet, up to a
maximum of three per site.
(b)Â
Automotive service stations primarily involved in the retail
sale of vehicular fuels shall be permitted two entrance drives on
one public street, up to a maximum of three per site, provided that
the center lines of the two entrance drives on one street frontage
are no less than 60 feet apart.
(7)Â
Where sidewalks occur in parking areas, parked vehicles shall not
overhang or extend over the sidewalk unless two feet of additional
sidewalk width is provided in order to accommodate such overhang.
B.Â
Location of parking and loading areas.
(1)Â
Required off-street parking (residential or commercial) and loading
spaces shall be located on the same lot or premises as the use served,
regardless of the number of spaces required by this chapter, except
in the following cases:
(a)Â
When it is determined during site plan review that the requirements
for on-site off-street parking cannot be met because of existing conditions,
the location and adequacy of off-site parking spaces to service the
use shall be specified on the site plan for approval by the Board.
(b)Â
A cooperative arrangement between nonresidential uses on different
lots or premises has been approved by the Board.
(2)Â
No off-street loading and maneuvering areas shall be located in any
front yard nor require any part of a street.
(3)Â
No off-street loading areas will be located within 100 feet of any
residential zone or use, school, hospital or nursing home.
(4)Â
Loading areas shall not be used for the purposes of refuse storage
or removal.
(5)Â
Loading spaces shall abut the building being served and shall be
located to directly serve the building for which the space is being
provided.
(6)Â
No loading or parking spaces shall be located in any required buffer
area.
(7)Â
No parking of vehicles shall be permitted in designated fire lanes,
streets, driveways, landscaped areas, aisles, sidewalks or turning
areas.
(8)Â
The required handicapped parking spaces shall be located as close
as possible to elevators, ramps and walkways and no more than 200
feet from an accessible entrance.
(9)Â
Where the separate designation of a specific loading space is not
required for an activity, the required off-street parking area shall
not be used for loading and unloading purposes except during hours
when normal business operations are suspended.
(10)Â
The intersection of any entrance drive and a public street shall
be located to permit the flow of vehicles to and from the lot or premises
in a manner that is not hazardous to the health, safety or general
welfare and shall be separated from entrance drives, existing or proposed,
on other or adjacent lots or on the same lot according to the following
schedule:
Lot Frontage
|
Minimum Separation
(feet)
| |
---|---|---|
Less than 150 feet
|
60
| |
Greater than 150 feet
|
100
|
C.Â
Driveways and accessways.
(1)Â
Single-lot residential driveways of more than 50 feet in length shall
have a minimum unobstructed width of 18 feet to allow access for emergency
vehicles. Improved driveway width shall be a minimum of 12 feet with
three feet on either side cleared of vegetation other than ground
cover or low growing ornamental.
(2)Â
Driveway curb cut access shall be limited by the approving authority,
as deemed necessary, in order to provide as few curb cuts as necessary,
and no curb cut shall be more than 24 feet in width for residential
use. In all instances, due consideration to the proposed width, curbing,
direction of traffic flow, radii of curves and method of dividing
traffic lanes shall be given. Curbing, where required, shall be depressed
at the driveway and the curbing may be rounded at the corners.
(3)Â
Driveways and parking spaces shall be located at least 10 feet from
the side property line except that, where the permitted side yard
set back for a principal building is zero, the driveway shall be located
on the property line of the abutting lot.
(4)Â
Each lot developed with a two-family dwelling unit shall provide
an on-site driveway turnaround where direct access is provided from
a collector or arterial street and shall be permitted only one curb
cut per lot. Where feasible, abutting lots shall have a common access
drive. Each curb cut shall be a minimum 16 feet wide and the curb
cut and access drive shall be located on the common property line.
(5)Â
Lots developed with Townhouse units shall have common access drives
whenever possible.
(6)Â
Commercial driveways and access to any public street shall be located
at least 35 feet from the intersection of the street at the curbline
and shall be designed in a manner conducive to safe ingress and egress.
(7)Â
In other than major subdivisions and projects having site plan approval,
which are currently covered by a performance or maintenance guarantee,
the following procedures shall be followed for construction of any
new driveway or accessway to any street or the paving of an existing
driveway or accessway.
(a)Â
No person shall construct or pave a driveway entrance or cut,
alter or remove a curb, or part thereof, in or along any public street
or right-of-way of the Township without first having obtained a permit
to do so pursuant to this section.
(b)Â
Application for a permit required by this subsection should be made, in writing, to the Department of Planning and Zoning accompanied by fees, in accordance with § 176-20B, and a plan showing the location and details of the proposed construction, cutting, landscaping and/or removal, and driveway dimensions with grades and construction details.
(c)Â
Special attention must be paid to roadside drainage and sufficient
detail provided for the Township Engineer to assess the impact of
the proposed construction on surface drainage. Moreover, the plan
should provide information on the existing and proposed lot coverage
and any deed restriction or easement placed on the lot.
(d)Â
The Township Engineer shall review the application and report
back on the application within 14 days of the date of filing, stating
either approval or a denial with an explanation of the reasons for
denial.
(e)Â
Upon approval by the Township Engineer, the Zoning Official
shall issue the permit, which shall be valid for a period of not more
than one year.
(f)Â
The Township Engineer shall certify that the driveway entrance
or accessway has been completed in accordance with the terms of the
permit issued pursuant to this section, and that the pavement on the
street or streets abutting the property has been restored to the condition
that existed prior to the start of construction.
(8)Â
No principal driveway access for ingress and egress to any commercial
or industrial use shall be permitted through any residential district.
D.Â
Residential off-street parking requirements.
(1)Â
The required number of parking spaces for residential use may be
provided in a garage, carport, or off-street parking area, but in
no case may be located more than 150 feet from the dwelling units
intended to be served.
(2)Â
A one-car garage and driveway combination counts as two off-street
parking spaces, provided the driveway measures a minimum of 18 feet
in length between the face of the garage door and the right-of-way,
or 30 feet to the curbline. A two-car garage and driveway combination
count as 3.5 off-street parking spaces, provided the minimum width
of the driveway is 20 feet and its minimum length is as specified
above for a one-car garage.
(3)Â
For single-family dwellings there shall be two off-street spaces
provided for two- and three-bedroom units; three off-street spaces
for four- and five-bedroom units.
(4)Â
For apartments and condominiums, including senior housing, there
shall be one off-street space provided for efficiency and one-bedroom
units; two off-street spaces for two- and three-bedroom units.
(5)Â
For townhouses there shall be two off-street spaces for each unit.
E.Â
Nonresidential off-street parking requirements.[1]
Use
|
Required Number of Off-Street Spaces
| ||
---|---|---|---|
Assembly operation
|
1 per 800 square feet of GFA
| ||
Automotive service station
|
4 per bay and work area
| ||
Bar
|
1 per 2 seats
| ||
Banks, savings and loan
|
1 per 300 square feet of GFA
| ||
Boardinghouse
|
1 per boarder
| ||
Bowling alley
|
4 per alley
| ||
Car wash
|
1 per employee; plus
1 separate space for each waxing, upholstery cleaning or similar
specialized service area; plus
Queuing capacity for a minimum of 12 vehicles for each access lane to a mechanized car wash entrance; see § 176-104K(6)
| ||
Churches/synagogue
|
1 per 3 seats
| ||
Church rectory/parsonage
|
3 per residence on church site
| ||
Hospital, philanthropic clinic, residential health care facility,
nursing home and convalescent center
|
1 1/2 for every bed
| ||
Hotel/motel
|
1 per guest room, plus 10 per 1,000 square feet GFA
| ||
Industrial
|
1 per 800 square feet GFA
| ||
Library
|
1 per 300 square feet GFA
| ||
Manufacturing
|
1 per 800 square feet GFA
| ||
Medical/dental offices
|
6 per 1,000 square feet GFA
| ||
Nightclub
|
1 per 3 seats
| ||
Professional and business offices
|
4 per 1,000 square feet GFA
| ||
Receiving
|
1 per 1,000 square feet GFA
| ||
Recreation, indoor
|
3 per 1,000 square feet of GFA plus 1 space per 3 spectator
seats
| ||
Recreation, outdoor
|
1 per 2,000 square feet of field area
| ||
Research/laboratory
|
1 per 1,000 square feet GFA
| ||
Restaurant
|
1 per 3 seats
| ||
Fast-food restaurant
|
1 per 30 square feet GFA, plus 1 for each employee on the largest
shift
| ||
Retail store
|
1 per 200 square feet GFA
| ||
Schools (day care, nursery)
|
Not less than 1 per teacher and staff member, plus 2 per 1,000
square feet of GFA
| ||
Schools (elementary)[2]
|
2 for each classroom, but not less than 1 for each teacher and
staff member
| ||
Schools (intermediate)
|
1 1/2 for each classroom, but not less than 1 for each teacher
and staff member
| ||
Schools (secondary)
|
2 1/2 for each classroom, but not less than 2 for each teacher
and staff member
| ||
Schools (junior college, college, university, trade or technical)
|
Not less than 1 per teacher and staff member, plus 1 per 4 students
| ||
Shopping center:
| |||
0 to 400,000 square feet
|
4 per 1,000 square feet GLA
| ||
400,000 square feet and larger
|
5 per 1,000 square feet GLA
| ||
Storage centers
|
1 per 5,000 square feet GLA
| ||
Theaters, community centers and other places of assembly
|
1 per 3 seats or 1 per 200 square feet GFA, whichever is greater
| ||
Warehouse
|
1 per 5,000 square feet GFA
|
GFA = Gross floor area
| |
GLA = Gross lease area
|
[2]
Editor's Note: The number of parking spaces for schools may be increased by the Planning Board; see § 176-104U(2)(b).
F.Â
Handicapped parking.
(1)Â
Parking spaces shall conform to the requirements of the Barrier-Free
Subcode of the New Jersey Uniform Construction Code N.J.A.C. 5:23-7.9
and the Americans With Disabilities Act (ADA) Accessibility Guidelines
for Buildings and Facilities.
(2)Â
All public and commercial development shall provide adequate parking
for persons who are physically challenged.
Total Number of Parking Spaces
|
Number of Required Handicapped Spaces
| |
---|---|---|
1 to 25
|
1
| |
26 to 50
|
2
| |
51 to 75
|
3
| |
76 to 100
|
4
| |
101 to 150
|
5
| |
151 to 200
|
6
| |
201 to 300
|
7
| |
301 to 400
|
8
| |
401 to 500
|
9
| |
501 to 1,000
|
2% of total
| |
1,000+
|
20, plus 1 for each 100 over 1,000
|
(3)Â
For every eight accessible parking spaces or fraction thereof, at
least one shall be a van-accessible parking space.
