A. 
General. The following provisions shall apply to all buildings and uses lawfully existing on the effective date of this Part 4 which do not conform to the requirements set forth in this Part 4 and to all buildings and uses that become nonconforming by reason of any subsequent amendment to this Part 4.
B. 
Regulations. Any nonconforming use of buildings or open land and any nonconforming buildings may be continued indefinitely, but such uses:
(1) 
Shall not be enlarged, altered, extended, reconstructed or restored, except as provided in § 200-224 herein, nor placed on a different portion of the lot or parcel of land occupied by such use on the effective date of this Part 4, nor shall any external evidence of such use be increased by any means whatsoever.
(2) 
Shall not be moved to another location where such use would be nonconforming.
(3) 
Shall not be reestablished if such use has been voluntarily discontinued for any reason for a period of one year or more or has been changed to or replaced by a conforming use.
(4) 
Shall not be restored for other than a conforming use after substantial destruction thereof.
Nothing in this article shall be deemed to prevent normal maintenance and repair, structural alteration in or the reconstruction of a noncomplying building, provided that such action does not increase or extend the degree of or create any new nonconformity with regard to the regulations pertaining to such buildings or the lot upon which they are constructed (e.g., an undersized house, situated closer to the street line than now specified may have an addition on the back, provided that side and rear yards are not invaded), except that the floor area of a single-family house that occupies a lot that is smaller than the minimum lot area for the district in which the house is located may be increased by not more than 20% of the floor area existing as of the date of adoption of this Part 4, provided that all other provisions of this Part 4 are complied with. Yard reductions for such undersized lots may be permitted according to criteria established in § 200-225 of this article. This latter exception shall not apply to those lots in which an increase in floor area of a nonconforming building has occurred since August 15, 1975.
No nonconforming vacant lot existing prior to August 15, 1975, shall be further reduced in size. In residential districts, such lots, as well as those which are consolidated into a single lot but still are nonconforming in area or dimension, may be improved for a single-family residence and its permitted accessory uses without appeal for variance relief, provided that the following provisions are met:
A. 
The lot is in separate ownership and not contiguous to lots in the same ownership and the owner had made a conscientious effort to acquire additional property. However, in the case of two or more contiguous lots under the same ownership, regardless of whether or not each may have been approved as a subdivision, acquired by separate conveyance or by other operation of law, where one or more of said lots does not conform with the area and/or division requirements for the zone in which it is located, the contiguous lots shall be considered as a single lot and the provisions of the applicable zoning district shall apply.
B. 
As appropriate, all necessary health approvals are given by the responsible municipal agency or its agent.
C. 
FAR/MIC exceptions. The FAR/MIC of the zoning district in which the vacant lot is located may either be the maximum permitted FAR/MIC of the zoning district or 120% of the average FAR/MIC of dwellings immediately adjacent to the vacant lot, whichever is smaller. In the case of all vacant lots in a particular block or area, the permitted FAR/MIC of the zoning district may be increased by 10%.
D. 
Yard exceptions.
(1) 
Where the lot does not have the required width, each side yard may be reduced by one foot for each five feet that the lot is below the minimum required width, except that no side yard shall be less than 1/2 that required by the zoning district.
(2) 
Where the lot does not have required depth, the rear yard may be reduced six inches for every foot below 100 feet in depth, except that no rear yard shall be less than 1/2 that required by the zoning district.
(3) 
If after application of the exceptions of Subsections D(1) and (2) above front yard infringement is necessary, no building shall be set back less than 75% of the required front yard in the zoning district.
[Added 10-18-2004 by Ord. No. 2004-27; amended 9-15-2008 by Ord. No. 2008-24]
A partially or totally destroyed single-family dwelling and structures accessory thereto, whether or not the lot and structures are conforming, may be reconstructed, provided that the structure is no larger than, and is the same location as, the structure that was partially or totally destroyed.
A. 
General requirements.
(1) 
Accessory uses shall be permitted only on the same lot and within the same zoning district unless otherwise indicated, with the principal building to which they are accessory, except for parking as required in Part 1, Site Plan Review, of this chapter, and retention/detention basins as noted in Part 3, Subdivision and Site Plan Procedures, of this chapter. All accessory uses shall be such as do not alter the character of the premises on which they are located or impair the neighborhood. Such accessory uses shall not be located in any front, side or rear yard area, unless otherwise permitted in this Part 4. Accessways to off-street parking and loading areas may cross front yard areas or the yard area abutting a principal street from which site access is to be provided.
(2) 
Bulk and area regulations. No distinction is made in nonresidential districts regarding the dimensional limitations between principal and other buildings or structures referred to as accessory, except as permitted in this article. All such accessory buildings or structures or uses in nonresidential districts shall be governed by the bulk and area regulations of the district within which they are located. All accessory structures and uses in residential districts shall be set back a minimum of 20 feet from side and rear property lines, except as herein modified by this chapter.
[Amended 10-27-2008 by Ord. No. 2008-42]
B. 
Farm and agricultural uses. In the districts where farm and agricultural uses are permitted, the following additional provisions governing their use shall apply:
(1) 
Such uses are conducted upon a lot not less than five acres in area.
(2) 
No building or structure used for shelter or enclosure of fowl, game, horses, farm livestock or adult dogs shall be closer to any property line than 200 feet.
(3) 
Buildings used for the shelter of fowl of any kind shall have a maximum usable floor area of 2,000 square feet for the first 10 acres and 5,000 additional square feet for each additional acre.
(4) 
One domestic horse for the personal use of the occupants of the residence may be maintained on any lot at least three acres in size.
(5) 
The display for sale of products grown or raised by the owner, tenant or lessee on a roadside stand shall only be permitted where:
(a) 
The sale of such products are within the confines of the property upon which they have been grown or raised.
(b) 
The place of sale or storage of any such products, whether of a permanent or temporary nature, shall not be closer than 100 feet to any side lot line.
(c) 
The sale of any such products shall not have a deleterious effect on adjoining properties by reason of nuisance or health hazard.
(d) 
The sale of any such products shall also require that a suitable amount of off-street parking and loading space as required in Part 1, Site Plan Review, of this chapter, be provided.
C. 
Swimming pools and similar personal recreational facilities in residential zones.[1] Except for portable swimming pools less than three feet in height and less than 10 feet in length or diameter, the following regulations shall apply to permanent and portable swimming pools and similar recreational facilities accessory to a residential use:
[Amended 4-20-1990 by Ord. No. 90-12]
(1) 
Said use shall be erected on the same lot as the principal structure.
(2) 
Said use shall comply with a minimum setback of 20 feet from side and rear property lines.
[Amended 10-27-2008 by Ord. No. 2008-42]
(3) 
Said use shall be appropriately screened and fenced so as not to adversely affect adjoining properties.
(4) 
Said use shall meet all applicable codes and ordinances of the Township of West Windsor and any regulations of a county or state agency.
(5) 
A pool or water surface shall not be counted as part of a lot's maximum improvement coverage requirements.
[1]
Editor's Note: See Ch. 162, Swimming Pools.
D. 
Storage sheds in residential districts. Such storage facilities on the same lot as the principal structure may be located within 10 feet of the required side and rear yards, but shall conform to front yard setback requirements for principal structures. Storage sheds on corner lots shall not be located closer to the side street property line than the required setback line for a front yard in the zoning district within which the lot is located.
E. 
Tennis courts and multipurpose sports patios in residential zones. The following regulations shall apply to all tennis courts and multipurpose sports patios accessory to a residential use, except that only Subsections E(6) and (7) shall apply to multipurpose sports patios of less than 225 square feet:
[Added 4-20-1990 by Ord. No. 90-12; 12-19-1994 by Ord. No. 94-62]
(1) 
A minimum lot area of one acre is required for a tennis court; a minimum lot area of not less than 3/4 of an acre is required for a multipurpose sports patio.
(2) 
Tennis courts and multipurpose sports patios shall be erected on the same lot as the principal structure.
(3) 
Neither tennis courts nor multipurpose sports patios shall be permitted in any front yard area and shall be a minimum of 30 feet from any property line.
(4) 
The courts and patios shall be appropriately screened with vegetative landscaping and fenced so as not to adversely affect adjoining properties.
(5) 
No fencing greater than 10 feet in height shall be permitted for either tennis courts or multipurpose sports patios.
(6) 
No lighting shall be permitted for the courts or patios in order to ensure that the courts and patios are used only during daytime hours.
(7) 
In no case can the court or sports patio be located between the dwelling and street, nor shall they infringe upon any yard setback area.
(8) 
One backstop and not more than two basketball backboards shall be permitted at a maximum height of 10 feet on either tennis courts or sports patios. For the purpose of basketball backboards, the maximum 10 feet height shall be measured from the ground to the basketball rim.
(9) 
The area of tennis courts and multipurpose sports patios shall be included in the calculation of maximum improvement coverage.
F. 
Satellite dish antennas.
[Added 4-20-1992 by Ord. No. 92-11]
(1) 
Satellite dish antennae are permitted accessory structures when located on a single-family dwelling lot, provided that the same is located a distance of at least 10 feet from the side and rear property lines. Satellite dish antenna shall mean a combination of a dish whose purpose is to receive communications or other signals from orbiting satellites, a low-noise amplifier which is situated in the focal point of the receiving dish and whose purpose is to magnify and transfer signals and a cable and appurtenances whose purpose is to carry the signal to the interior of a structure.
(2) 
Such satellite dish antennas shall be subject, in addition, to the following standards:
(a) 
No satellite dish antenna shall be located in the front yard.
(b) 
No satellite dish antenna shall extend higher than 15 feet above ground level or be greater than 15 feet in diameter; provided, however, that a satellite dish whose diameter is 12 inches or less may extend more than 15 feet above the ground.
(c) 
A satellite dish antenna shall not be placed on any lot which does not contain a permitted principal residential structure.
(d) 
No lot shall contain more than one satellite dish antenna.
(e) 
Construction of all facilities including wires, conduits and cables shall be constructed, where applicable, in accordance with the Uniform Construction Codes.[2]All installations of satellite dish antenna shall meet local, state and federal requirements and shall be constructed in accordance with the manufacturer's recommendations, provided that the same are at least as comprehensive as local, state and federal regulations.
[2]
Editor's Note: See Ch. 63, Construction Codes, Uniform.
(f) 
The satellite dish shall be colored in a manner to blend with existing surfaces and backdrops, to the extent practicable.
(g) 
Landscaping shall be provided in the area of the pad of the antenna to soften its appearance; however, there is no requirement for landscaping which will interfere with the ability of the disk to receive signals.
(h) 
Satellite dish antennas shall be installed in a manner so as not to interfere with television, radio or similar reception in adjacent areas and shall in all cases meet state and federal requirements.
(i) 
Satellite dish antennas on corner lots shall not be located closer to the side street property line than the required setback line for a front yard in the zoning district within which the lot is located.