G.Â
Dimensions.
(1)Â
Any area, either within a structure or in the open, of not less than
nine feet wide by 18 feet in length, or, in the case of parking spaces
for the physically challenged, an area not less than eight feet wide
by 20 feet with an adjacent access aisle at least five feet wide,
for the parking of motor vehicles, exclusive of driveways, access
drives, fire lanes, and public rights-of-way. Notwithstanding any
other provision of this chapter, nothing shall prohibit private driveways
for detached dwelling units from being considered off-street parking
areas, except that no portion of such private driveway within the
right-of-way line of the street intersected by such driveway shall
be considered off-street parking areas. The width and length of each
space shall be measured perpendicular to each other regardless of
the angle of the parking space to the access aisle or driveway.
(2)Â
The provisions of parking and loading spaces also shall include adequate
driveway and necessary turning areas for handling the vehicles for
which provision is made. Parking areas shall be designed to permit
each motor vehicle to proceed to and from the parking space provided
for it without requiring the moving of any other motor vehicles except
for a driveway providing access to a private residential garage. Aisles
providing access to parking areas shall have the following minimum
dimensions:
Angle of Parking
(degree)
|
One-Way Aisle
(feet)
|
Two-Way Aisle
(feet)
| |
---|---|---|---|
90°
|
24
|
24
| |
60°
|
18
|
24
| |
45°
|
13
|
24
|
(3)Â
Off-street parking areas shall be designed to eliminate the maneuvering
of vehicles within entrance drives. The length of entrance drive free
of vehicle maneuvering shall conform to the following schedule (measured
from the right-of-way line):
Total Number of Parking Spaces
|
Length of Maneuver-Free Drive
(feet)
| |
---|---|---|
Less than 40
|
20
| |
40 to 99
|
40
| |
100 to 250
|
60
| |
250 or greater
|
60, plus 20 feet for each additional 500 spaces or part thereof
|
H.Â
Off-street loading and unloading (shipping and receiving areas).
(1)Â
Shipping and receiving areas shall be located in side or rear yard areas only. When shipping and receiving areas are located in the side yard, they must be screened from view of any public right-of-way or adjoining property in accordance with § 176-52.
(2)Â
In connection with every building or building group or part thereof
hereafter erected which is to be occupied by manufacturing or commercial
uses, there shall be maintained on the same lot with such building
off-street loading berths in accordance with this section.
(3)Â
Off-street loading spaces shall have 15 feet of vertical clearance
and shall be designed in accordance with the following schedule, except
that the loading space may be reduced to 40 feet in length in cases
where the site is to be serviced by vans or smaller trucks with less
than four axles and when the site plan is approved by the Board:
Loading Space
|
Combined Apron and Aisle Length
| |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Length
(feet)
|
Width
(feet)
|
90°
(feet)
|
60°
(feet)
| |
60
|
10
|
72
|
66
| |
60
|
12
|
63
|
57
| |
60
|
14
|
60
|
54
|
(4)Â
Off-street loading shall be provided according to the following schedule:
Use
|
Square footage at which one loading berth is required
|
Square footage at which a second and each additional loading
berth is required
| |
---|---|---|---|
Manufacturing and warehousing
|
0 to 40,000
|
Over 40,000
| |
Commercial (wholesale)
|
0 to 40,000
|
Over 40,000
| |
Commercial (retail)
|
0 to 20,000
|
Over 20,000
| |
Service establishment
|
0 to 40,000
|
Over 40,000
| |
Undertakers/funeral homes
|
0 to 40,000
|
Over 40,000
| |
Restaurants
|
0 to 25,000
|
Over 25,000
| |
Office/bank
|
0 to 100,000
|
Over 100,000
| |
Hotel
|
0 to 100,000
|
Over 100,000
| |
School
|
0 to 100,000
|
Over 100,000
| |
Hospital/nursing home
|
0 to 100,000
|
Over 100,000
| |
Place of public assembly
|
0 to 100,000
|
Over 100,000
|
I.Â
Staged development relief. Where the total number of off-street parking
spaces required may not be immediately required for a particular use,
a staged development plan may be permitted which requires that only
a portion of the parking area, but not less than 65% of the required
spaces be completed initially, subject to the following regulations:
(1)Â
The site plan shall clearly indicate both that portion of the parking
area to be initially paved and the total parking needed to provide
the number of spaces required.
(2)Â
The site plan shall provide for adequate drainage of both the partial
and total parking area.
(3)Â
The portion of the parking area not to be paved initially shall be landscaped in accordance with § 176-72.
(4)Â
The applicant shall post separate performance guarantees, in addition to the performance guarantees required under § 176-22, which will reflect the cost of installing the additional parking facilities necessary to provide the total number of parking spaces required.
(5)Â
In lieu of a permanent certificate of occupancy, a temporary certificate
of occupancy shall be issued for a period of two years. Prior to the
expiration of the two-year period, the applicant may either install
the additional parking shown on the site plan and apply for issuance
of a permanent certificate of occupancy or apply to the Planning Board
after the use has been in operation a minimum of 18 months for a determination
as to whether or not the initial parking area provided is adequate.
If the Planning Board determines that the parking facility is adequate
as originally constructed, the performance guarantees shall be released
and a permanent certificate of occupancy issued. If, however, the
Planning Board determines that the partial off-street parking area
is not adequate, the applicant shall be required to install the additional
parking facilities in accordance with the terms of the performance
guarantees prior to issuance of a permanent certificate of occupancy.
(6)Â
Any change of use on a site for which the Planning Board may have
approved a partial paving of off-street parking areas to a use which
requires more parking spaces than are provided on the site shall require
submission of a new site plan.
A.Â
Parking areas, driveways and loading berths.
(1)Â
All parking areas shall be surfaced with a durable all-weather asphalt
or concrete paving. All parking areas, parking bays, driveways, drive
aisles, and internal collectors shall be curbed with concrete curbing.
Paving shall consist of a minimum of two-inch bituminous surface course,
mix I-5 on six inches of dense graded aggregate.
(2)Â
Concrete pads a minimum of six inches in depth shall be provided
for all loading berths. Loading berth approach aprons and driveways
providing access to loading areas shall be paved in accordance with
the recommendations of the Planning Board Engineer.
B.Â
Residential driveway paving. Residential driveways may be paved with
an impervious material if there are no restrictions in a certificate
of filing issued by the Commission that the subject parcel must have
a driveway of crushed stone or gravel. The design and construction
of the driveway shall be reviewed as an administrative site plan and
approved by the Township Engineer to ensure grading meets the requirements
of this chapter.
A.Â
Unless otherwise specified in this chapter, no more than one principal
dwelling or building shall be permitted on a lot, except that shopping
centers, industrial and office complexes, two-family dwellings, multifamily
complexes and condominium and townhouse developments receiving site
plan approval may be permitted to have more than one building on a
lot, provided that the structures comply with the setback and yard
provisions of this chapter.
B.Â
Every principal building shall be built upon a lot with frontage
upon a public street or streets improved to meet the Township's standards
or accepted by the Township.
C.Â
No more than one principal use shall be permitted on a lot except
as otherwise permitted in this chapter for forestry, agriculture,
horticulture, fish and wildlife management, and, on agricultural lands,
recreation development.
A.Â
General.
(1)Â
All recreation areas and facilities shall be designed in accordance
with N.J.A.C. 7:50-6.143(a)2 and 7:50-6.144(a)1 through 3 and with
the NJDEP publication entitled "Administrative Guidelines Barrier
Free Design Standards for Parks and Recreational Facilities."
(2)Â
Commercial and industrial developments shall ensure that recreational
areas designed to include lawn areas are used for public recreational
purposes, meet an identified public recreation need and are dedicated
to public recreation use.
(3)Â
Recreational development incorporating lawn areas shall limit said
lawn areas that support recreational activities and which, to the
extent practical, are of a variety of grass which requires minimal
fertilization.
(4)Â
Areas set aside for common open space shall not be used to satisfy
recreational land area requirements.
B.Â
Land area standards of recreational areas.[1]
(1)Â
All residential development of 25 units or more shall comply with
the following:
(a)Â
Ten percent of the total acreage of the proposed residential portion
of a development shall be land set aside for recreational purposes.
(b)Â
Land provided in accordance with Subsection B(1)(a) above shall be provided in a single area or in individual parcels no smaller than one acre in size.
(c)Â
All residential units for which the recreational land is provided in accordance with Subsection B(1)(b) above shall be located within 1/4 mile of such recreational land.
[1]
Editor's Note: Original § 176-82.2A, which required
a monetary contribution by certain major subdivisions to a special
recreational open space land fund, which was previously included in
this subsection, was repealed 2-26-2014 by Ord. No. 2014-2.
C.Â
Facility standards. Recreational facilities in accordance with the
following schedule shall also be provided to the extent recreational
facility needs are generated by the proposed development. An analysis
of the recreational facility needs of a proposed development within
a specific service area around the development shall be conducted
by comparing the following schedule of facility standards with existing
recreational facilities within the service area and the projected
population of the service area:
Type of Facility
|
Population
|
Minimum Space Standard
|
Service Area Radius
| |
---|---|---|---|---|
Basketball courts
|
1 per 1,000
|
Court dimension range from 60 x 80 feet to 70 x 104 feet
|
1/2 mile
| |
Tennis court
|
1 per 1,000
|
Court dimension range from
60 x 120 feet single court;
45 x 120 feet additional adjoining courts
|
1 mile
| |
Multipurpose paved area
|
1 per 2,000
|
0.50 acre (including basketball and tennis courts)
|
1/2 mile
| |
Passive area (sitting)
|
1 per 2,000
|
0.50 acre
|
1/2 mile
| |
Senior citizen (over 55)
(bocce, shuffleboard horseshoe)
|
1 per 1,000
|
0.50 acre
|
1/4 mile
| |
Preschool playground
|
1 per 2,000
|
0.25 acre
|
1/4 mile
| |
Advanced playground
|
1 per 2,000
|
0.25 acre
|
1/2 mile
| |
Multipurpose turf area
|
1 per 2,000
|
0.50 acre
|
1 mile
| |
Football/soccer fields
|
1 per 6,000
|
2.8 acres
325-foot outfield
|
1 mile
| |
Baseball youth
|
1 per 6,000
|
1.0 acre
|
1 mile
| |
Softball 60-foot diamond
|
200-foot outfield
| |||
Picnic area
|
1 per 6,000
|
8 eight-foot tables
|
1 mile
|
Collection and disposal of these materials shall be in accordance with Chapter 235, Solid Waste, of the Waterford Township Municipal Code.
A.Â
Residential.
(1)Â
Each application for residential development of 30 or more units
of single-family or two-family housing or 25 or more units of multifamily
housing must include provisions for the collection, disposition, and
recycling of recyclable materials. A single-family unit or a unit
within a multifamily dwelling should provide at least 12 square feet
of floor area conveniently arranged and located as a holding area
for a two-week accumulation of materials. Such an area may be within
a hidden laundry room, basement or garage.
(2)Â
All apartments and condominium units shall have an outdoor recycling
area for the storage of residentially generated recyclable materials.
The dimensions of the recycling area shall be sufficient to accommodate
recycling bins or containers of adequate size and number consistent
with anticipated usage.
B.Â
Nonresidential. Each application for a nonresidential use that utilizes
1,000 square feet or more of land must include provisions for the
collection, disposition and recycling of recyclable materials. Each
application shall quantify the amount of recyclable material it will
generate as part of its weekly generation, including newspapers, leaves,
white high-grade paper, glass bottles and jars, aluminum, corrugated
cardboard, and tin and bimetal cans. The application shall provide
a storage area to contain a week's accumulation of recyclable material.
C.Â
General area requirements.
(1)Â
The storage area for recyclable materials shall be designed for truck
access for pickup of materials.
(2)Â
The recycling area shall be well lit and shall be safely and easily
accessible by recycling personnel and vehicles. Collection vehicles
shall be able to access the recycling area without interference from
parked cars or other obstacles. Reasonable measures shall be taken
to protect the recycling area, and the bins or containers placed therein,
against theft of recyclable materials, bins or containers.
(3)Â
The recycling area shall be conveniently located for the residential
disposition of source separated recyclable materials, preferably near,
but clearly separated from, a refuse dumpster.
(4)Â
The recycling bins and or containers shall be designed to provide
protection against adverse environmental conditions that might render
the collected materials unmarketable. Any bins or containers that
are used for the collection of recyclable paper or cardboard shall
be equipped with a lid, or otherwise covered, to keep the paper or
cardboard dry.
(5)Â
Signs clearly identifying the recycling area and the materials accepted shall be posted adjacent to all points of access to the recycling area. Individual bins or containers shall be equipped with signs indicating the materials to be placed therein. Signs shall conform to the requirements of § 176-88.
No resource extraction operation shall be carried out by any person unless an application containing the information required by N.J.A.C. 7:50-4.2(b)6 is filed with the Department of Planning and Zoning and approved by the Zoning Official in accordance with § 176-12G.
On lands within the existing or proposed sewer service area
as indicated in the Waterford Township Wastewater Facility Plan and
where a public wastewater treatment collection system is accessible
to a property proposed for development, or where such facilities are
to be constructed as a condition of approval of any application for
development, the developer shall construct such wastewater sanitary
sewer lines and building connections in accordance with the Waterford
Township Wastewater Facilities Plan and NJDEP permit requirements
and in such a manner as to make adequate sewage treatment available
to each lot and building within the development.
A.Â
Dry sewer lines. In the event of approval of the use of individual subsurface disposal systems on lands located within the existing or proposed sewer service area according to the Waterford Township Wastewater Facilities Plan, the Planning Board additionally may require the installation of sewer lines, which must include connections to each building, for future use when public sewage treatment facilities are provided to serve the realty improvements to be constructed in the development. Until such time that the dry sewer lines are made operational and public sewage treatment facilities are provided to the site, the density provisions specified within § 176-110 for development with septic systems shall prevail.
B.Â
Construction of dry sewer lines. The end of all dry sanitary sewer
building connection lines shall have a tamper-proof plug or cap, temporarily
sealed with a material that can be removed to utilize the fitting
when the system is to be activated. The Plumbing Subcode Official
or the Plumbing Inspector shall affix an adhesive-backed disc on the
cap or plug bearing a preprinted message and instructions related
to tampering and future use, that will be sufficient to alert and
warn the original and subsequent occupants of the building. The capping
and plugging shall be performed by the developer at his expense.
C.Â
Additional standards.
(1)Â
All sanitary sewer lines shall be air and mandrel tested. Additionally,
all lines shall be televised, if needed, at the direction of the Township
Engineer, and a videotape of the lines shall be provided to the Township
Engineer immediately prior to the activation of the sewer lines or
acceptance of the streets, whichever occurs earlier.
(2)Â
It is the developer's responsibility to expand any on-tract public
sanitary sewers to the limits of the tract boundary line to service
future development and to conform to the Township's Master Plan and
Wastewater Facilities Plan. Moreover, it is the developer's responsibility
to maintain all sanitary sewer improvements for partially completed
developments.
A.Â
Sidewalks along all streets are not required, but they shall be installed
at the direction of the approving authority's discretion, depending
on the probable volume of pedestrian traffic, the street classification
in instances where streets are involved, school bus stops, the development's
location in relation to other populated areas and the general type
of improvement intended. Where required, sidewalks shall be at least
four feet wide and located as approved by the approving authority.
Sidewalks shall be at least four inches thick, except at points of
vehicular crossing where they shall be at least six inches thick,
of Class C concrete having a twenty-eight-day compressive strength
of 4,000 pounds per square inch, and shall be air-entrained.
A.Â
Sight triangles shall be required at each quadrant of an intersection
of streets, or streets and driveways, involving collector and arterial
streets in the Township. The classification of existing and proposed
streets shall be designated by the Township Engineer at the time of
approval of a new street. The area within sight triangles shall either
be dedicated as part of the street right-of-way or maintained as part
of the lot adjoining the street set aside on a subdivision or site
plan as a site triangle easement.
B.Â
At the intersection or interception of two or more streets, no hedge,
fence or wall, nor any obstruction to vision, shall be permitted within
the triangular area formed by the intersecting street lines and a
straight line joining said street lines at points which are 25 feet
distant from the point of intersection, measured along said street
lines.
Any sign that does not conform to this section shall be removed
immediately upon notification from the Department of Planning and
Zoning.
A.Â
Scope. In all zoning districts of the Township of Waterford, signs
may be erected, altered, maintained, used, replaced, removed or moved
only in compliance with the provisions of N.J.A.C. 7:50-6.107 and
this section, except that any sign inside the structure or building
which is not visible from outside the building or structure is excluded
from the requirements.
B.Â
ATTACHED SIGN
DEVELOPMENT SIGN
ERECT
EXTERNALLY LIGHTED
FREESTANDING SIGN
FUNCTIONAL SIGNS
INTERNALLY LIGHTED
MOBILE SIGN
MULTIPLE OCCUPANCY AND TENANCY SIGN
OFFICIAL SIGN
REAL ESTATE SIGN
ROOF SIGN
SIGN HEIGHT
SIGN SIZE
TEMPORARY SIGN
WARNING SIGN
WINDOW SIGN
Definitions. As used in this section, the following terms shall have
the meanings indicated:
Any sign erected, constructed or maintained on a building
with the principal support of said sign being the building, including,
specifically, the painting of signs or displays on the exterior surface
of a building. "Attached signs" shall not be more than 10 inches off
the building to which they are attached.
A sign designating the name of a subdivision of residential
homes, whether single-family, multifamily, attached or detached, or
an apartment complex.
To build, construct, attach, place, suspend or affix, and
shall also include the painting of wall signs and the painting of
signs or displays on the exterior surface of the building, structure
or material surface.
Any sign whose sole source of artificial illumination is
outside the display portion of the sign.
Any sign not attached to a building, erected, constructed
or maintained on a post or pole, or other bracing or supporting device.
Directional, information or public service signs, such as
signs advertising locations of rest rooms, telephones or similar facilities
of public convenience, including entry and exit signs from parking
areas. Functional signs shall not include any name or business or
message other than the directional or informational material.
Any sign whose sole source of artificial illumination is
contained within the display portion of the sign.
A sign which is not permanently attached to a building or
not placed in the ground in such a fashion as to be permanent in a
manner conforming to the Uniform Construction Code or which is located
or attached to a trailer, on wheels, or other similar attachment such
that the sign may be moved from place to place, either within the
lot or to another location.
A single sign relating to a use or facility, such as a shopping
center, industrial park or office complex, where there is more than
one occupancy and/or tenancy of uses, where said multiple occupancy
and tenancy uses a common parking facility and/or a common private
drive or roadway and where the names and professions or business names
of the various tenants and/or occupants are displayed.
Any sign, symbol or device, erected, constructed or maintained
by the federal, state, county or local government, or any agency thereof,
for the purpose of informing or guiding the public or for the protection
of the public health, safety and welfare.
A sign of an owner of real property or of a licensed real
estate broker designating a property "for sale" or "for lease."
An attached sign erected, constructed or maintained upon
or over the roof of any building, where the principal support of said
sign is the roof structure.
In the case of a freestanding sign, the height of the sign
will be computed from grade level to the greatest height at any one
point in the sign. In the case of an attached sign, no sign can be
higher than the level of a second floor window in a two-or-more story
building, nor can it be higher than the lowest point of the roofline
in a single-story building.
The square foot area of a sign computed by multiplying its
greatest width by its greatest length, exclusive of supporting structures
and bracing devices, unless such supporting structures and bracing
devices are illuminated or are in the form of a symbol or contain
words or symbols, in which case the supporting structure shall also
be computed in determining sign size. Two- or three-sided signs carrying
exactly the same message on each side shall be measured by using the
surface area of one side in the case of two-sided signs or two sides
in the case of three-sided signs. When there is a different message
on each side of the sign, each side will be considered and used in
computing sign size, or each side will be considered a separate sign.
A sign which is not permanently attached to a building structure
or permanently affixed to a freestanding structure and which may be
erected for a limited period of time in compliance with the provisions
of this chapter.
A sign indicating no trespassing or no fishing and/or hunting
and an existing danger where a warning is legally required.
Any sign erected, constructed or maintained in or on a window
of a building, visible from outside the building, whether illuminated
or nonilluminated.
C.Â
Prohibited signs. The following signs shall be prohibited in the
Township and, if in existence, shall not be permitted to continue:
(1)Â
No outdoor, off-site commercial advertising sign or billboard shall
be permitted in the Township except lawful off-site commercial advertising
signs in existence as of January 14, 1981, in the R1, R2, R3, R4,
PI, PHB, OC, TC, OP, and NB Zones. All other existing off-site commercial
advertising signs shall be immediately removed unless a waiver of
strict compliance has been issued providing a certificate was issued
by the Commission allowing them to remain.
(2)Â
Flashing, blinking, twinkling, animated, moving or projected signs
of any type or signs which present an illusion of movement. A sign
that displays a static time and/or temperature display is permitted
if the sign on which the time and/or temperature display is located
is an otherwise permitted sign under this chapter.
(3)Â
No sign shall be erected or maintained on a lot, tract or parcel,
including any improvement thereon, unless the message on the sign
directly relates to the use, sale or lease of said lot, tract or parcel.