A. 
Landscape transition buffer. A landscape transition buffer satisfactory to the Planning Board of not less than 25 feet in width shall be provided and maintained by the owner or lessee of a property between any nonresidential use and contiguous residentially zoned districts.
(1) 
The Planning Board may waive the requirements to provide a transition buffer where natural or man-made physical barriers exist such that an effective visual separation exists between residential and nonresidential uses or a landscape strip, screen or fence as stipulated in Subsection B of this section is provided.
(2) 
Yard requirements shall be deemed to be counted as part of the landscape transition buffer area. Where yard areas are less than the required buffer area, they shall be increased accordingly.
B. 
Landscape strips, fences or screens.
(1) 
A landscape strip of at least 10 feet in width, or, in lieu thereof, a fence, shall be provided and maintained by the owner or lessee of a property within landscape transition buffers or in any case where a nonresidential use as permitted in this Part 4 is contiguous to or abuts upon any property or area classified for residential purposes or the rear or either side line which abuts upon a street separating it from any property classified for residential purposes.
(2) 
Such landscape strip, screen or fence shall be of such a type and designed in such manner as to obscure from view at ground level such nonresidential property from the contiguous or abutting or neighboring residential properties and be constructed of materials and be of a design subject to the special requirements for such strips, screens or fences as stipulated in Part 1, Site Plan Review, of this chapter. Such planting strip, screen or fence shall be not less than six feet high at the time of installation, nor shall a fence be more than eight feet high.
C. 
Fences, residential districts. No fence or wall forward of the front setback line shall exceed four feet in height.
A. 
Landscaping in nonresidential districts. Other provisions of this Part 4 notwithstanding, in any nonresidential district, the entire lot, except for areas covered by buildings or surfaced as parking, recreation or service areas, shall be seeded, sodded or planted with ground cover and suitably landscaped in accordance with an overall landscape plan consistent with the natural surroundings. All landscaping shall be properly maintained throughout the life of any use on said lot. Existing trees or landscaping located within 20 feet of any street line, lot or zoning district line shall not be removed, except upon written approval by the Planning Board, nor shall the existing grade within that space be disturbed without such approval.
B. 
Landscaping requirements where parking is in front yard areas.
(1) 
So as to obstruct from view at the street line any parking area in the front yard, the front yard area not containing parking shall contain a landscape strip or screen. Landscaped earth berms may also be used in front yard areas where there is sufficient area to allow for their construction and long term maintenance. Such landscaping shall be subject to the approval of the Planning Board and shall be maintained throughout the effective period of any certificate of occupancy on a lot.
(2) 
Landscaping within parking areas. Any single parking area with 50 or more spaces shall, notwithstanding other requirements of this Part 4 and Part 1, Site Plan Review, of this chapter, provide at least 5% of its area in landscaping.
C. 
Natural landscape area along watercourses. No building or parking area shall be located within 200 feet from the center line of any stream or within a flood hazard area, except as may be modified by Part 6 of this chapter, Floodplain Management Regulations. Such area shall be deemed to be part of any landscape area or landscape transition buffer when required.
[Amended 6-12-2023 by Ord. No. 2023-03]
D. 
Screening of outdoor storage. Any article or material stored outside an enclosed building as an incidental part of the primary operation on a lot shall be so screened by fencing, walls or evergreen planting that it cannot be seen from adjoining public streets or adjacent lots when viewed by a person standing on the ground level.
A. 
Corner lots.
(1) 
Obstruction to vision at street intersections. At all street intersections in all districts, no obstructions to vision exceeding 30 inches in height above curb level shall be erected or maintained on any lot within the sight triangle as required by Part 2, Subdivision, of this chapter. This requirement shall apply to existing as well as proposed street intersections.
(2) 
Yards. On a corner lot, one yard other than the front yard shall be deemed to be a rear yard and the other or others side yards.
B. 
Through lots. On a through lot, front yards are required on all street lines.
C. 
Lot frontage/width. When a lot adjoins a cul-de-sac or is on a curved alignment with an outside radius of less than 500 feet, such frontage may be reduced to not less than 1/2 the required lot width, and the minimum lot width at the setback line may be reduced to not less than 75% of the required lot width.
D. 
Lot depth. The required lot depth at any point may be decreased by 25% if the average lot depth conforms with the minimum requirement.
E. 
Measurement of setbacks, Where a building lot has frontage upon a street, or streets in the case of a corner lot, which on the Master Plan or Official Map of West Windsor Township is contemplated for right-of-way widening, the required setback distance shall be measured from such proposed right-of-way line.
F. 
Height exceptions. The height limitations of this Part 4 shall not apply to church spires, belfries, cupolas and domes not used for human occupancy, nor to chimneys or radio and television antennas or wireless communication antennas for the sole use of the business on the site and required by federal law for emergency communications purposes if they are less than 55 feet above average grade, which grade shall be substantially unchanged from the natural grade at the time of a construction permit application. Mechanical equipment, such as penthouse elevators, condensers, exhaust fans, air conditioners and similar equipment, stair enclosures and skylights or atrium structures, may exceed the maximum permitted height in the district by up to 10 feet, provided that such structures in the aggregate do not exceed 10% of the roof area on which they are located and are properly shielded or screened. Except for walls of elevators and stair enclosures when required by the plan of the building, all such screened mechanical equipment structures may be either 10 feet from the perimeter walls of a building or integral with the front facade of the building if designed as an architectural extension of the facade and contain similar building materials.
[Amended 12-27-1982 by Ord. No. 82-54; 12-27-1988 by Ord. No. 88-51; 9-15-2008 by Ord. No. 2008-23]
G. 
Courts. The minimum dimension of an inner court shall not be less than twice the average height of all surrounding walls. However, in no case shall an inner court have a dimension of less than 30 feet. The height of walls surrounding an inner court shall be measured from finished grade at the base thereof to the top of such wall, except that in the case of roofs with a slope exceeding five inches vertical to 12 inches horizontal, the height shall be measured to the mean point between the top of said wall and the highest point of the roof. The minimum dimension of an outer court shall be 20 feet, and its depth shall not exceed its width.
H. 
Minimum net habitable floor area. Minimum net habitable floor areas for permitted residential uses in this Part 4 shall comply with the least restrictive of the most current minimum floor areas as promulgated by the New Jersey Housing Finance Agency or by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development minimum property standards manuals.
I. 
Number of buildings restricted. There shall be not more than one principal structure on each lot in any residence district except as may be allowed in planned residential neighborhoods, planned residential developments or in R-3 to R-5 Districts. In any other zone, applicants seeking to develop more than one principal structure on each lot shall comply with the provisions of Part 1, Site Plan Review, of this chapter, and submit for Planning Board approval a site plan showing existing, proposed and all future developments on the site.
J. 
Frontage upon a street. Every principal building shall be built upon a lot with the minimum lot width fronting upon an improved and approved street in accordance with the road standards established by the Township or on a private road shown on an approved site plan.
K. 
Minimum occupancy requirements. The number of occupants per permitted residential use in this Part 4 shall comply with the most current occupancy guidelines as established by the Unite States Department of Housing and Urban Development (Manual 7465.1), which establishes reasonable criteria limiting the number of occupants per dwelling unit to available sleeping and bedroom facilities.
L. 
Application of reverse frontage buffer requirements on arterial roads and major collector streets. For all multifamily units and attached dwelling units that abut an arterial or major collector street, the required reverse frontage buffer easement shall be excluded from the calculation of all setback requirements.
[Amended 4-20-1990 by Ord. No. 90-12]
Off-street parking and loading for uses allowed in this Part 4 shall be subject to the requirements stipulated in Part 1, Site Plan Review, of this chapter. No parking or loading spaces shall be permitted in the front yard area of any business district.
Permanent signs shall be subject to the requirements stipulated in Part 1, Site Plan Review, of this chapter. Temporary signs shall be governed by the regulations contained in Article XXVI herein with design standards, if not stipulated in Article I, conforming to the provisions of Part 1, Site Plan Review, of this chapter.
[Amended 8-22-1988 by Ord. No. 88-15]
Home occupations shall be permitted in all resident districts, provided that:
A. 
No person other than members of the family residing on the premises plus one outside employee shall be engaged in such occupation. The person whose occupation is being operated from the home shall reside on the premises.
B. 
The use of the dwelling unit for the home occupation shall be clearly incidental and subordinate to its use for residential purposes by its occupants, and not more than 25% of the floor area of the principal dwelling on the lot, except those used for farm purposes, shall be used in the conduct of the home occupation.
C. 
Such occupation shall be pursued only in single-family dwelling units, shall give no external evidence of nonresidential use other than a small nameplate sign not to exceed one square foot in size and shall not display products visible from the street.
D. 
The lot upon which the premises is located is 3/4 acre or larger, and no traffic or parking shall be generated in excess of three passenger automobiles at any one time, in addition to those used by the owner or tenant, all of which must be parked off-street, in properly designed spaces, except that a home occupation may be located in a single-family dwelling unit on a lot smaller than 3/4 acre if no employees are hired therefor, the occupation does not generate more than one passenger automobile at any one time, in addition to those used by the owner or tenant, and only one off-street parking space is provided for use of customers of the home occupation.
E. 
No mechanical or electrical equipment is used that will be detectable to the normal senses or that will create electrical or audio interference.
F. 
The retail sale of goods shall not be construed to be a home occupation under the terms of this Part 4.
G. 
There shall be no more than one home occupation in any one dwelling unit.
H. 
Applicants for home occupation permits proposing to hire an employee or provide more than one off-street parking space for customers shall by certified mail, return receipt requested, provide notice to all property owners within 200 feet of the lot upon which the home occupation is proposed to be located specifying that the applicant has applied for a home occupation permit, setting forth the substance of the application and stating that the Zoning Officer will decide the application 30 days from the date of the notice unless the Zoning Officer receives written objections thereto. If the Zoning Officer receives written objections, he or she shall grant or deny the application, with or without conditions, or refer the application to the Planning Board for site plan review.
I. 
No change shall be permitted to the exterior of the home to accommodate the home occupation.
[Added 12-16-1991 by Ord. No. 91-34]
J. 
Adequate indoor and outdoor play areas shall be provided for any family day-care home. The determination of whether adequate play areas are provided shall be based upon guidelines established in the Manual of Requirements for Child Care Centers by the New Jersey Division of Youth and Family Services.
[Added 12-16-1991 by Ord. No. 91-34]
For purpose of this Part 4, calculation of common open space shall not include parking areas or accessways thereto, lands privately owned or in fee simple or open space lands that are part of a residential condominium or rental project and used for the calculation of net density requirements.
A. 
General. Various types of planned developments listed as permitted or conditional uses in certain districts herein may be permitted by the Planning Board only after it has determined that the development proposal complies with the conditions and standards set forth in this section, notwithstanding other applicable regulations of this Part 4 or additional conditions for the particular planned development.
B. 
Findings for planned developments. Prior to approval of any planned development, the Planning Board shall find as required by N.J.S.A. 40:55D-45 the following facts and conclusions:
(1) 
That the departures by the proposed development from zoning regulations otherwise applicable to the subject property conform to the zoning standards applicable to the planned development.
(2) 
That the proposals for maintenance and conservation of the common open space are reliable and the amount, location and purpose of the common open space are adequate.
(3) 
That provision through the physical design of the proposed development for public services, control over vehicular and pedestrian traffic and the amenities of light and air, recreation and visual enjoyment are adequate.
(4) 
That the proposed planned development will not have an unreasonably adverse impact upon the area in which it is proposed to be established.
(5) 
In the case of a proposed development which contemplates construction over a period of years, that the terms and conditions intended to protect the interests of the public and of the residents, occupants and owners of the proposed development in the total completion of the development are adequate.
Electric and telephone lines shall be underground to the structures from existing utility poles.
[Added 6-14-2021 by Ord. No. 2021-11]
Prohibited uses. All marketplace classes of cannabis to include cultivator, manufacturer, wholesaler, distributor, retailer, and delivery as said terms are defined in Section 3 of P.L. 2021, c. 16, shall be prohibited uses in all zones in the municipality.
[1]
Editor's Note: Former § 200-236, Flag lots, was repealed 9-15-2008 by Ord. No. 2008-20.
[Amended 2-25-1985 by Ord. No. 85-1; 10-7-1985 by Ord. No. 85-25; 2-21-1989 by Ord. No. 89-04; 10-2-1989 by Ord. No. 89-28; 10-16-1989 by Ord. No. 89-43; 9-26-1994 by Ord. No. 94-45; 1-9-1995 by Ord. No. 94-63; 6-6-2005 by Ord. No. 2005-08; 10-15-2007 by Ord. No. 2007-18; 3-18-2019 by Ord. No. 2019-12]
A. 
Purpose.
(1) 
The title of this section shall be the "Affordable Housing Regulations."
(2) 
The Legislature of the State of New Jersey has, in the Fair Housing Act, N.J.S.A. 52:27D-301 et seq., delegated the authority to local governments to adopt an ordinance to provide a realistic opportunity for sound shelter for low- and moderate-income households.
B. 
Monitoring requirements.
(1) 
On the first anniversary of the entry of a final judgment, and every anniversary thereafter through the end of 2025, the Township shall provide annual reporting of its Affordable Housing Trust Fund activity to the New Jersey Department of Community Affairs (DCA), Council on Affordable Housing (COAH), Local Government Services (LGS) or other entity designated by the State of New Jersey, with a copy provided to Fair Share Housing Center (FSHC) and posted on the municipal website, using forms developed for this purpose by the DCA, COAH or LGS.
(2) 
On the first anniversary of the entry of a final judgment, and every anniversary thereafter through the end of 2025, the Township shall provide annual reporting of the status of all affordable housing activity within the Township through posting on the municipal website, with copies provided to FSHC, using forms previously developed for this purpose by COAH or any other forms agreed to by the Township, the court-appointed Special Master and FSHC.
(3) 
For the midpoint realistic opportunity review, due on July 1, 2020, as required pursuant to N.J.S.A. 52:27D-313, the Township shall post on its municipal website, with a copy provided to FSHC, a status report as to its implementation of its Plan.
(4) 
For the review of very-low-income housing requirements required by N.J.S.A. 52:27D-329.1, within 30 days of the third anniversary of the entry of final judgment, and every third year thereafter, the Township will post on its municipal website, with a copy provided to FSHC, a status report as to its satisfaction of its very-low-income requirements.
C. 
Definitions. The following terms when used in this section shall have the meanings given in this section:
ACT
The Fair Housing Act of 1985, P.L. 1985, c. 222 (N.J.S.A. 52:27D-301 et seq.)
ADAPTABLE
Constructed in compliance with the technical design standards of the Barrier Free Subcode, N.J.A.C. 5:23-7.
ADMINISTRATIVE AGENT
The entity designated by the Township to administer affordable units in accordance with this section, N.J.A.C. 5:93, and UHAC (N.J.A.C. 5:80-26).
AFFIRMATIVE MARKETING
A regional marketing strategy designed to attract buyers and/or renters of affordable units pursuant to N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.15.
AFFORDABILITY AVERAGE
The average percentage of median income at which new restricted units in an affordable housing development are affordable to low- and moderate-income households.
AFFORDABLE
A sales price or rent level that is within the means of a low- or moderate-income household as defined within N.J.A.C. 5:93-7.4, and, in the case of an ownership unit, that the sales price for the unit conforms to the standards set forth in N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.6, as may be amended and supplemented, and, in the case of a rental unit, that the rent for the unit conforms to the standards set forth in N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.12, as may be amended and supplemented.
AFFORDABLE HOUSING DEVELOPMENT
A development included in or approved pursuant to the Housing Element and Fair Share Plan or otherwise intended to address the Township's fair share obligation, and includes, but is not limited to, an inclusionary development, a municipal construction project or a 100% affordable housing development.
AFFORDABLE HOUSING PROGRAM(S)
Any mechanism in a municipal Fair Share Plan prepared or implemented to address a municipality's fair share obligation.
AFFORDABLE UNIT
A housing unit proposed or created pursuant to the Act and approved for crediting by the Court and/or funded through an affordable housing trust fund.
AGE-RESTRICTED UNIT
A housing unit designed to meet the needs of, and exclusively for, the residents of an age-restricted segment of the population such that all the residents of the development wherein the unit is situated are 62 years of age or older; or at least 80% of the units are occupied by one person who is 55 years of age or older; or the development has been designated by the Secretary of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development as "housing for older persons" as defined in Section 807(b)(2) of the Fair Housing Act, 42 U.S.C. § 3607.
AGENCY
The New Jersey Housing and Mortgage Finance Agency established by P.L. 1983, c. 530 (N.J.S.A. 55:14K-1, et seq.).
ALTERNATIVE LIVING ARRANGEMENT
A structure in which households live in distinct bedrooms, yet share kitchen and plumbing facilities, central heat and common areas. Alternative living arrangements include, but are not limited to: transitional facilities for the homeless; Class A, B, C, D and E boarding homes as regulated by the State of New Jersey Department of Community Affairs; residential health care facilities as regulated by the New Jersey Department of Health; group homes for the developmentally disabled and mentally ill as licensed and/or regulated by the New Jersey Department of Human Services; and congregate living arrangements.
ASSISTED LIVING RESIDENCE
A facility that is licensed by the New Jersey Department of Health and Senior Services to provide apartment-style housing and congregate dining and to assure that assisted living services are available when needed for four or more adult persons unrelated to the proprietor and that offers units containing, at a minimum, one unfurnished room, a private bathroom, a kitchenette and a lockable door on the unit entrance.
CERTIFIED HOUSEHOLD
A household that has been certified by an administrative agent as a low-income household or moderate-income household.
COAH
The Council on Affordable Housing, as established by the New Jersey Fair Housing Act (N.J.S.A. 52:27D-301, et seq.), or any successor agency charged with the administration of the Act.
COURT
The Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division, Mercer County.
DCA
The State of New Jersey Department of Community Affairs.
DEFICIENT HOUSING UNIT
A housing unit with health and safety code violations that requires the repair or replacement of a major system. A major system includes weatherization, roofing, plumbing (including wells), heating, electricity, sanitary plumbing (including septic systems), lead paint abatement and/or load bearing structural systems.
DEVELOPER
Any person, partnership, association, company or corporation that is the legal or beneficial owner or owners of a lot or any land included in a proposed development including the holder of an option to contract to purchase, or other person having an enforceable proprietary interest in such land.
DEVELOPMENT
The division of a parcel of land into two or more parcels, the construction, reconstruction, conversion, structural alteration, relocation, or enlargement of any use or change in the use of any building or other structure, or of any mining, excavation or landfill, and any use or change in the use of any building or other structure, or land or extension of use of land, for which permission may be required pursuant to N.J.S.A. 40:55D-1, et seq.
INCLUSIONARY DEVELOPMENT
A development containing both affordable units and market rate units. This term includes, but is not limited to new construction, the conversion of a nonresidential structure to residential use and the creation of new affordable units through the gut rehabilitation or reconstruction of a vacant residential structure.
LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLD
A household with a total gross annual household income equal to 50% or less of the regional median household income by household size.
LOW-INCOME UNIT
A restricted unit that is affordable to a low-income household.
MAJOR SYSTEM
The primary structural, mechanical, plumbing, electrical, fire protection, or occupant service components of a building which include, but are not limited to, weatherization, roofing, plumbing (including wells), heating, electricity, sanitary plumbing (including septic systems), lead paint abatement and load-bearing structural systems.
MARKET-RATE UNITS
Housing not restricted to low- and moderate-income households that may sell or rent at any price.
MEDIAN INCOME
The median income by household size for the applicable housing region, as adopted annually by COAH or a successor entity approved by the Court.
MODERATE-INCOME HOUSEHOLD
A household with a total gross annual household income in excess of 50% but less than 80% of the regional median household income by household size.
MODERATE-INCOME UNIT
A restricted unit that is affordable to a moderate-income household.
NONEXEMPT SALE
Any sale or transfer of ownership other than the transfer of ownership between husband and wife; the transfer of ownership between former spouses ordered as a result of a judicial decree of divorce or judicial separation, but not including sales to third parties; the transfer of ownership between family members as a result of inheritance; the transfer of ownership through an executor's deed to a class A beneficiary and the transfer of ownership by court order.
RANDOM SELECTION PROCESS
A process by which currently income-eligible households are selected for placement in affordable housing units such that no preference is given to one applicant over another except for purposes of matching household income and size with an appropriately priced and sized affordable unit (e.g., by lottery).
REGIONAL ASSET LIMIT
The maximum housing value in each housing region affordable to a four-person household with an income at 80% of the regional median as defined by duly adopted regional income limits published annually by COAH or a successor entity.
REHABILITATION
The repair, renovation, alteration or reconstruction of any building or structure, pursuant to the Rehabilitation Subcode, N.J.A.C. 5:23-6.
RENT
The gross monthly cost of a rental unit to the tenant, including the rent paid to the landlord, as well as an allowance for tenant-paid utilities computed in accordance with allowances published by DCA for its Section 8 program. In assisted living residences, rent does not include charges for food and services.
RESTRICTED UNIT
A dwelling unit, whether a rental unit or an ownership unit, that is subject to the affordability controls of N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.1, as amended and supplemented, but does not include a market-rate unit financed under UHORP or MONI.
UHAC
The Uniform Housing Affordability Controls set forth in N.J.A.C. 5:80-26, et seq.