Nothing herein shall be deemed to prohibit off-tract signs for churches
or fraternal organizations, setting forth the location of the church
or the meeting place and meeting hours of the church or fraternal
organization.
(4)Â
Banners, flags, pennants, tents and similar devices, except upon
occasion of the opening of a new business use in a commercial or industrial
district, when banners, pennants or flags may be used for a period
not to exceed 14 days to announce the opening of said business and
except for special sales events or promotions, for a period not to
exceed 14 days, not more than four times per calendar year.
(5)Â
All mobile signs, as defined herein, are prohibited.
(6)Â
No sign shall be placed in such a position that it causes or is likely
to cause danger to vehicular or pedestrian traffic on any street,
sidewalk or right-of-way. No sign other than an official sign may
be placed within the right-of-way of any Township or county road.
(7)Â
No sign shall be attached, affixed or painted on trees, fences, rocks,
curbs, walks, hydrants, benches or bridges, except for warning signs,
as defined herein, indicating no trespassing and the like.
(8)Â
No signs with any lighting or control mechanism that may cause radio
or television interference shall be erected in the Township.
(9)Â
No vehicle shall be regularly parked, stopped or located in such
a manner as to be used as or considered as a sign.
(10)Â
Permanent window signs are prohibited except as otherwise permitted
herein.
(11)Â
No signs which in any way simulate official, directional or
warning signs erected or maintained by the State of New Jersey, Camden
County or Waterford Township or by any railroad, public utility or
agency concerned with the protection of the public health or safety
shall be erected in the Township.
(12)Â
No signs, except such directional signs or devices required
by the federal aeronautical authorities, shall be placed, inscribed
or supported upon a roof or upon any structure which extends above
the roof, and no sign shall project above the main cornice line of
the building to which it may be affixed.
D.Â
Nonconforming signs.
(1)Â
It is the intent and purpose of this chapter that, as soon as legally
possible, all existing signs not conforming to this section be eliminated
or brought into conformity.
(2)Â
Any sign located within the Township which does not conform with the provisions of this chapter, but which did conform at the time it was erected, shall be deemed a legal nonconforming sign and may continue in use until losing said legal nonconforming status as defined in Subsection D(3) below.
E.Â
Structural requirements. All signs shall be of sound construction
and shall be permanently affixed to either the ground or building
in a manner conforming to the New Jersey Uniform Construction Code.
F.Â
Maintenance. All signs shall be periodically maintained by the owner
of said sign, including painting, repairing and cleaning as necessary.
Any sign that, because of improper maintenance, is deemed to be in
a state of disrepair, such that the sign is no longer functional,
visible or dangerous to the safety of others, in the discretion of
the Township Zoning Official or Construction Official, shall be repaired
by the owner of said sign within 14 days of a notice requiring said
repair. Otherwise, the sign shall be removed.
G.Â
Sign content. All signs shall indicate only the principal name of
the establishment, proprietor or owner and may include a brief description
of the principal goods or service or use thereof and a logo or trademark
by which the business or owner is identified. No sign shall have a
message or logo that in and of itself is lewd and licentious or advocates
an act in violation of any municipal, county, state or federal law.
H.Â
Abandoned uses. All signs which identify an owner, proprietor, establishment
or business which is no longer in existence or operation shall be
removed within 60 days from the date said operation or establishment
of business ceases to exist or operate.
I.Â
Illuminated signs. Illuminated signs shall be arranged such that
no light or glare is directed or reflected to adjoining lots or streets
or into residential windows. Any beam or beacon, lighted exteriorly,
shall be lighted downwards and shall be shielded to prevent spillage
off the lot or onto streets, parking and driveway areas; however,
no sign with red, green, blue or amber illumination in a beam or beacon
resembling an emergency light shall be erected or used in any location.
J.Â
Real estate signs. One real estate sign for each lot frontage is
temporarily permitted in all districts, provided that it complies
with all of the following requirements:
(1)Â
It is nonilluminated.
(2)Â
It must pertain only to the lease or sale of the principal building
lot upon which it is placed.
(3)Â
It shall not exceed 12 square feet in area, except in residential
districts, in which case it shall not exceed six square feet in area.
(4)Â
It shall be removed within seven days after closing or settlement
on said property or the execution of the lease.
K.Â
Agricultural establishment signs. Signs or billboards advertising
agricultural commercial establishments, in any district, shall be
permitted, provided that
(1)Â
No more than two signs shall be placed in any one direction along
each road directly approaching the agricultural establishment; and
(2)Â
No sign along a four-lane state or federal highway shall exceed 50
square feet in area, and no sign along any other road shall exceed
32 square feet in area.
(3)Â
No sign shall exceed the height of 15 feet.
L.Â
Temporary signs.
(1)Â
All temporary signs shall be nonilluminated.
(2)Â
Temporary signs, advertising events such as business openings, fairs,
bazaars, auctions or other special activities, including posters,
shall be erected or placed so as not to obstruct or obscure visibility
at corners or intersections or otherwise cause a traffic safety hazard.
Such signs are allowed 30 days prior to the event being advertised
and must be removed within 10 days following the conclusion of the
event. Signs erected by an ongoing business as a means of furthering
its business activity or by an ongoing business or an individual as
a means of selling real property shall not fall within this special
activity designation. Political signs are permitted to be erected
and placed 45 days prior to any election but are subject to the same
ten-day removal requirement.
[Amended 9-8-2021 by Ord. No. 2021-13]
(3)Â
Temporary signs of contractors, mechanics or artisans are permitted
only during the period when the contractors, artisans and mechanics
are actively performing work on the lands and premises where the signs
are placed. The sign shall have a maximum size of 12 square feet inclusive
of all mechanics or artisans performing work on the same premises.
No sign shall be placed upon land or property without having first
received written permission from the property owner and a construction
permit has been issued for the parcel on which the sign is placed.
(4)Â
Temporary window signs advertising or describing sales or special
merchandise are permitted, provided that the same sign does not remain
in the window for a period longer than 30 days and that all of the
signs collectively do not exceed 30% of all available window space
on the wall on which the window signs are located.
(5)Â
One temporary development sign is permitted only for major subdivisions.
Said sign is subject to the following standards:
(a)Â
The temporary development sign shall not exceed 20 square feet
in size and six feet in height.
(b)Â
The sign shall include only the name of the subdivision; the
offer for sale of the lots or homes therein; and the name and telephone
number of the developer, financing institution, realtor or other agent
to contact with reference to the sale.
(c)Â
The temporary development sign may be installed only after final
subdivision approval has been granted and at the same time as the
first building permit is issued on the first lot sold. The sign must
be removed with 10 days of the issuance of the last certificate of
occupancy or the sale of the last lot and replaced, if desired, with
a permanent development sign in accordance with the standards of this
chapter if approved by the Planning Board. Notwithstanding anything
herein to the contrary, no temporary development sign shall remain
longer than two years from the date of final major subdivision approval
unless an extension is granted by the Planning Board.
(d)Â
The temporary sign shall be located at the entrance of the subdivision
on property owned by the developer. No temporary development sign
may be installed that interferes with traffic. If there is more than
one entrance, the developer may move the one sign periodically to
a different entrance as sections are sold and new sections opened.
Upon acceptance of the roads or upon the sale of lands on which the
sign is located, such that the sign becomes located on private property
owned by other than the developer, or within a Township or county
right-of-way, the sign shall be removed subject to the right to move
the sign to another location as above, and subject to the overall
time restrictions hereinabove.
(6)Â
One temporary site sign is permitted only for major site plans in the PI District. Said sign is subject the standards of this chapter and shall be approved by the Planning Board at the time of final site plan approval. No temporary site sign shall interfere with traffic. If there is more than one entrance, the developer may move the one sign to a different entrance as buildings are sold or rented and other buildings opened. Nothing herein shall prevent the subsequent use of real estate signs as permitted under § 176-88J to advertise the further sale or lease of the stores, shops, offices or business units.[1]
(7)Â
Notwithstanding anything in this chapter to the contrary, any licensed
real estate broker may place a temporary direction sign for the sole
purpose of providing directions to properties offered for sale or
lease.
(a)Â
A "temporary direction sign" is defined as a removable, freestanding
sign, to be placed in or on the ground, not exceeding 18 inches in
height and 24 inches in width and no higher than 30 inches out of
the ground, constructed of metal, heavy cardboard or wood, indicating
thereon the location of or directions to a residential property in
the Township and announcing an open house utilized in connection with
the marketing of that property. No more than one temporary direction
sign shall be located on any one lot or within 500 feet of any other
temporary direction sign along any Township right-of-way.
(b)Â
A temporary directional sign may be installed on the day an
open house is being conducted. It is expressly understood that the
temporary direction sign must be removed no later than 6:00 p.m. of
the day of the open house.
(c)Â
A temporary direction sign, as defined herein, shall not include
any illumination, nor any balloons, streamers or other decorative
accessory.
(d)Â
A temporary direction sign shall be set back from the paved
cartway a minimum distance of three feet and located so that visibility
at intersections is in no way diminished.
(e)Â
All other provisions of this chapter remain in full force and
effect.
M.Â
Historic signs. Notwithstanding anything in this chapter to the contrary,
signs on structures of historic significance for historic informational
purposes, upon which the name of the original or historic inhabitant
or builder and the date of construction of said structure is set forth
and/or the historical significance of the structure are permitted,
provided that said signs shall not exceed two square feet.
N.Â
Signs for nonconforming uses. Upon application for a use variance
or other approval to permit a nonconforming use on a property in any
district where the use is not permitted, the sign for said use must
be approved by the Planning Board.
O.Â
Signs for nonprofit institutions. Notwithstanding the sign standards
for the district in which the property is located, any property used
for a church, school, lodge, club, veterans organization or similar
use which is organized and operated not for profit, pursuant to Title
15 of N.J.S.A., may have one sign per street frontage identifying
the use by name. Said sign may be freestanding or attached and may
contain messages describing upcoming events, times of service or meetings,
inspirational messages and the like. The maximum size of a freestanding
sign shall be 30 square feet with a maximum height of 10 feet. An
attached sign may not exceed 10% of the wall surface area of the wall
on which said sign is placed.
P.Â
Information and direction signs.
(1)Â
A nameplate not exceeding one square foot in area and an address
and/or street number not exceeding two square feet in area, both within
the property line, which may be attached or freestanding, are permitted
in any residential district.
(2)Â
Street number designations, postal boxes, "private property," "no
hunting," on-site direction, parking and warning signs are permitted
in all districts but are not considered in calculating sign area.
No such signs shall exceed two square feet in area.
Q.Â
Development signs.