VERY-LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLD
A household with a total gross annual household income equal to 30% or less of the regional median household income by household size.
VERY-LOW-INCOME UNIT
A restricted unit that is affordable to a very-low-income household.
WEATHERIZATION
Building insulation (for attic, exterior walls and crawl space), siding to improve energy efficiency, replacement storm windows, replacement storm doors, replacement windows and replacement doors, and is considered a major system for purposes of a rehabilitation program.
D. 
Applicability.
(1) 
The provisions of this section shall apply to all affordable housing developments and affordable housing units that currently exist and that are proposed to be created within West Windsor Township pursuant to the Township's most recently adopted Housing Element and Fair Share Plan.
(2) 
Moreover, this section shall apply to all developments that contain low- and moderate-income housing units, including any currently anticipated future developments that will provide low- and moderate-income housing units.
(3) 
All low and moderate income units, including all units created through low-income housing tax credits and other outside funding sources, shall have minimum thirty-year affordability controls and shall comply with the income and bedroom distribution requirements of UHAC, except that instead of 10% of all affordable rental units being affordable to households earning 35% or less of the regional median household income by household size, 13% of all affordable rental units shall be affordable to very-low-income households earning 30% or less of the regional median household income by household size, which very-low-income units shall be counted as part of the low-income housing requirements set forth in UHAC.
(4) 
Affordable housing set-aside. West Windsor Township has a mandatory affordable housing set-aside requirement that is imposed on certain types of multifamily development. See § 200-243.2 for the requirements.
E. 
Rehabilitation program.
(1) 
West Windsor's rehabilitation program shall be designed to renovate deficient housing units occupied by low- and moderate-income households such that, after rehabilitation, these units will comply with the New Jersey State Housing Code pursuant to N.J.A.C. 5:28.
(2) 
Both owner-occupied and renter-occupied units shall be eligible for rehabilitation funds.
(3) 
All rehabilitated units shall remain affordable to low- and moderate-income households for a period of 10 years (the control period). For owner occupied units the control period will be enforced with a lien and for renter occupied units the control period will be enforced with a deed restriction.
(4) 
West Windsor Township shall dedicate a minimum of $10,000 for each unit to be rehabilitated through this program.
(5) 
West Windsor Township shall adopt a resolution committing to fund any shortfall in the rehabilitation programs for the Township.
(6) 
West Windsor Township shall designate, subject to the approval of the Court, one or more administrative agents to administer the rehabilitation program in accordance with N.J.A.C. 5:96 and N.J.A.C. 5:97. The administrative agent(s) shall provide a rehabilitation manual for the owner-occupancy rehabilitation program and a rehabilitation manual for the rental-occupancy rehabilitation program to be adopted by resolution of the governing body and subject to approval of the Court. Both rehabilitation manuals shall be available for public inspection in the office of the Municipal Clerk and in the office(s) of the administrative agent(s).
(7) 
Units in a rehabilitation program shall be exempt from N.J.A.C. 5:97-9 and Uniform Housing Affordability Controls (UHAC), but shall be administered in accordance with the following:
(a) 
If a unit is vacant, upon initial rental subsequent to rehabilitation, or if a renter-occupied unit is rerented prior to the end of controls on affordability, the deed restriction shall require the unit to be rented to a low- or moderate-income household at an affordable rent and affirmatively marketed pursuant to N.J.A.C. 5:97-9 and UHAC.
(b) 
If a unit is renter-occupied, upon completion of the rehabilitation, the maximum rate of rent shall be the lesser of the current rent or the maximum permitted rent pursuant to N.J.A.C. 5:97-9 and UHAC.
(c) 
Rents in rehabilitated units may increase annually based on the standards in N.J.A.C. 5:97-9.
(d) 
Applicant and/or tenant households shall be certified as income-eligible in accordance with N.J.A.C. 5:97-9 and UHAC, except that households in owner-occupied units shall be exempt from the regional asset limit.
F. 
Alternative living arrangements.
(1) 
The administration of an alternative living arrangement shall be in compliance with N.J.A.C. 5:93-5.8 and Uniform Housing Affordability Controls (UHAC), with the following exceptions:
(a) 
Affirmative marketing (N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.15), provided, however, that the units or bedrooms may be affirmatively marketed by the provider in accordance with an alternative plan approved by COAH or the Court;
(b) 
Affordability average and bedroom distribution (N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.3).
(2) 
With the exception of units established with capital funding through a twenty-year operating contract with the Department of Human Services, Division of Developmental Disabilities, alternative living arrangements shall have at least thirty-year controls on affordability in accordance with UHAC, unless an alternative commitment is approved by COAH or the Court.
(3) 
The service provider for the alternative living arrangement shall act as the administrative agent for the purposes of administering the affirmative marketing and affordability requirements for the alternative living arrangement.
G. 
Inclusionary zoning.
(1) 
To implement the fair share plan in a manner consistent with the affordable housing regulations, to ensure the efficient use of land through compact forms of development and to create realistic opportunities for the construction of affordable housing, West Windsor Township has created several inclusionary housing zones. These inclusionary housing zones are detailed in the Housing Element and Fair Share Plan, dated February 27, 2019.
H. 
Phasing schedule for inclusionary zoning. In inclusionary development the following schedule shall be followed:
Maximum Percentage of Market-Rate Units Completed
Minimum Percentage of Low- and Moderate-Income Units Completed
25
0
25+1
10
50
50
75
75
90
100
I. 
New construction.
(1) 
Low/moderate split and bedroom distribution of affordable housing units:
(a) 
The fair share obligation shall be divided equally between low- and moderate-income units, except that where there is an odd number of affordable housing units, the extra unit shall be a low-income unit. At least 13% of all restricted rental units shall be very-low-income units (affordable to a household earning 30% or less of median income). The very-low-income units shall be counted as part of the required number of low-income units within the development.
(b) 
At least 25% of the obligation shall be met through rental units, including at least half in rental units available to families.
(c) 
A maximum of 25% of the Township's obligation may be met with age restricted units. At least half of all affordable units in the Township's Plan shall be nonrestricted.
(d) 
In each affordable development, at least 50% of the restricted units within each bedroom distribution shall be low-income units, including that at least 13% of the restricted units in each bedroom distribution shall be very-low-income units.
(e) 
Affordable developments that are not age-restricted shall be structured in conjunction with realistic market demands such that:
[1] 
The combined number of efficiency and one-bedroom units shall be no greater than 20% of the total low- and moderate-income units;
[2] 
At least 30% of all low- and moderate-income units shall be two-bedroom units;
[3] 
At least 20% of all low- and moderate-income units shall be three-bedroom units; and
[4] 
The remaining units may be allocated among two- and three-bedroom units at the discretion of the developer.
(f) 
In accordance with the Uniform Housing Affordability Controls, N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.3(c), for low- and moderate-income age-restricted units, at a minimum, the number of bedrooms shall equal the number of age-restricted low- and moderate-income units within the affordable development. This standard may be met by having all one-bedroom units or by having a two-bedroom unit for each efficiency unit. The Township shall not be permitted to claim credit to satisfy its obligations for age-restricted units that exceed 25% of all units developed.
(2) 
Accessibility requirements.
(a) 
The first floor of all restricted townhouse dwelling units and all restricted units in all other multistory buildings shall be subject to the technical design standards of the Barrier Free Subcode, N.J.A.C. 5:23-7.
(b) 
All restricted townhouse dwelling units and all restricted units in other multistory buildings in which a restricted dwelling unit is attached to at least one other dwelling unit shall have the following features:
[1] 
An adaptable toilet and bathing facility on the first floor; and
[2] 
An adaptable kitchen on the first floor; and
[3] 
An interior accessible route of travel on the first floor; and
[4] 
An adaptable room that can be used as a bedroom, with a door or casing for the installation of a door, on the first floor; and
[5] 
If not all of the foregoing requirements in Subsection I(2)(b)[1] through [4] can be satisfied, then an interior accessible route of travel must be provided between stories within an individual unit, but if all of the terms of Subsection I(2)(b)[1] through [4] above have been satisfied, then an interior accessible route of travel shall not be required between stories within an individual unit; and
[6] 
An accessible entranceway as set forth at P.L. 2005, c. 350 (N.J.S.A. 52:27D-311a, et seq.) and the Barrier Free Subcode, N.J.A.C. 5:23-7, or evidence that West Windsor has collected funds from the developer sufficient to make 10% of the adaptable entrances in the development accessible:
[a] 
Where a unit has been constructed with an adaptable entrance, upon the request of a person with disabilities who is purchasing or will reside in the dwelling unit, an accessible entrance shall be installed.
[b] 
To this end, the builder of restricted units shall deposit funds within West Windsor Township's Affordable Housing Trust Fund sufficient to install accessible entrances in 10% of the affordable units that have been constructed with adaptable entrances.
[c] 
The funds deposited under Subsection I(2)(b)[6][b] above shall be used by West Windsor Township for the sole purpose of making the adaptable entrance of an affordable unit accessible when requested to do so by a person with a disability who occupies or intends to occupy the unit and requires an accessible entrance.
[d] 
The developer of the restricted units shall submit a design plan and cost estimate to the Construction Official of West Windsor Township for the conversion of adaptable to accessible entrances.
[e] 
Once the Construction Official has determined that the design plan to convert the unit entrances from adaptable to accessible meet the requirements of the Barrier Free Subcode, N.J.A.C. 5:23-7, and that the cost estimate of such conversion is reasonable, payment shall be made to the Township's Affordable Housing Trust Fund in care of the Township Chief Financial Officer who shall ensure that the funds are deposited into the Affordable Housing Trust Fund and appropriately earmarked.
[f] 
Full compliance with the foregoing provisions shall not be required where an entity can demonstrate that it is "site impracticable" to meet the requirements. Determinations of site impracticability shall be in compliance with the Barrier Free Subcode, N.J.A.C. 5:23-7.
(3) 
Design.
(a) 
In inclusionary developments, to the extent possible, low- and moderate-income units shall be integrated with the market units.
(b) 
In inclusionary developments, low- and moderate-income units shall have access to all of the same common elements and facilities as the market units.
(4) 
Maximum rents and sales prices.
(a) 
In establishing rents and sales prices of affordable housing units, the administrative agent shall follow the procedures set forth in UHAC, utilizing the regional income limits, which shall be updated by the Township annually within 30 days of the publication of determinations of median income by HUD as follows below. This does not include units established through a federal program exempted from UHAC pursuant to N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.1.
[1] 
Regional income limits shall be established for the housing region in which the Township is located (in this case, Housing Region 4) based on the median income by household size, which shall be established by a regional weighted average of the uncapped Section 8 income limits published by HUD. To compute this regional income limit, the HUD determination of median county income for a family of four is multiplied by the estimated number of households within the county according to the most recent decennial census. The resulting product for each county within the housing region is summed. The sum is divided by the estimated total number of households from the most recent decennial census in the Township's housing region. This quotient represents the regional weighted average of median income for a household of four. The income limit for a moderate-income unit for a household of four shall be 80% of the regional weighted average median income for a family of four. The income limit for a low-income unit for a household of four shall be 50% of the HUD determination of the regional weighted average median income for a family of four. The income limit for a very-low-income unit for a household of four shall be 30% of the regional weighted average median income for a family of four. These income limits shall be adjusted by household size based on multipliers used by HUD to adjust median income by household size. In no event shall the income limits be less than those for the previous year.
[2] 
The income limits attached to the settlement agreement as Exhibit D[1] are the result of applying the percentages set forth in Subsection I(4)(a)[1] above to HUD's determination of median income for FY 2018, and shall be utilized until the Township updates the income limits after HUD has published revised determinations of median income for the next fiscal year.
[1]
Editor’s Note: Exhibit D is on file in Township offices.
[3] 
The regional Asset limit used in determining an applicant's eligibility for affordable housing pursuant to N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.16(b)3 shall be calculated by the Township annually by taking the percentage increase of the income limits calculated pursuant to Subsection I(4)(a)[1] above over the previous year's income limits, and applying the same percentage increase to the regional asset limit from the prior year. In no event shall the regional asset limit be less than that for the previous year.
[4] 
The resale prices of owner-occupied low- and moderate-income units may increase annually based on the percentage increase in the regional median income limit for each housing region determined pursuant to the process outlined above. In no event shall the maximum resale price established by the administrative agent be lower than the last recorded purchase price.
[5] 
The rent levels of very-low-, low- and moderate-income units may be increased annually based on the percentage increase in the Housing Consumer Price Index for the Northeast Urban Area, upon its publication for the prior calendar year. This increase shall not exceed 9% in any one year. Rents for units constructed pursuant to low income housing tax credit regulations shall be indexed pursuant to the regulations governing low-income housing tax credits.
(b) 
The maximum rent for restricted rental units within each affordable development shall be affordable to households earning no more than 60% of median income, and the average rent for restricted rental units shall be affordable to households earning no more than 52% of median income.
(c) 
The developers and/or municipal sponsors of restricted rental units shall establish at least one rent for each bedroom type for both low-income and moderate-income units, provided that at least 13% of all low- and moderate-income rental units shall be affordable to very-low-income households, earning 30% or less of the regional median household income, with such very-low-income units counted the low-income housing requirement.
(d) 
The maximum sales price of restricted ownership units within each affordable development shall be affordable to households earning no more than 70% of median income, and each affordable development must achieve an affordability average of 55% for restricted ownership units; in achieving this affordability average, moderate-income ownership units must be available for at least three different sales prices for each bedroom type, and low-income ownership units must be available for at least two different sales prices for each bedroom type.
(e) 
In determining the initial sales prices and rent levels for compliance with the affordability average requirements for restricted units other than assisted living facilities and age-restricted developments, the following standards shall be used:
[1] 
A studio shall be affordable to a one-person household;
[2] 
A one-bedroom unit shall be affordable to a 1 1/2 person household;
[3] 
A two-bedroom unit shall be affordable to a three-person household;
[4] 
A three-bedroom unit shall be affordable to a 4 1/2 person household; and
[5] 
A four-bedroom unit shall be affordable to a six-person household.
(f) 
In determining the initial sales prices and rents for compliance with the affordability average requirements for restricted units in assisted living facilities and age-restricted developments, the following standards shall be used:
[1] 
A studio shall be affordable to a one-person household;
[2] 
A one-bedroom unit shall be affordable to a 1 1/2 person household; and
[3] 
A two-bedroom unit shall be affordable to a two-person household or two one-person households.
(g) 
The initial purchase price for all restricted ownership units shall be calculated so that the monthly carrying cost of the unit, including principal and interest (based on a mortgage loan equal to 95% of the purchase price and the Federal Reserve H.15 rate of interest), taxes, homeowner and private mortgage insurance and condominium or homeowner association fees do not exceed 28% of the eligible monthly income of the appropriate size household as determined under N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.4, as it may be amended and supplemented; provided, however, that the price shall be subject to the affordability average requirement of N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.3, as it may be amended and supplemented.
(h) 
The initial rent for a restricted rental unit shall be calculated so as not to exceed 30% of the eligible monthly income of the appropriate size household, including an allowance for tenant paid utilities, as determined under N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.4, as it may be amended and supplemented; provided, however, that the rent shall be subject to the affordability average requirement of N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.3, as it may be amended and supplemented.
(i) 
The price of owner-occupied low- and moderate-income units may increase annually based on the percentage increase in the regional median income limit for each housing region. In no event shall the maximum resale price established by the administrative agent be lower than the last recorded purchase price.
(j) 
The rent of low- and moderate-income units may be increased annually based on the permitted percentage increase in the Housing Consumer Price Index for the United States. This increase shall not exceed 9% in any one year. Rents for units constructed pursuant to low-income housing tax credit regulations shall be indexed pursuant to the regulations governing low-income housing tax credits.
J. 
Utilities.
(1) 
Affordable units shall utilize the same type of heating/ventilation/air conditioning (HVAC) source as market units within an inclusionary development.
(2) 
Tenant-paid utilities included in the utility allowance shall be set forth in the lease and shall be consistent with the utility allowance approved by HUD for the Section 8 program.
K. 
Occupancy standards. In referring certified households to specific restricted units, the administrative agent shall, to the extent feasible and without causing an undue delay in the occupancy of a units, strive to:
(1) 
Provide an occupant for each bedroom;
(2) 
Provide children of different sexes with separate bedrooms;
(3) 
Provide separate bedrooms for parents and children; and
(4) 
Prevent more than two persons from occupying a single bedroom.
L. 
Control periods for restricted ownership units and enforcement mechanisms.
(1) 
Control periods for restricted ownership units shall be in accordance with N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.5, as may be amended and supplemented, and each restricted ownership unit shall remain subject to the requirements of this section for a period of at least 30 years, until West Windsor takes action to release the unit from such requirements; prior to such action, a restricted ownership unit must remain subject to the requirements of N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.1, as may be amended and supplemented.
(2) 
The affordability control period for a restricted ownership unit shall commence on the date the initial certified household takes title to the unit.
(3) 
Prior to the issuance of the initial certificate of occupancy for a restricted ownership unit and upon each successive sale during the period of restricted ownership, the administrative agent shall determine the restricted price for the unit and shall also determine the nonrestricted, fair market value of the unit based on either an appraisal or the unit's equalized assessed value without the restrictions in place.
(4) 
At the time of the initial sale of the unit, the initial purchaser shall execute and deliver to the administrative agent a recapture note obligating the purchaser (as well as the purchaser's heirs, successors and assigns) to repay, upon the first nonexempt sale after the unit's release from the restrictions set forth in this section, an amount equal to the difference between the unit's nonrestricted fair market value and its restricted price, and the recapture note shall be secured by a recapture lien evidenced by a duly recorded mortgage on the unit.
(5) 
The affordability controls set forth in this section shall remain in effect despite the entry and enforcement of any judgment of foreclosure with respect to restricted ownership units.
(6) 
A restricted ownership unit shall be required to obtain a continuing certificate of occupancy or a certified statement from the Construction Official stating that the unit meets all Code standards upon the first transfer of title following the removal of the restrictions provided under N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.5(a), as may be amended and supplemented.
M. 
Price restrictions for restricted ownership units, homeowner association fees and resale prices. Price restrictions for restricted ownership units shall be in accordance with N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.1, as may be amended and supplemented, including:
(1) 
The initial purchase price for a restricted ownership unit shall be approved by the administrative agent.
(2) 
The administrative agent shall approve all resale prices, in writing and in advance of the resale, to assure compliance with the foregoing standards.
(3) 
The master deeds of inclusionary developments shall provide no distinction between the condominium or homeowner association fees and special assessments paid by low- and moderate-income purchasers and those paid by market purchasers.
(4) 
The owners of restricted ownership units may apply to the administrative agent to increase the maximum sales price for the unit on the basis of anticipated capital improvements. Eligible capital improvements shall be those that render the unit suitable for a larger household or the addition of a bathroom. See Subsection O.
N. 
Buyer income eligibility.
(1) 
Buyer income eligibility for restricted ownership units shall be in accordance with N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.1, as may be amended and supplemented, such that low-income ownership units shall be reserved for households with a gross household income less than or equal to 50% of median income and moderate-income ownership units shall be reserved for households with a gross household income less than 80% of median income.
(2) 
Notwithstanding the foregoing, the administrative agent may, upon approval by the Township Council, and subject to the Court's approval, permit a moderate-income purchaser to buy a low-income unit if and only if the administrative agent can demonstrate that there is an insufficient number of eligible low-income purchasers in the housing region to permit prompt occupancy of the unit and all other reasonable efforts to attract a low-income purchaser, including pricing and financing incentives, have failed. Any such low-income unit that is sold to a moderate-income household shall retain the required pricing and pricing restrictions for a low-income unit.
(3) 
A certified household that purchases a restricted ownership unit must occupy it as the certified household's principal residence and shall not lease the unit; provided, however, that the administrative agent may permit the owner of a restricted ownership unit, upon application and a showing of hardship, to lease the restricted unit to another certified household for a period not to exceed one year.
(4) 
The administrative agent shall certify a household as eligible for a restricted ownership unit when the household is a low-income household or a moderate-income household, as applicable to the unit, and the estimated monthly housing cost for the particular unit (including principal, interest, taxes, homeowner and private mortgage insurance and condominium or homeowner association fees, as applicable) does not exceed 33% of the household's eligible monthly income.
O. 
Limitations on indebtedness secured by ownership unit; subordination.
(1) 
Prior to incurring any indebtedness to be secured by a restricted ownership unit, the owner shall apply to the administrative agent for a determination in writing that the proposed indebtedness complies with the provisions of this section, and the administrative agent shall issue such determination prior to the owner incurring such indebtedness.
(2) 
With the exception of first purchase money mortgages, neither an owner nor a lender shall at any time cause or permit the total indebtedness secured by a restricted ownership unit to exceed 95% of the maximum allowable resale price of the unit, as such price is determined by the administrative agent in accordance with N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.6(b).
P. 
Capital improvements to ownership units.
(1) 
The owners of restricted ownership units may apply to the administrative agent to increase the maximum sales price for the unit on the basis of capital improvements made since the purchase of the unit. Eligible capital improvements shall be those that render the unit suitable for a larger household or that add an additional bathroom. In no event shall the maximum sales price of an improved housing unit exceed the limits of affordability for the larger household.