(1)Â
One permanent development sign, not exceeding 24 square feet and
six feet height, stating the name of the subdivision only shall be
permitted in a major subdivision.
(2)Â
During construction, a temporary development sign is permitted only in accordance with the standards of § 176-88L(5). The permanent development sign, if desired, may be installed at any time after the first construction permit is issued.
(3)Â
The location of the permanent development sign must be approved by
the Planning Board at the time of the preliminary subdivision approval.
The sign may be installed at the main entrance to the subdivision
and may be located within an island or other entrance design on land
specifically dedicated to the Township or homeowners' association
specifically for the purpose of the sign location.
R.Â
Commercial and business signs.
(1)Â
A commercial or business sign shall be provided in accordance with
the requirements set forth below.
(2)Â
In multiple occupancy shopping centers, individual facade-mounted
tenancy signs shall be uniform in size, scale and design, and shall
not exceed 25 square feet in area.
(3)Â
Attached wall signs shall not exceed an area equivalent to 5% of
the first-floor portion of the front facade or 75 square feet, whichever
is less.
(4)Â
Ground-mounted signs shall not exceed 15 feet height, shall be set
back a minimum of 20 feet from the property line and shall not exceed
50 square feet.
(5)Â
Principal identification signs for shopping centers may have tenancy
identification and shall not exceed 20 feet in height or 75 square
feet.
(6)Â
Permitted commercial and business signs may be illuminated either
from the interior or exterior, but not both.
(7)Â
If a business or use is located on a lot with more than one street
frontage, said business or use may have either one additional attached
sign or one additional freestanding sign in accordance with this section.
S.Â
Street signs. There shall be at least one street sign furnished at
each intersection. All signs shall be installed under light standards
where possible, be free of visual obstruction, and shall be four-way,
with street names parallel to the named street. Street signs shall
be installed on a particular street prior to the issuance of a certificate
of occupancy for a residence on that street.
T.Â
Traffic signs. The design and placement of traffic control signs
shall follow the requirements specified in the "Manual on Uniform
Traffic Control Devices for Streets and Highways" published by USDOT
and adopted by NJDOT.
U.Â
Permit required. It shall be unlawful to erect, alter, relocate or
otherwise have a sign within the Township of Waterford, except those
hereinafter exempt, without first making application for and obtaining
a permit from the Construction Official. Exemptions:
V.Â
Variance. In the event that a proposed sign does not comply with
the provisions of this chapter, an application for variance may be
made to the Planning Board.
W.Â
Enforcement.
(1)Â
Upon discovery of an alleged violation of this section, the Zoning
Official shall serve written notice on the owner of the sign and/or
the owner, lessee, or party in interest of the property where the
sign is located, ordering the sign to be brought into compliance or
removed within 30 days of the date of the notice, or seven days if
the alleged violation concerns a temporary sign. The notice shall
include notification that if the sign is not brought into compliance
or removed within such time, a summons will be issued, and that subsequent
violations shall not require further notification or time to conform.
(2)Â
Should the owner of a sign and/or the owner, lessee, or party in
interest of the property where a sign is located violate the provisions
of this chapter subsequent to the initial notice, a summons shall
issue for such subsequent violation without further notice and opportunity
to conform, and the Zoning Official may summarily remove the signs
violating this section.
(3)Â
In the event the Zoning Official, with the concurrence of the Construction Official, determines that the presence of any sign, either by reason of its construction, location or lack of maintenance and repair, presents a hazard to the health, safety and welfare of the residents of the Township, or where a sign is in violation of Subsection W(1) above, the Zoning Official shall be empowered to immediately effectuate the removal of said sign, and the expenses and costs of such removal shall be borne by the owner of the sign and/or the owner, lessee, or party in interest of the property upon which the sign is located.
(4)Â
In addition to any fine imposed for a violation of this section,
the sentencing court shall order the removal of the sign or the sign
being brought into compliance at the owner's sole expense.
A.Â
Clearing standards. All clearing and soil disturbance activities,
whether or not an application for development is required pursuant
to N.J.A.C. 7:50-4 and this chapter, shall be limited to that which
is necessary to accommodate an activity, use or structure which is
permitted by this chapter.
B.Â
Grading. No grading construction or regrading shall be permitted
which creates or aggravates water stagnation or a drainage problem
on adjacent properties. Grading shall be limited to areas shown on
an approved plan.
C.Â
Topsoil and subsoil protection.
(1)Â
No topsoil shall be removed from the site, except as provided herein.
Topsoil moved during the course of construction shall be redistributed
over the disturbed areas of the development and shall be stabilized
by seeding or planting or another method shown on the approved plan.
(2)Â
Excess subsoil, when approved by the Township Engineer, may be transferred
to another site within the Township. No subsoil may be relocated outside
the Township.
All determinations of the depth to seasonal high water table
shall be based upon soil analyses considering soil test borings taken
on the site. Although it is preferred that the soil borings be taken
between February 1 and May 31 of the calendar year, borings may be
taken at any time if sufficient mottling is present to determine the
seasonal high water table. Soil borings shall be taken by a soils
scientist or a licensed professional engineer who shall certify and
seal the results thereof. The Township reserves the right to verify
all test borings and soil tests, including requiring additional borings
or the monitoring of existing borings with the Township, Pinelands,
or County Board of Health personnel present. The applicant shall be
permitted to provide any additional information and/or data to verify
the feasibility of any system to function without a deleterious effect
upon or damage to water quality.
All applicants for development encompassing or abutting lakes
and streams shall submit, at the time of submission, lake and stream
samples, including, but not limited to, temperatures; dissolved oxygen;
pH; alkalinity; benthic algal; nitrate/nitrogen; nitrogen; total Kjeldahl;
chloride; invertebrate collection; phosphorus; and fecal coliform
count.
A.Â
These tests shall be submitted at the time of preliminary submission
to the Commission and the Township.
B.Â
Tests shall be prepared by a qualified testing laboratory.
C.Â
Tests shall be taken at the intersection of any tract boundary and
the inflowing streams and at the outfall points where the watercourse
leaves the tract.
D.Â
If the development is approved, at the discretion of the Board, a
second set of tests shall be taken by the developer, upon the acceptance
of the improvements, at a time decided by the Board but not more than
two years beyond the acceptance of the improvements. All results and
comparisons shall be given to the Township Engineer for review.
A.Â
Streets.
(1)Â
All development shall be serviced by paved public streets. The arrangement
of streets not shown on the Master Plan and Zoning Map shall be arranged
to provide for appropriate extension of existing streets and should
conform with the topography, as far as practicable, and allow for
continued extension into adjoining undeveloped tracts.
(2)Â
When a new development adjoins land capable of being further developed,
suitable provisions shall be made for optimum vehicular access for
the remaining and/or adjoining tract to existing or proposed streets,
including the possibility of a sketch of a feasible plan for vehicular
access to the adjoining lands.
(3)Â
Minor streets shall be designed to discourage through traffic.
(4)Â
In all residential districts, development bounded by an arterial
or collector street shall control access to said streets by having
all driveways intersect minor streets.
(5)Â
In all developments, the minimum street right-of-way shall be measured
from lot line to lot line, but in no case shall a new street that
is a continuation of an existing street be continued at a width less
than the existing street. In addition, where any arterial or collector
street intersects another arterial or collector street, the cartway
requirement shall be increased by 10 feet on the right side of the
street(s) approaching the intersection for a distance of 300 feet
from the intersection of the center lines.
(6)Â
In the event that a development adjoins or includes existing Township
streets that do not conform to the street width requirements of this
chapter, additional land along both sides of said street sufficient
to conform to the right-of-way requirements shall be required in the
development design. If the development is along one side only, at
least 1/2 of the required extra width shall be required. Moreover,
a portion of the existing street or road adjoining or included within
a development shall be improved, including excavation, grading, base
and surface courses, in accordance with the road improvement standards
of this chapter.
(7)Â
Township streets shall be constructed in accordance with the requirements
of N.J.A.C. 5:21-4.19.
B.Â
Street classification.
(1)Â
All streets shall be classified according to the following schedule:
Type of Street
|
Right-of-Way
(feet)
|
Minimum Cartway Width
(feet)
| |
---|---|---|---|
Arterial
|
80
|
60
| |
Collector
|
60
|
40
| |
Minor
|
50
|
30
| |
Cul-de-sac
|
50
|
30
|
(2)Â
The minimum right-of-way and cartway widths for streets serving multifamily,
commercial and industrial developments shall be determined on an individual
basis and shall in all cases be of sufficient width and design to
safely accommodate the maximum traffic, parking and loading needs
and maximum access for fire-fighting vehicles and equipment, all of
which shall be subject to the approval of the Planning Board Engineer
and Township Fire Marshal.
C.Â
Culs-de-sac.
(1)Â
Permanent culs-de-sac shall provide a turnaround at the end with
a right-of-way radius equal to the street right-of-way, but in no
case less than 50 feet, and a cartway radius of not less than 50 feet
and shall be tangent with the right side of the street.
(2)Â
A temporary cul-de-sac shall provide a similar turnaround as in Subsection C(1) above, and provisions shall be made to either leave the turnaround in existence after the street is extended or to have the turnaround removed and to have the excess right-of-way revert to the adjoining properties when the street is extended.
(3)Â
Unless waived by the Board, a cul-de-sac shall not extend 600 feet
measured from the center line of the intersection street to the center
point of the turnaround.
D.Â
Street grades.
(1)Â
The minimum grade for all streets shall be 0.5%; however, 0.75% should
be used where topographic conditions permit.
(2)Â
All changes in grade shall be connected by vertical curves of sufficient
radius and greater than 100 feet to provide a smooth transition and
a minimum sight distance of 100 feet.
(3)Â
Maximum street grade shall vary by road hierarchy with flatter grades
required for roads with higher ADTs, in accordance with the requirements
of N.J.A.C. 5:21 Table 4.6.
E.Â
Street intersections.
(1)Â
Street intersections shall be as near at right angles as possible
and in no case shall be less than 75° at the point of intersection.
Any development abutting an existing street that is classified as
an arterial or collector street shall be permitted no more than one
new street every 800 feet on the same side of the street within the
boundaries of the tract being subdivided. In the spacing of streets,
consideration shall be given to the location of existing intersections
on both sides of the development.
(2)Â
Intersections shall be rounded at the curbline or edge of pavement
with a curve having a radius not less than 20 feet.
(3)Â
When connecting street lines deflect from each other at any one point
more than 10° and not more than 45°, they shall be connected
by a curve with a radius of not more than 100 feet for minor streets
and 300 feet for arterial and collector streets.
(4)Â
Streets intersecting another street from opposite sides shall not
be offset unless there is a minimum of 125 feet between the rights-of-way.