(2) 
Upon the resale of a restricted ownership unit, all items of property that are permanently affixed to the unit or were included when the unit was initially restricted (for example, refrigerator, range, washer, dryer, dishwasher, wall-to-wall carpeting) shall be included in the maximum allowable resale price. Other items may be sold to the purchaser at a reasonable price that has been approved by the administrative agent at the time of the signing of the agreement to purchase. The purchase of central air conditioning installed subsequent to the initial sale of the unit and not included in the base price may be made a condition of the unit resale provided the price, which shall be subject to ten-year, straight-line depreciation, has been approved by the administrative agent. Unless otherwise approved by the administrative agent, the purchase of any property other than central air conditioning shall not be made a condition of the unit resale. The owner and the purchaser must personally certify at the time of closing that no unapproved transfer of funds for the purpose of selling and receiving property has taken place at the time of or as a condition of resale.
Q. 
Control periods for restricted rental units.
(1) 
Control periods for restricted rental units shall be in accordance with N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.11, as may be amended and supplemented, and each restricted rental unit shall remain subject to the requirements of this section for a period of at least 30 years, until West Windsor takes action to release the unit from such requirements. Prior to such action, a restricted rental unit must remain subject to the requirements of N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.1, as may be amended and supplemented.
(2) 
Deeds of all real property that include restricted rental units shall contain deed restriction language. The deed restriction shall have priority over all mortgages on the property, and the deed restriction shall be filed by the developer or seller with the records office of the County of Mercer. A copy of the filed document shall be provided to the administrative agent within 30 days of the receipt of a certificate of occupancy.
(3) 
A restricted rental unit shall remain subject to the affordability controls of this section despite the occurrence of any of the following events:
(a) 
Sublease or assignment of the lease of the unit;
(b) 
Sale or other voluntary transfer of the ownership of the unit; or
(c) 
The entry and enforcement of any judgment of foreclosure on the property containing the unit.
R. 
Rent restrictions for rental units; leases.
(1) 
A written lease shall be required for all restricted rental units and tenants shall be responsible for security deposits and the full amount of the rent as stated on the lease. A copy of the current lease for each restricted rental unit shall be provided to the administrative agent.
(2) 
No additional fees or charges shall be added to the approved rent (except, in the case of units in an assisted living residence, to cover the customary charges for food and services) without the express written approval of the administrative agent.
(3) 
Application fees (including the charge for any credit check) shall not exceed 5% of the monthly rent of the applicable restricted unit and shall be payable to the administrative agent to be applied to the costs of administering the controls applicable to the unit as set forth in this section.
(4) 
No rent control ordinance or other pricing restriction shall be applicable to either the market units or the affordable units in any development in which at least 15% of the total number of dwelling units are restricted rental units in compliance with this section.
S. 
Tenant income eligibility.
(1) 
Tenant income eligibility shall be in accordance with N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.13, as may be amended and supplemented, and shall be determined as follows:
(a) 
Very-low-income rental units shall be reserved for households with a gross household income less than or equal to 30% of the regional median household income by household size.
(b) 
Low-income rental units shall be reserved for households with a gross household income less than or equal to 50% of the regional median household income by household size.
(c) 
Moderate-income rental units shall be reserved for households with a gross household income less than 80% of the regional median household income by household size.
(2) 
The administrative agent shall certify a household as eligible for a restricted rental unit when the household is a very-low-income household, low-income household or a moderate-income household, as applicable to the unit, and the rent proposed for the unit does not exceed 35% (40% for age-restricted units) of the household's eligible monthly income as determined pursuant to N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.16, as may be amended and supplemented; provided, however, that this limit may be exceeded if one or more of the following circumstances exists:
(a) 
The household currently pays more than 35% (40% for households eligible for age-restricted units) of its gross household income for rent, and the proposed rent will reduce its housing costs;
(b) 
The household has consistently paid more than 35% (40% for households eligible for age-restricted units) of eligible monthly income for rent in the past and has proven its ability to pay;
(c) 
The household is currently in substandard or overcrowded living conditions;
(d) 
The household documents the existence of assets with which the household proposes to supplement the rent payments; or
(e) 
The household documents reliable anticipated third-party assistance from an outside source such as a family member in a form acceptable to the administrative agent and the owner of the unit.
(3) 
The applicant shall file documentation sufficient to establish the existence of the circumstances in Subsections (2)(a) through (e) above with the administrative agent, who shall counsel the household on budgeting.
A. 
Purpose. The purpose of this section is to create the administrative mechanisms needed for the execution of West Windsor Township's responsibility to promote and oversee the provision of affordable housing pursuant to the Fair Housing Act of 1985.
B. 
Definitions. As used in this section, the following terms shall have the meanings indicated:
ADMINISTRATIVE AGENT
The entity responsible for administering the affordability controls of some or all units in the affordable housing program, and all units in inclusionary developments, for West Windsor to ensure that the restricted units under administration are affirmatively marketed and sold or rented, as applicable, only to low- and moderate-income households.
MUNICIPAL HOUSING LIAISON
The municipal employee duly designated by the governing body with the responsibility for monitoring, reporting oversight and general administration of the affordable housing program for the Township of West Windsor.
C. 
Establishment of position and compensation; powers and duties.
(1) 
Establishment of position of Municipal Housing Liaison. There is hereby established the position of Municipal Housing Liaison for West Windsor Township.
(2) 
Subject to the approval of the Court, the Municipal Housing Liaison shall be appointed by the governing body and may be a full- or part-time municipal employee.
(3) 
The Municipal Housing Liaison shall be responsible for monitoring, reporting, oversight and general administration of the affordable housing program for West Windsor Township, including the following responsibilities which may not be contracted out to an administrative agent:
(a) 
Serving as West Windsor Township's primary point of contact for all inquiries from the state, affordable housing providers, administrative agents, and interested households;
(b) 
Monitoring the status of all restricted units in West Windsor Township's Housing Element and Fair Share Plan;
(c) 
Compiling, verifying and publishing on the Township's website all referenced monitoring reports as required by the Court;
(d) 
Coordinating meetings with affordable housing providers and the administrative agent(s) as applicable; and
(e) 
Attending continuing education programs as required to obtain and maintain certification as a Municipal Housing Liaison.
(4) 
Subject to approval by the Court, West Windsor Township may contract with or authorize a consultant, authority, government or any agency charged by the governing body, which entity shall have the responsibility of administering the affordable housing program of West Windsor Township. If West Windsor Township contracts with another entity to administer all or any part of the affordable housing program, including the affordability controls and affirmative marketing plan, the Municipal Housing Liaison shall supervise the contracting administrative agent.
(5) 
Compensation. Compensation shall be fixed by the governing body at the time of the appointment of Municipal Housing Liaison.
[Amended 8-26-2024 by Ord. No. 2024-21]
A. 
Purpose. The purpose of this section is to create the administrative mechanisms needed for the execution of West Windsor Township's responsibility to promote and oversee the provision of affordable housing pursuant to the Fair Housing Act of 1985.
B. 
Establishment of position; powers and duties. Administrative agents may be an independent entity serving under contract to and reporting to the municipality. The fees of the administrative agents shall be paid by the owners of the affordable units for which the services of the administrative agents are required. The administrative agents shall perform the duties and responsibilities of administrative agents as set forth in UHAC, including those set forth in Sections 5:80-26.14, 16 and 18 thereof, which includes:
(1) 
Affirmative marketing:
(a) 
Conducting an outreach process to affirmatively market affordable housing units in accordance with the Affirmative Marketing Plan of West Windsor Township and the provisions of N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.15; and
(b) 
Providing counseling or contracting to provide counseling services to low-and moderate-income applicants on subjects such as budgeting, credit issues, mortgage qualification, rental lease requirements, and landlord/tenant law.
(2) 
Household certification:
(a) 
Soliciting, scheduling, conducting and following up on interviews with interested households;
(b) 
Conducting interviews and obtaining sufficient documentation of gross income and assets upon which to base a determination of income eligibility for a low or moderate-income unit;
(c) 
Providing written notification to each applicant as to the determination of eligibility or noneligibility;
(d) 
Requiring that all certified applicants for restricted units execute a certificate substantially in the form, as applicable, of either the ownership or rental certificates set forth in Appendices J and K of N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.1 et seq.;
(e) 
Creating and maintaining a referral list of eligible applicant households living in the housing region and eligible applicant households with members working in the housing region where the units are located;
(f) 
Employing a random selection process as provided in the affirmative marketing plan of West Windsor Township when referring households for certification to affordable units.
(3) 
Affordability controls:
(a) 
Furnishing to attorneys or closing agents forms of deed restrictions and mortgages for recording at the time of conveyance of title of each restricted unit;
(b) 
Creating and maintaining a file on each restricted unit for its control period, including the recorded deed with restrictions, recorded mortgage and note, as appropriate;
(c) 
Ensuring that the removal of the deed restrictions and cancellation of the mortgage note are effectuated and properly filed with the Mercer County Register of Deeds or Mercer County Clerk's office after the termination of the affordability controls for each restricted unit;
(d) 
Communicating with lenders regarding foreclosures; and
(e) 
Ensuring the issuance of continuing certificates of occupancy or certifications pursuant to N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.10.
(4) 
Resales and rerentals:
(a) 
Instituting and maintaining an effective means of communicating information between owners and the administrative agent regarding the availability of restricted units for resale or rerental; and
(b) 
Instituting and maintaining an effective means of communicating information to low- (or very-low-) and moderate-income households regarding the availability of restricted units for resale or re-rental.
(5) 
Processing requests from unit owners:
(a) 
Reviewing and approving requests for determination from owners of restricted units who wish to take out home equity loans or refinance during the term of their ownership that the amount of indebtedness to be incurred will not violate the terms of this section;
(b) 
Reviewing and approving requests to increase sales prices from owners of restricted units who wish to make capital improvements to the units that would affect the selling price, such authorizations to be limited to those improvements resulting in additional bedrooms or bathrooms and the depreciated cost of central air conditioning systems;
(c) 
Notifying the municipality of an owner's intent to sell a restricted unit; and
(d) 
Making determinations on requests by owners of restricted units for hardship waivers.
(6) 
Enforcement:
(a) 
Securing annually from the municipality a list of all affordable housing units for which tax bills are mailed to absentee owners, and notifying all such owners that they must either move back to their unit or sell it;
(b) 
Securing from all developers and sponsors of restricted units, at the earliest point of contact in the processing of the project or development, written acknowledgement of the requirement that no restricted unit can be offered, or in any other way committed, to any person, other than a household duly certified to the unit by the administrative agent;
(c) 
Posting annually, in all rental properties (including two-family homes), a notice as to the maximum permitted rent together with the telephone number of the administrative agent where complaints of excess rent or other charges can be made;
(d) 
Sending annual mailings to all owners of affordable dwelling units, reminding them of the notices and requirements outlined in N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.18(d)4;
(e) 
Establishing a program for diverting unlawful rent payments to the municipality's Affordable Housing Trust Fund; and
(f) 
Creating and publishing a written operating manual for each affordable housing program administered by the administrative agent, to be approved by the Township Council and the Court, setting forth procedures for administering the affordability controls.
(7) 
Additional responsibilities:
(a) 
The administrative agents shall have the authority to take all actions necessary and appropriate to carry out their responsibilities hereunder.
(b) 
The administrative agents shall prepare monitoring reports for submission to the Municipal Housing Liaison in time to meet the Court-approved monitoring and reporting requirements in accordance with the deadlines set forth in this section.
(c) 
The administrative agents shall attend continuing education sessions on affordability controls, compliance monitoring, and affirmative marketing at least annually and more often as needed.
C. 
Additional administrative agents. Any agreement that the municipality enters into with one or more administrative agents will address the areas of responsibility of each administrative agent as to each other and with respect to the municipality. The municipality may designate one of the administrative agents as the "lead" agent, and require that the other administrative agent(s) that may be established report to the lead agent and regularly provide information to the lead administrative agent about the affordable units that the other administrative agent is responsible for, so that the lead administrative agent has the same access to the information as if it was solely responsible for the affordable units and performing the duties described in this Section.
D. 
Change of administrative agents. The municipality and administrative agents shall, to the extent necessary and applicable, comply with the provisions of N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.17 (Procedures for changing administrative agents).
E. 
Choice of administrative agents. The selection of administrative agent is the municipality's in its sole discretion.
A. 
The Township of West Windsor shall adopt by resolution an affirmative marketing plan, subject to the approval of the Court that is compliant with N.J.A.C. 5:80-25.15, as it may be amended and supplemented.
B. 
The affirmative marketing plan is a regional marketing strategy designed to attract buyers and/or renters of all majority and minority groups, regardless of race, creed, color, national origin, ancestry, marital or familial status, gender, affectional or sexual orientation, disability, age or number of children to housing units which are being marketed by a developer, sponsor or owner of affordable housing. The affirmative marketing plan is intended to target those potentially eligible persons who are least likely to apply for affordable units in that region. In addition, as a result of the settlement agreement with FSHC, the affirmative marketing plan shall require the notification of the FSHC, New Jersey State Conference of the NAACP, the Latino Action Network, STEPS, Ocean, Inc., the Greater Red Bank, Asbury Park/Neptune, Bayshore, Greater Freehold, Greater Long Branch and Trenton Branches of the NAACP, and the Supportive Housing Alliance of affordable housing opportunities. It is a continuing program that directs marketing activities toward Housing Region 4 and is required to be followed throughout the period of restriction.
C. 
The affirmative marketing plan shall provide a regional preference for all households that live and/or work in Housing Region 4, comprised of Mercer, Monmouth and Ocean Counties.
D. 
The Township has the ultimate responsibility for adopting the affirmative marketing plan and for the proper administration of the affirmative marketing program, including initial sales and rentals and resales and rerentals. The administrative agent designated by the Township shall implement the affirmative marketing plan to assure the affirmative marketing of all affordable units.
E. 
In implementing the affirmative marketing plan, the administrative agent shall provide a list of counseling services to low- and moderate-income applicants on subjects such as budgeting, credit issues, mortgage qualification, rental lease requirements, and landlord/tenant law.
F. 
The affirmative marketing plan shall describe the media to be used in advertising and publicizing the availability of housing. In implementing the affirmative marketing plan, the administrative agent shall consider the use of language translations where appropriate.
G. 
The affirmative marketing process for available affordable units shall begin at least four months (120 days) prior to the expected date of occupancy.
H. 
Applications for affordable housing shall be available in several locations, including, at a minimum, the Mercer County Library Headquarters, Monmouth County Library Headquarters, Ocean County Library, West Windsor Library, the West Windsor Municipal Building and the developer's rental office. Preapplications may be emailed to prospective applicants upon request. Otherwise, hard copies are available from the Township's Municipal Housing Liaison.
I. 
The costs of advertising and affirmative marketing of the affordable units shall be the responsibility of the developer, sponsor or owner.
A. 
Upon the occurrence of a breach of any of the regulations governing an affordable unit by an owner, developer or tenant, the municipality shall have all remedies provided at law or equity, including but not limited to foreclosure, tenant eviction, a requirement for household recertification, acceleration of all sums due under a mortgage, recuperation of any funds from a sale in violation of the regulations, injunctive relief to prevent further violation of the regulations, entry on the premises, and specific performance.
B. 
After providing written notice of a violation to an owner, developer or tenant of a low- or moderate-income unit and advising the owner, developer or tenant of the penalties for such violations, the municipality may take the following action(s) against the owner, developer or tenant for any violation that remains uncured for a period of 60 days after service of the written notice:
(1) 
The municipality may file a court action pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2A:58-11 alleging a violation or violations of the regulations governing the affordable housing unit. If the owner, developer or tenant is adjudged by the Court to have violated any provision of the regulations governing affordable housing units the owner, developer or tenant shall be subject to one or more of the following penalties, at the discretion of the Court:
(a) 
A fine of not more than $500 per day or imprisonment for a period not to exceed 90 days, or both, provided that each and every day that the violation continues or exists shall be considered a separate and specific violation of these provisions and not a continuation of the initial offense;
(b) 
In the case of an owner who has rented a low- or moderate-income unit in violation of the regulations governing affordable housing units, payment into West Windsor Township's Affordable Housing Trust Fund of the gross amount of rent illegally collected;
(c) 
In the case of an owner who has rented a low- or moderate-income unit in violation of the regulations governing affordable housing units, payment of an innocent tenant's reasonable relocation costs, as determined by the Court.
(2) 
The municipality may file a court action in the Superior Court seeking a judgment that would result in the termination of the owner's equity or other interest in the unit, in the nature of a mortgage foreclosure. Any such judgment shall be enforceable as if the same were a judgment of default of the first purchase money mortgage and shall constitute a lien against the low- or moderate-income unit.
(a) 
The judgment shall be enforceable, at the option of the municipality, by means of an execution sale by the Sheriff, at which time the low- and moderate-income unit of the violating owner shall be sold at a sale price which is not less than the amount necessary to fully satisfy and pay off any first purchase money mortgage and prior liens and the costs of the enforcement proceedings incurred by the municipality, including attorney's fees. The violating owner shall have his right to possession terminated as well as his title conveyed pursuant to the Sheriff's sale.
(b) 
The proceeds of the Sheriff's sale shall first be applied to satisfy the first purchase money mortgage lien and any prior liens upon the low- and moderate-income unit. The excess, if any, shall be applied to reimburse the municipality for any and all costs and expenses incurred in connection with either the court action resulting in the judgment of violation or the Sheriff's sale. In the event that the proceeds from the Sheriff's sale are insufficient to reimburse the municipality in full as aforesaid, the violating owner shall be personally responsible for the full extent of such deficiency, in addition to any and all costs incurred by the municipality in connection with collecting such deficiency. In the event that a surplus remains after satisfying all of the above, such surplus, if any, shall be placed in escrow by the municipality for the owner and shall be held in such escrow for a maximum period of two years or until such earlier time as the owner shall make a claim with the municipality for such. Failure of the owner to claim such balance within the two-year period shall automatically result in a forfeiture of such balance to the municipality. Any interest accrued or earned on such balance while being held in escrow shall belong to and shall be paid to the municipality, whether such balance shall be paid to the owner or forfeited to the municipality.
(c) 
Foreclosure by the municipality due to violation of the regulations governing affordable housing units shall not extinguish the restrictions of the regulations governing affordable housing units as the same apply to the low- and moderate-income unit. Title shall be conveyed to the purchaser at the Sheriff's sale, subject to the restrictions and provisions of the regulations governing the affordable housing unit. The owner determined to be in violation of the provisions of this plan and from whom title and possession were taken by means of the Sheriff's sale shall not be entitled to any right of redemption.
(d) 
If there are no bidders at the Sheriff's sale, or if insufficient amounts are bid to satisfy the first purchase money mortgage and any prior liens, the municipality may acquire title to the low- and moderate-income unit by satisfying the first purchase money mortgage and any prior liens and crediting the violating owner with an amount equal to the difference between the first purchase money mortgage and any prior liens and costs of the enforcement proceedings, including legal fees and the maximum resale price for which the low- and moderate-income unit could have been sold under the terms of the regulations governing affordable housing units. This excess shall be treated in the same manner as the excess which would have been realized from an actual sale as previously described.
(e) 
Failure of the low- and moderate-income unit to be either sold at the Sheriff's sale or acquired by the municipality shall obligate the owner to accept an offer to purchase from any qualified purchaser which may be referred to the owner by the municipality, with such offer to purchase being equal to the maximum resale price of the low- and moderate-income unit as permitted by the regulations governing affordable housing units.
(f) 
The owner shall remain fully obligated, responsible and liable for complying with the terms and restrictions of governing affordable housing units until such time as title is conveyed from the owner.
C. 
Appeals. Appeals from all decisions of an administrative agent appointed pursuant to this section shall be filed in writing with the Court.
[Amended 12-15-1986 by Ord. No. 86-35; 4-20-1990 by Ord. No. 90-12; 10-7-1991 by Ord. No. 91-23]
A. 
Adjustments required.
(1) 
The maximum permitted FAR as contained in various nonresidential zoning districts as well as the permitted residential density in residential zoning districts of this Part 4 are to be amended according to the following reduction schedule in recognition of the extent of environmentally constrained areas located on a tract. Environmentally constrained areas shall include areas designated as freshwater wetlands, as delineated by an applicant and as approved by the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection or other governmental agencies, and water bodies as generally indicated on the most recent edition of the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection wetlands maps contained on United States Geological Survey Topographic Quadrangle maps. Also included as environmentally constrained areas shall be areas within the one-hundred-year floodplain as indicated on the New Jersey Delineation of Floodway and Flood Hazard Areas Map (DFFHA.) Detailed soil engineering and geotechnical test data undertaken in accordance with acceptable engineering standards and practices or permits received from governmental agencies having jurisdiction over such wetlands, water bodies or floodplains indicating a different geographic area may be submitted by an applicant if the applicant seeks amendment to the boundary limits which define such environmentally constrained areas depicted by the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection wetlands maps and DFFHA.
(2) 
Multiple environmentally constrained areas on a tract shall be additive, except those instances where various environmentally constrained areas overlap. In overlap cases, the largest constrained area shall be used for calculation purposes.
(3) 
The FAR or residential density permitted by a particular zoning district for a tract containing environmentally constrained areas shall require an adjustment to be made based on the following chart. Once the reduction factor is determined, it shall be subtracted from the base FAR or residential density allowed in the zoning district to arrive at the adjusted FAR or residential density permitted for a parcel containing environmentally constrained areas.