(5)Â
Approaches to all intersections shall follow the straight line for
at least 100 feet measured from the curbline of the intersecting street
to the beginning of the curve. A tangent of at least 100 feet shall
be introduced between reverse curves on all streets.
(6)Â
Street intersections should be designed with a flat grade wherever
practical. Maximum grade within intersections should be 5%, except
for collectors that should be 3%.
F.Â
Grid pattern street systems.
(1)Â
As few dwelling units as possible shall face the shorter linking
streets.
(2)Â
Continuous street frontage shall not exceed 1,200 feet. This distance
can be increased to a maximum of 1,600 feet if a public paved pedestrian
access of a minimum width of 10 feet is provided near the midpoint
giving access to an adjacent street.
G.Â
P-loop street systems.
H.Â
Alleys. Unless specifically required by governmental regulation or
unless evidence can be presented that rear lanes or alleys will be
adequately maintained, the provision of rear lanes or alleys shall
be discouraged by the Planning Board.
I.Â
Street names. No street shall have a name that duplicates or so nearly
duplicates in spelling or phonetic sound the name of an existing street
within the Township or a nearby street of an adjacent municipality.
The continuation of an existing street shall have the same name. The
names of new streets must be approved by the Department of Planning
and Zoning.
J.Â
Street paving.
(1)Â
All Township streets shall be constructed of two inches bituminous
concrete surface course, mix I-2 on four inches bituminous stabilized
base on six inches dense graded aggregate (quarry blend) subbase.
(2)Â
A reduction of this requirement may be permitted upon the examination
by the Township Engineer of the results of field CBR tests submitted
by the applicant.
K.Â
Deceleration lanes. When a street within a major subdivision intersects
with an arterial or collector street, or where a driveway serves as
an entrance to a development providing 50 or more parking spaces,
a deceleration lane shall be provided for traffic turning right into
the street or driveway from the arterial or collector street. The
deceleration lane is to be at least 200 feet long and at least 13
feet wide measured from the proposed edge of the pavement of the arterial
or collector street.
L.Â
Shoulders.
(1)Â
The shoulder is the portion of the roadway contiguous with the traveled
way which can be used to accommodate stopped vehicles, for emergency
use, bikeways, and for lateral support of subbase, base, and surface
courses.
(2)Â
Shoulder requirements shall vary according to street hierarchy and
intensity of development. With greater intensity of development, there
is more need to provide a strip for cars and service vehicles to pull
off from the traveled way, to stop safely for deliveries, and for
pedestrian and bicycle movement (where sidewalks are not provided).
(3)Â
When shoulders are not paved, they shall be stabilized with grass in accordance with § 176-72F.
(4)Â
When required, shoulder width shall be determined by the Municipal
Engineer, but in no case less than four feet.
(5)Â
Shoulders shall be required along all streets without sidewalks.
(6)Â
No obstructions shall be placed in the shoulder area of any street.
For the purpose of this section the term "pool" shall include
on-ground, in-ground swimming pools, whirlpools, hot tubs and spas.
A.Â
No commercial pool shall be constructed or installed unless approved
by the appropriate Board as part of a site plan approval. All swimming
pools, spas, whirlpools and hot tubs shall be classified into types
in accordance with their particular use and shall meet the appropriate
design standards as set forth by the National Swimming Pool Institute,
the New Jersey Uniform Construction Code, or the Swimming Pool Code
of New Jersey, latest edition, whichever is more stringent.
B.Â
No private outdoor pool shall be installed on any lot unless said
lot contains a residence and said pool shall be accessory to such
residence. A pool may be installed on a contiguous lot in common ownership
with the lot containing the residence.
C.Â
Pools shall be set back a minimum of 10 feet from all side and rear
property lines and shall not be located in a front yard. In the case
of properties having frontage on more than one street, the pool shall
be set back at least the same distance from the street line as required
for the principal building. There shall be no minimum distance requirement
between the pool and principal building.
D.Â
In accordance with the requirements of the current requirements of
the New Jersey Uniform Construction Code, an outdoor private pool
shall be provided with a fence, a wall, a building wall or a combination
thereof which completely surrounds it and obstructs access to it.[1]
E.Â
All filter systems shall be enclosed or separated to prevent use
as an access to the pool.
F.Â
The location of pools shall not interfere with access to any building
or the operation of any on-lot water supply, waste disposal system,
or drainage easement.
G.Â
Pools shall be constructed and operated in accordance with all applicable
health, safety and sanitary regulations for water filtration, circulation
and treatment.
H.Â
Pools shall conform with the requirements of this chapter regarding
fencing and outdoor lighting.
A.Â
Trailers and other stationary structures of a similar nature for
storage, warehouse space, sales area, office or other use, for residential
or commercial purposes, are prohibited except where expressly permitted
during construction of a development or project.
B.Â
In emergency situations, such as fire, water or storm damage sufficient
to make a residence inhabitable, the Zoning Official may issue a temporary
use permit to place a trailer on a residential lot in conjunction
with construction permits for renovation of the property.
A.Â
Connections. All public utility services shall be connected to an
approved public utilities system where one exists. The developer shall
arrange with the servicing utility for the underground installation
of the distribution supply lines and service connections in accordance
with the provisions of the applicable standard terms and conditions
incorporated as part of its tariff, as the same are on file with the
New Jersey State Board of Public Utility Commissioners; provided,
however, that lots not part of a new major subdivision or site plan
which abut existing streets where overhead electric, CATV or telephone
distribution supply lines and service connections have heretofore
been installed may be supplied with electric, CATV or telephone service
from these overhead lines, but any new service connections for the
utilities' overhead lines shall be installed underground. In cases
where extension or replacement of service is needed to existing or
new buildings in established subdivisions or developments, the present
method of service may be continued. In the case of existing overhead
utilities, however, should a road widening or an extension of service
or such other condition occur as a result of the development which
necessitates the replacement or relocation of such utilities, the
developer shall cause the replacement or relocation to be underground.
B.Â
Location.
(1)Â
New utility distribution lines and telephone lines to locations not
presently served by utilities shall be placed underground, except
for those lines which are located on or adjacent to active agricultural
operations.
(2)Â
Aboveground generating facilities, switching complexes, pumping stations,
and substations shall be screened with vegetation from adjacent uses
in accordance with this section.
(3)Â
All electric utility transmission lines shall be located on existing
towers or underground to the maximum extent practical.
(4)Â
The center line of all relocated or newly installed telephone poles
are to be set back five feet from the edge of pavement on noncurbed
roads.
(5)Â
In all developments, easements along rear property lines or elsewhere
for utility installation shall be required. Such easements shall be
at least 10 feet wide and located in consultation with the companies
or municipal departments concerned.
No use shall obstruct the natural ventilation of adjacent uses
nor contaminate the air with excessive heat or odor. Further, no air
conditioners or exhaust fans shall be permitted to discharge exhausted
air unless set back from all property lines at least 10 feet or equipped
with baffles to deflect the discharged air away from the adjacent
use. Air conditions and vents on rooftops shall be screened from view.
A.Â
Standard. Ground-transmitted vibrations shall be measured with a
seismograph or complement of instruments capable of recording vibration
displacement and frequency in the three mutually perpendicular directions,
simultaneously.
B.Â
Vibration level restrictions. Vibration levels shall not exceed a
particle velocity of 0.05 inch per second in any district. During
the hours of 9:00 p.m. to 7:00 a.m. in residential districts, vibration
levels shall not exceed a particle velocity of 0.02 inch per second.
Measurements shall be made at the points of maximum vibration intensity
and/or beyond adjacent lot lines or neighboring uses, whichever is
more restrictive.
A.Â
Careful attention shall be given to the quality of design of all buildings, land uses and street furniture (such as streetlighting, outdoor equipment and signs). Among the elements that the Planning Board must comment upon are the design of residential and nonresidential land uses and buildings, community facilities, parks and landscaping and the design of street furniture. The nature, size, shape, lighting and style of all outdoor signs must be found to be in harmony with their surroundings and consistent with the provisions of § 176-88.
B.Â
Community favorable aesthetic and appearance factors shall be encouraged
by the Planning Board to persist on a continuous basis.
C.Â
The visual relationship and space between buildings shall be examined
as it relates to its surroundings.
D.Â
Buildings shall be situated to take advantage of desirable views.
E.Â
Building materials, their colors and textures, shall be harmonious
with their surroundings.
A.Â
Trash enclosures. Refuse stations, where required, must be designed
and located to be convenient for garbage removal, attractive, durable
and inoffensive to the occupants of adjacent dwelling units.
(1)Â
All multifamily and nonresidential uses shall provide for the outdoor
storage of refuse according to the following requirements:
(a)Â
Trash enclosures shall be a minimum of 100 square feet per dumpster
enclosure or, in the case of large capacity dumpsters, sufficiently
sized to completely enclose the receptacle. Enclosures shall be six
feet high.
(b)Â
All enclosures shall be constructed on a concrete pad a minimum
of six inches thick, Class B. The pad shall extend a minimum of 10
feet from the front of the enclosure.
(c)Â
Nonresidential enclosures shall be of masonry construction architecturally
compatible with the principal structure. Residential enclosures may
be constructed of wood or chain link fencing if sufficient room is
allocated for trash truck access to dumpsters in the enclosure. All
commercial trash enclosures must be equipped with locking gates of
steel construction. When large-capacity dumpsters are utilized, a
steel, locking access door within the gate or elsewhere shall be provided.
(d)Â
Trash enclosures shall be located to provide straight-on access
while not impeding pedestrian or vehicular circulation. Trash enclosures
should not be located adjacent to site accessways or primary drive
aisles.
(e)Â
All enclosures shall have a vegetative buffer in accordance with § 176-52C(3).
(f)Â
Where the Board determines that the types and quantities of
refuse generated by the proposed use are such that they may be safely
stored internally, the requirement for a external/outdoor trash enclosure
may be waived.
(g)Â
All trash enclosures shall be subject to accessory structure
setback requirements of this chapter.
(2)Â
All uses shall provide for source separation of waste pursuant to
the New Jersey Mandatory Source Separation and Recycling Act of 1987
(Laws of 1987, Chapter 102), N.J.S.A. 13:1E-99.16.
B.Â
Storage.
(1)Â
In multifamily developments, not more than one outdoor garbage and
refuse pickup station shall be permitted for each 10 independent dwelling
units, except where a building contains less than 10, and each of
such size and capacity as will provide adequate and well-located storage
in the rear or side of the buildings housed in an appropriate structure,
and all such units, together with all garbage and refuse disposal
from the development, shall be serviced and picked up and otherwise
disposed of by the owner of said development.
(2)Â
No hazardous or toxic substances, including hazardous wastes, shall
be stored, transferred, processed, discharged, disposed or otherwise
used in the Township. The land application of waste or waste-derived
materials is prohibited in the Pinelands Area, except as expressly
authorized in N.J.A.C. 7:50-6.79. Waste management facilities shall
only be permitted in the Township in accordance with the standards
set forth in N.J.A.C. 7:50-6.
(3)Â
In the nonresidential districts, no article or material shall be
kept, stored, or displayed outside the confines of a building, except
where permitted elsewhere in this chapter and unless the same is so
screened by a special buffer planting, berm arrangement or fence,
or combination thereof, as approved by the Board, so that it is not
visible from any adjacent property or public street.
(4)Â
Outdoor storage, where permitted, is only permitted in rear yards.
(5)Â
All materials or wastes that might create a pollutant or hazard shall
be enclosed in appropriate containers to eliminate such possibility.
No flammable, combustible or explosive substance shall be stored on
a property except under conditions approved by the Fire Official in
accordance with the New Jersey Uniform Fire Code.
(6)Â
Any outdoor storage of flammable material, which is permitted and
is properly screened, shall be at least 50 feet from any property
line.
(7)Â
Household waste shall be stored is watertight containers.
(8)Â
Trash containers shall not be stored in front or side yards.
C.Â
Disposal.
(1)Â
In all developments other than single-family, duplex or twins, the
owner shall be responsible for contracting services for maintenance,
pickup and disposal of all garbage and refuse.
(2)Â
Household waste shall not be placed at the curb until 6:00 p.m. the
night before collection.
(3)Â
No materials or wastes shall be deposited upon a lot in such form
or manner that they can be transferred off the lot, directly or indirectly,
by natural forces such as precipitation, evaporation or wind, or where
they can contaminate or render undesirable an underground aquifer,
or where they will destroy aquatic life.
(4)Â
No disposal of solid or liquid waste by application to land shall
be permitted in the Township and the operation of a landfill for said
purposes is expressly prohibited.
(5)Â
Nothing herein shall be construed to prevent the fertilization of
plants, vegetation and other agricultural activity for agricultural
purposes.
(6)Â
Nothing herein shall prevent disposal by the Township, or as authorized
by the Township, of any waste, including, but not limited to, composting,
sludge disposal, spray irrigation or other lawful governmental disposal
in connection with an active agricultural operation and in accordance
with the requirements of the DEP and CMP.
A.Â
Interbasin transfer of water between watersheds shall be avoided
to the maximum extent practical. In areas served by central sewers,
water-saving devices, such as water-saving toilets, showers and sink
faucets, shall be installed in all new development. Existing development
shall comply with this requirement whenever renovation or plumbing
permits are issued by the Construction Official.
B.Â
Water shall not be exported from the Township except as otherwise
provided in N.J.S.A. 58:1A-7.1.
C.Â
All wells and all increases in diversion from existing wells which
require water allocation permits from the NJDEP shall be designed
and located to minimize impacts on wetlands and surface waters and
meet the requirements of 7:50-6.86 of the CMP.
A.Â
General water quality standards.
(1)Â
All development permitted under this chapter shall be designed
and carried out so that the quality of surface water and groundwater
shall be protected and maintained. Agricultural use shall not be considered
development for the purposes of this subsection.
(2)Â
Except as specifically permitted and authorized in this chapter,
no development shall be permitted which degrades surface water or
groundwater quality or which establishes new point sources of pollution.
(3)Â
No development shall be permitted which does not meet the minimum
water quality and potable water standards of the State of New Jersey
or the United States.
B.Â
Minimum standards for point and nonpoint source discharges. The following
point and nonpoint sources may be developed and operated in the Pinelands:
(1)Â
Development of new or the expansion of existing commercial, industrial and wastewater treatment facilities, or the development of new or the expansion of existing nonpoint sources, except those specifically regulated in Subsection B(2) through (5) below, provided that:
(a)Â
There will be no direct discharge into any surface water body.
(b)Â
All discharge from the facility is of a quality and quantity
such that groundwater exiting from the parcel of land or entering
a surface body of water will not exceed two ppm (parts per million)
nitrate/nitrogen.
(c)Â
All public wastewater treatment facilities are designed to accept
and treat septage.
(d)Â
All storage facilities, including ponds or lagoons, are lined
to prevent leakage into groundwater.
(2)Â
Development of new wastewater treatment or collection facilities which are designed to improve the level of nitrate/nitrogen attenuation of more than one existing on-site wastewater treatment system where a public health problem has been identified may be exempted from the standards of Subsection B(1)(b) above, provided that:
(a)Â
There will be no direct discharge into any surface water body;
(b)Â
The facility is designed only to accommodate wastewater from
existing residential, commercial and industrial development;
(c)Â
Adherence to Subsection B(1)(b) above cannot be achieved due to limiting site conditions or that the costs to comply with the standard will result in excessive user fees.
(d)Â
The design level of nitrate/nitrogen attenuation is the maximum
possible within the costs to comply within the cost limitations imposed
by such user fee guidelines but in no case shall groundwater exiting
from the parcel or entering a surface body of water exceed five ppm
nitrate/nitrogen.
(3)Â
Improvements to existing commercial, industrial and wastewater
treatment facilities which discharge directly into surface waters,
provided that:
(a)Â
There is no practical alternative available that would adhere to the standards of Subsection B(1)(a) above.
(b)Â
There is no increase in the existing approved capacity of the
facility.
(c)Â
All discharges from the facility into surface waters are such
that the nitrate/nitrogen levels of the surface waters at the discharge
point do not exceed two ppm. In the event that nitrate/nitrogen levels
in the surface waters immediately upstream of the discharge point
exceed two ppm, the discharge shall not exceed two ppm nitrate/nitrogen.
(4)Â
Individual on-site septic wastewater treatment systems which
are not intended to reduce the level of nitrate/nitrogen in the wastewater,
provided that:
(a)Â
The proposed development to be served by the system is otherwise
permitted pursuant to the provisions of this chapter;
(b)Â
The design of the system and its discharge point and the size of the entire contiguous parcel on which the system or systems is located will ensure that groundwater exiting from the entire contiguous parcel or entering a surface body of water will not exceed two ppm nitrate/nitrogen, calculated pursuant to the Pinelands dilution model dated December 1993, as amended, subject to the provisions of § 176-101B(4)(c) below. The entire contiguous parcel may include any contiguous lands to be dedicated as open space as part of the proposed development but may not include previously dedicated road rights-of-way or any contiguous lands that have been deed restricted pursuant to § 176-15 or 176-16.
(c)Â
Only contiguous lands located within the same zoning district
and Pinelands management area as the proposed system or systems may
be utilized for septic dilution purposes, except for the development
of an individual single-family dwelling on a lot existing as of January
14, 1981, nonresidential development on a lot of five acres or less
existing as of January 14, 1981, or cluster development as permitted
by N.J.A.C. 7:50-5.19.
(d)Â
The depth to seasonal high water table is at least five feet.
(e)Â
The system will be maintained and inspected in accordance with the requirements of N.J.A.C. 7:50-6.85 and § 176-101C below.
(f)Â
The technology has been approved for use by the New Jersey Department
of Environmental Protection.
(g)Â
Flow values for nonresidential development shall be determined
based on the values contained in N.J.A.C. 7:9A-7.4, as amended, except
that number of employees may not be utilized in calculating flow values
for office uses. In the event that N.J.A.C. 7:9A-7.4 does not provide
flow values for a specific use, but a flow value is assigned for that
use in N.J.A.C. 7:14A-23.3(a), the flow value specified in N.J.A.C.
7:14A-23.3(a) shall be used in calculating flow.
(5)Â
Individual on-site septic wastewater treatment systems which
are intended to reduce the level of nitrate/nitrogen in the wastewater,
provided that:
(b)Â
If the proposed development is nonresidential, it is located:
[Amended 6-13-2018 by Ord. No. 2018-13]
(c)Â
The design of the system and its discharge point, and the size of the entire contiguous parcel on which the system or systems is located will ensure that groundwater exiting from the entire contiguous parcel or entering a surface body of water will not exceed two ppm nitrate/nitrogen, calculated pursuant to the Pinelands dilution model dated December 1993, as amended, subject to the provisions of Subsection B(4)(c) above and the assumptions and requirements set forth in N.J.A.C. 7:50-6.84(a)5iv. The entire contiguous parcel may include any contiguous lands to be dedicated as open space as part of the proposed development but may not include previously dedicated road rights-of-way or any contiguous lands that have been deed restricted pursuant to § 176-15 or 176-16.
(6)Â
Permit required. No person shall locate, construct or alter
any individual sewage disposal system until a permit for the location,
construction or alteration of said system shall have been approved
and issued by the Camden County Department of Health and any required
construction permits have been issued by the Township Construction
Official.
(a)Â
The Camden County Department of Health may issue a permit if
an application for the same is accompanied by a certificate made by
an engineer licensed to practice professional engineering in New Jersey,
stating that the design of the individual sewage disposal system as
proposed is in compliance with the code and in compliance with the
standards of this chapter.
(b)Â
New individual disposal systems shall not be placed in operation,
nor shall new dwellings or buildings or additions thereto be sold
or occupied which must rely on such a system for sewage disposal until
the Camden County Department of Health has issued a certificate indicating
that the system has been located and constructed in compliance with
the terms of the permit and this chapter.
(7)Â
Alternate design pilot program treatment systems, provided that:
(a)Â
The proposed development to be served by the system is residential
and is otherwise permitted pursuant to the provisions of this chapter;
(b)Â
The design of the system and its discharge point and the size of the entire contiguous parcel on which the system or systems is located will ensure that groundwater exiting from the entire contiguous parcel or entering a surface body of water will not exceed two parts per million nitrate/nitrogen, calculated pursuant to the Pinelands dilution model, dated December 1993, as amended, subject to the provisions of Subsection B(7)(c) below. The entire contiguous parcel may include any contiguous lands to be dedicated as open space as part of the proposed development but may not include previously dedicated road rights-of-way or any contiguous lands that have been deed restricted pursuant to § 176-15 or 176-16;
(c)Â
Only contiguous lands located within the same zoning district
and Pinelands Management area as the proposed system or systems may
be utilized for septic dilution purposes, except for the development
of an individual single-family dwelling on a lot existing as of January
14, 1981, nonresidential development on a lot of five acres or less
existing as of January 14, 1981, or cluster development as permitted
by N.J.A.C. 7:50-5.19;
(d)Â
The depth to seasonal high water table is at least five feet;
(e)Â
Any potable water well will be drilled and cased to a depth
of at least 100 feet, unless the well penetrates an impermeable clay
aquiclude, in which case, the well shall be cased to at least 50 feet;
(f)Â
No more than 10 alternate design pilot program treatment systems
utilizing the same technology shall be installed in the development
of any parcel if those systems are each serving one single-family
dwelling;
(g)Â
Each system shall be equipped with automatic dialing capability
to the manufacturer, or its agent, in the event of a mechanical malfunction;
(h)Â
Each system shall be designed and constructed so that samples
of effluent leaving the alternate design pilot program septic system
can be readily taken to confirm the performance of the technology;
(i)Â
The manufacturer or its agent shall provide to each owner an
operation and maintenance manual approved pursuant to N.J.A.C. 7:50-10.22(a)2iv;
(j)Â
Each system shall be covered by a five-year warranty and a minimum
five-year maintenance contract consistent with those approved pursuant
to N.J.A.C. 7:50-10.22(a)2v that cannot be canceled and is renewable
and which includes a provision requiring that the manufacturer or
its agent inspect the system at least once a year and undertake any
maintenance or repairs determined to be necessary during any such
inspection or as a result of observations made at any other time;
[Amended 6-13-2018 by Ord. No. 2018-13]
(k)Â
The property owner shall record with the deed to the property a notice consistent with that approved pursuant to N.J.A.C. 7:50-10.22(a)2vi that identifies the technology, acknowledges the owner's responsibility to operate and maintain it in accordance with the manual required in Subsection B(7)(i) above, and grants access, with reasonable notice, to the local Board of Health, the Commission and its agents for inspection and monitoring purposes. The recorded deed shall run with the property and shall ensure that the maintenance requirements are binding on any owner of the property during the life of the system and that the monitoring requirements are binding on any owner of the property during the time period the monitoring requirements apply pursuant to the pilot program or any subsequent regulations adopted by the Commission that apply to said system; and
[Amended 6-13-2018 by Ord. No. 2018-13]
(l)Â
No system shall be installed after August 5, 2007.
C.Â
Individual wastewater treatment facility and petroleum tank maintenance.
(1)Â
The owner of every on-site septic waste treatment facility shall,
as soon as suitable septage disposal facility capacity is available,
in accordance with the provisions of Chapter 325 of the Solid Waste
Management Act, N.J.S.A. 13:1E-1 et seq., and Section 201 of the Clean
Water Act:
(a)Â
Have the facility inspected by a technician at least once every
three years.
(b)Â
Have the facility cleaned at least once every three years.
(c)Â
Once every three years submit to the Zoning Official a sworn
statement that the facility has been inspected and cleaned and is
functional, setting forth the name of the person who performed the
inspection and cleaning and the date of such inspection.
(2)Â
The owner of every commercial petroleum storage tank shall comply
with the requirements of Chapter 102 of the Laws of 1986 and N.J.S.A.
7:14B.
D.Â
Surface water runoff. In addition to the requirements of § 176-59, surface water runoff is permitted, provided that:
(1)Â
The total runoff generated from any net increase in impervious
surfaces by a ten-year storm of a twenty-four-hour duration shall
be retained and infiltrated on site. Runoff volumes shall be calculated
in accordance with the United States Natural Resources Conservation
Service Technical Release No. 55 or the NRCS National Engineering
Handbook, Section 4.
(2)Â
The rates of runoff generated from the parcel by a two-, ten-
and one-hundred-year storm, each of a twenty-four-hour duration, shall
not increase as a result of the proposed development. Runoff rates
shall be calculated in accordance with the United States Natural Resources
Conservation Service Technical Release No. 55 or the NRCS National
Engineering Handbook, Section 4.
(3)Â
Surface water runoff shall not be directed in such a way as
to increase the volume and rate of discharge into any surface water
body from that which existed prior to development of the parcel.
(4)Â
Excessively and somewhat excessively drained soils, as defined
by the Natural Resources Conservation Service, should be avoided for
recharge of runoff wherever practical.
(5)Â
A minimum separation of two feet between the elevation of the
lowest point of the bottom of the infiltration or detention facility
and the seasonal high water table is met, or a lesser separation when
it is demonstrated that the separation, either due to soil conditions
or when considered in combination with other stormwater management
techniques, is adequate to protect groundwater quality.
(6)Â
A four-year maintenance guarantee is provided for the entire
stormwater management system by the applicant. In addition, the applicant
shall fund or otherwise guarantee an inspection and maintenance program
for a period of no less than 10 years. The program shall identify
the entity charged with responsibility of any necessary maintenance
and the method to finance said program.
A.Â
Where public water is accessible, water mains shall be constructed
in such a manner that adequate water service is available to each
lot or building within the development. The entire system shall be
designed in accordance with the requirements and standards of the
municipal and state agency having authority and shall be subject to
their approval. The system shall also be designed with adequate capacity
and sustained pressure and in a looped system with no dead-end lines,
whenever possible.
B.Â
Water shall be accessible to all lots in a development. For the purpose
of this section "accessible" shall mean that the property to be developed
is no further from an existing water main than the number of feet
arrived at by multiplying the number of units in a proposed residential
development by 200, or, in the case of subdivisions in which more
than 20 units are proposed, "accessible" shall mean that the property
to be developed is within one mile of an existing water main. To the
extent reasonable and practicable, all nonresidential developments
shall be served by public water.
C.Â
No more than 25 residential units or the equivalent shall be permitted
on the dead end of a water main on a permanent basis. If a development
exceeds the allowable limits for the number of units on a water main
dead end, it is the applicant's obligation to loop the water main
or provide a second source of potable water acceptable to the Township.
D.Â
Where no public water is accessible, water shall be furnished on
an individual lot basis. If wells are installed on each lot and the
lot also contains its own sewage disposal facilities, the wells shall
be of the drilled type. Any potable water well will be drilled and
cased to a depth of at least 100 feet, unless the well penetrates
an impermeable clay aquiclude, in which case the well shall be cased
to at least 50 feet.
E.Â
Well installation, sealing and testing shall be in accordance with
the NJ Standards for Construction of Water Supply Systems in Realty
Improvements (Chapter 199 of Public Laws of 1954), as amended, and
in accordance with the guidelines and resolutions adopted by the Camden
County Department of Health. Prior to being placed in consumer use
and prior to issuance of a certificate of occupancy for any building
served by the well, the developer shall certify to the Camden County
Department of Health that he complied with all applicable state and
municipal regulations.
F.Â
It is the developer's responsibility to maintain all water supply
improvements for partially completed developments.
G.Â
It is the developer's responsibility to extend any on-tract public water supply to the limits of the tract boundary line to service future development and to conform to the Township Master Plan. See § 176-53 for additional standards.
H.Â
Fire hydrants shall be spaced to provide necessary fire flow, and
the average area per hydrant typically should not exceed 120,000 square
feet. In addition, hydrants shall be spaced so that each residence
shall be within 600 feet of a hydrant.
(1)Â
Hydrants shall be located at all low points and at all high
points with adequate means of drainage provided.
(2)Â
Hydrants shall be located at the ends of lines, and valves of
full line size shall be provided after hydrant tees at the ends of
all dead lines and lines which may be extended in the future.
(3)Â
The size, type, and installation of hydrants shall conform to
Waterford Township Municipal Utilities Authority specifications.
A.Â
Wetlands are defined as those lands which are inundated or saturated
by water at a magnitude, duration and frequency sufficient to support
the growth of hydrophytes. Wetlands include lands with poorly drained
or very poorly drained soils, as designated by the Natural Resources
Conservation Service, or soils drainage Class 1. Wetlands include
coastal wetlands and inland wetlands, including submerged lands. Inland
wetlands include, but are not limited to: Atlantic white cedar swamps,
hardwood swamps, pitch pine lowlands, bogs, inland marshes, lakes
and ponds, rivers, streams and intermittent streams. Wetlands in Waterford
Township, as shown on Map 7, are defined using the outermost extent
of either lowland vegetation or wet soils.
B.Â
Development shall be prohibited in all wetlands in the Township except
as specifically authorized in this section.
C.Â
Horticulture of native Pinelands species and berry agriculture shall be permitted in all wetlands subject to the requirements of § 176-45.
D.Â
Beekeeping shall be permitted in all wetlands.
F.Â
Fish and wildlife activities and wetlands management in accordance
with N.J.A.C. 7:50-6.10.
[Amended 9-12-2012 by Ord. No. 2012-15]
G.Â
Low-intensity recreational uses which do not involve use of a structure, including hunting, fishing, trapping, hiking, boating and swimming and other low-intensity recreational uses, provided that any development associated with those other uses does not result in a significant adverse impact on the wetland as set forth in Subsection L below.
H.Â
Docks, piers, moorings and boat launches for the use of landowners shall be permitted in all wetlands, provided that the use will not result in a significant adverse impact, as set forth in Subsection L hereof, and conforms to all state and federal regulations.
I.Â
Commercial or public docks, piers, moorings and boat launches shall
be permitted, provided that:
J.Â
Bridges, roads, trails and utility transmission and distribution
facilities shall be permitted in wetlands, provided that:
(1)Â
There is no feasible alternative route or site for the facility
that does not involve development in a wetland or, if none, that another
feasible route or site which results in less significant adverse impacts
on wetlands does not exist;
(2)Â
The public need cannot be met by existing facilities or modification
thereof;
(3)Â
The use represents a need that overrides the importance of protecting
the wetland;
(4)Â
Development of the facility will include all practical measures
to mitigate the adverse impact on the wetland; and
(5)Â
The resources of the Pinelands will not be substantially impaired
as a result of the facility and its development.
K.Â
No development, except for those uses which are specifically authorized in this section, shall be carried out within 300 feet of any wetland, unless it has been demonstrated that the proposed development will not result in a significant adverse impact on the wetland, as set forth in Subsection L below. A municipal variance is not required if the Pinelands Commission accepts a buffer less than 300 feet and that buffer is stipulated in a certificate of filing.
L.Â
A significant adverse impact shall be deemed to exist where it is
determined that one or more of the following modifications of a wetland
will have an irreversible effect on the ecological integrity of the
wetland and its biotic components, including, but not limited to,
threatened or endangered species of plants or animals:
(1)Â
An increase in surface water runoff discharging into a wetland.
(2)Â
A change in the normal seasonal flow patterns in the wetland.
(3)Â
An alteration of the water table in the wetland.
(4)Â
An increase in erosion resulting in increased sedimentation
in the wetland.
(5)Â
A change in the natural chemistry of the groundwater or surface
water in the wetland.
(6)Â
A loss of wetland habitat.
(7)Â
A reduction in wetland habitat diversity.
(8)Â
A change in wetlands species composition.
(9)Â
A significant disturbance of areas used by indigenous and migratory
wildlife for breeding, nesting or feeding.