Extent of Environmentally Constrained Areas Expressed as % of Total Tract
Percent Reduction of Maximum Base Permitted FAR/ Residential Density
0 to 30
None
31 to 50
40
51 to 60
60
61 to 100
85
(4) 
By way of example in application of the above chart, if a tract located within a nonresidential zone permitting a maximum FAR of 0.30 contained 70% environmentally constrained areas, the adjusted maximum permitted FAR would be 0.045, derived as follows:
(a) 
Maximum base permitted FAR = 0.30.
(b) 
Percent reduction due to environmentally constrained areas = 85%.
(c) 
FAR reduction = 0.30 x 85% = 0.255.
(d) 
Adjusted maximum permitted FAR= 0.30 - 0.255 = 0.045 FAR.
(5) 
The Planning Board, upon review of a development application containing environmentally constrained areas, shall evaluate the resultant adjusted FAR or residential density, including those instances where no adjustment results through application of the above table, with respect to its impact on a site's environmental resources, and may further reduce the adjusted FAR or residential density by up to 50% if the proposed development application cannot assure positive findings with respect to the following performance criteria:
(a) 
The development application's compliance with all applicable transition buffers and/or setback limitations that may be required by the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection pursuant to the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection pursuant to N.J.A.C. 7:7A-1 et seq., Freshwater Wetlands Protection Act.
(b) 
The extent to which fill or encroachment exceeds that allowed by the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection with respect to wetlands or floodplain disturbance.
(c) 
Bulk variances are not requested as a result of an attempt to utilize adjusted FAR building potential or residential density.
(d) 
Site design and development on upland portions of the site cause significant degradation of groundwater or surface water quality and further significantly impair the wetland's or floodplain's environmental and hydrological purposes as defined by standard engineering and environmental resource protection practices.
B. 
The provisions of Subsection A of this section shall not apply to any zone in which low- and moderate-income housing is permitted, except that they shall apply to the ROM-1 Zone.
[Amended 1-9-1995 by Ord. No. 94-65[1]]
[1]
Editor's Note: Original Section 22-9.16, Calculation of Floor Area, which immediately followed this subsection and containing portions of Ord. Nos. 87-20 and 90-12, was repealed in its entirety by Ord. No. 91-23.
[Added 10-15-1990 by Ord. No. 90-28; amended 2-25-1991 by Ord. No. 91-06]
A. 
General. In order to preserve existing recreational open space lands within an R-2 District, one or more tracts located within the ROM-1 or ROM-2 District may be permitted to increase the permitted floor area of development on those tract(s) in exchange for maintaining in perpetuity separate and properly subdivided lot(s) for continued open space or recreational use.
B. 
Standards.
(1) 
The minimum lot size for the land to be preserved shall be 100 contiguous acres in a properly subdivided lot(s).
(2) 
The tract to be preserved shall be designated on the Township's Community Facilities Master Plan as existing semipublic recreation/open space.
(3) 
The extent of preservation development credits to be received from such preserved lands shall be determined by the Planning Board and be based on a hypothetical subdivision layout conforming to all zoning and subdivision criteria. Sufficient information shall be provided for a determination by the Planning Board as to the number of proposed lots which would be buildable if developed as shown. Based on the number of hypothetical building lots, the maximum residential building square footage that is permitted on such lots by the zone district in which the preservation tract is located can be established.
(4) 
The preservation development credits once established pursuant to Subsection B(5) herein are valid and may be utilized within the receiving areas set forth in Subsection B(6) herein for a period of 18 years following the date of recording of a deed imposing a restriction on the use of the land within the R-2 zone to open space or recreational uses in perpetuity. If the preservation development credits are incorporated as part of an approval of a development application for a receiving tract during the eighteen-year period, the right to utilize such incorporated credits shall be for the duration that such approval remains valid. Banking and subsequent transfer of excess preservation development credits from one property in the ROM-1 and ROM-2 Districts to another shall not be permitted.
(5) 
The utilization of the preservation development credits shall be authorized upon the recording by the owner of a deed restriction, in a form acceptable to the Township Attorney, and running with the land from which the preservation development credits are proposed to be transferred and restricting such land to open space or recreational uses permitted in the R-2 District in perpetuity, and limited by applicable bulk and area regulations. Such restrictions shall also be made a part of the final subdivision or site plan application of a development which proposes to utilize such credits and shall be filed with the appropriate agencies as a condition to such development application approval. In addition, right-of-way dedication in accordance with the Circulation Element of the Township's Master Plan shall be required from the parcel to be preserved.
(6) 
The receiving tract for the recreation preservation development credits shall be permitted to utilize the approved credits for permitted but not for conditional use, provided that the tract complies with the following:
(a) 
It is located within an ROM-1 District southwest of Washington Road (Route 571) or an ROM-2 District, except that area north of Alexander Road and west of the Bearbrook Creek, as such zones are delineated on the Zoning Map of West Windsor Township dated January, 1990, notwithstanding any changes in such district boundaries which may be enacted subsequent to the adoption of this Part 4, except that if any tract within the area bounded by Washington Road to the north, the New Jersey Transit Railroad to the east, Quakerbridge Road to the south and the Delaware and Raritan Canal to the west is subsequently zoned to ROM-1 or ROM-2, such tract shall be eligible to utilize the approved credits.
[Amended 3-11-1991 by Ord. No. 91-08]
(b) 
It is part of a planned development of a minimum of 20 acres which proposes a general development plan indicating generally how the additional floor area will be utilized.
(7) 
The additional floor area credit shall conform to all zoning, subdivision, site plan and other ordinance controls governing development within the ROM-1 and ROM-2 zones, including any traffic management, peak hour traffic reduction and pro rata off-tract improvement obligations, with the following exceptions/ conditions:
(a) 
Applications for development which include preservation development credits will be subject to the currently effective maximum improvement coverage (MIC) of 0.50 where required to accommodate the additional floor area credits, and in that case subsequent changes in the MIC of these ordinances will not apply.
(b) 
For developments which are proposed under the provisions of § 200-209A or § 200-211A(6) (for research-office limited manufacturing park developments), the additional floor area which the credits represent is specifically exempt from the requirements of § 200-209A(8)(f)[3] which limit the floor area of the stories above a three-storied building. All or a portion of the credit floor area may be utilized within stories above the third story of a building or buildings within a planned development solely to the extent necessary to utilize such credits and only where the improvement coverage has been fully utilized in the opinion of the board of jurisdiction.
(c) 
Notwithstanding the three-story height limitation otherwise imposed by § 200-210H and § 200-212H, building heights may be up to four stories but not more than 55 feet solely to the extent necessary to utilize such credits within the areas of the ROM-1 and ROM-2 Districts set forth in Subsection B(6) of this section which are outside a band 1,800 feet in width as measured from the right-of-way line of the state's principal arterial designated as Route One, provided that the additional floor area which the credits represent is at least equal to the total floor area proposed within the fourth story of the building or buildings in the proposed development.
[Added 2-16-1993 by Ord. No. 93-01]
Development applications in all nonresidential and residential zones, excluding those involving a public agency or those containing a required affordable housing component, shall be subject to the payment of an affordable housing fee. The amount of the fee and its collection, accounting and disposition shall be in accordance with New Jersey Council on Affordable Housing guidelines.
[Added 12-16-1991 by Ord. No. 91-34]
A. 
Child-care centers shall be a permitted use in all nonresidential districts, subject to the following minimum requirements:
[Amended 3-5-2007 by Ord. No. 2007-02]
(1) 
The following minimum standards shall apply to any freestanding child-care center:
(a) 
Minimum lot area: two acres.
(b) 
Minimum lot frontage: 150 feet.
(c) 
Minimum lot width: 150 feet.
(d) 
Minimum lot depth: 150 feet.
(e) 
Minimum yards:
[1] 
Front yard: 50 feet.
[2] 
Side yard: 25 feet.
[3] 
Rear yard: 25 feet.
(2) 
The maximum number of children enrolled in any child-care center, whether freestanding or within a building, the minimum number of square feet of usable activity indoor space, and the minimum number of square feet of outdoor play space shall be as is required by the New Jersey Department of Human Services.
(3) 
The maximum improvement coverage for freestanding child-care centers shall be 30%.
(4) 
The maximum building height for freestanding child-care centers shall be 35 feet.
(5) 
The hours of operation for any child-care center, whether freestanding or within a building, shall be limited to 6:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.
(6) 
For any child-care center, maneuvering room shall be provided on-site for parking and unloading/loading of children so as to preclude the necessity for stacking or backing out onto a public street. No unsafe conditions for pickup and dropoff of children shall be permitted.
(7) 
For any child-care center, parking areas, pedestrian walkways or other exterior portions of the premises subject to use by day care occupants at night shall be illuminated to provide safe entrance and egress from the center. Any site illumination shall not reflect over the property lines of the premises.
(8) 
The outdoor play area shall be well-drained, completely fenced and shall not include driveways, parking areas or land otherwise unsuitable as play areas. No part of any outdoor play area shall be situated in the front yard.
(9) 
For any child-care center, all outdoor play areas shall be fenced and adequately screened from adjacent properties or uses and roadways by screen plantings within a fifteen-foot setback area along all property lines. Gate doors, where provided, shall be equipped with safety locking devices so as to preclude inadvertent opening of the fenced enclosure.
(10) 
The applicant shall include a project statement indicating the number of children to be enrolled, the ages of children to be enrolled, the number of full- and part-time employees and the hours of operation.
(11) 
All child-care centers shall be licensed by the New Jersey Department of Human Services.
[Added 12-23-1996 by Ord. No. 96-35]
A. 
The minimum floor area of living space within the lower income units shall be as follows, as established by the Balanced Housing Program of the New Jersey Department of Community Affairs, as the same may be amended from time to time:
Type of Unit
Required Floor Area
(square feet)
Efficiency
500
One-bedroom
600
Two-bedroom
750
Three-bedroom
950
Four-bedroom
1,150
B. 
The Planning Board may reduce the minimum floor area required if the unit is in congregate care housing or housing which otherwise provides communal eating arrangements and other communal space for social services, is designed for and deed restricted to persons over the age of 62 and the Planning Board finds that the design meets or exceeds reasonable habitability and health standards.
[Amended 4-6-2010 by Ord. No. 2010-07]
A. 
Intent. To minimize the adverse impacts associated with the potential proliferation of communication towers, the Township of West Windsor is pursuing a proactive policy of requiring collocation of wireless communication antennas on existing towers, on buildings, and on a new tower(s) at a public site(s) which may be designated by the Township Council.
B. 
Communication antennas not attached to towers. Any communication antenna which is not attached to a communication tower, along with its associated equipment compound and support structure, shall be a permitted accessory use to any commercial, industrial, professional, institutional or office structure, provided that:
(1) 
The wireless communications facility does not exceed more than 20 feet above the highest point of the structure.
(2) 
Amateur radio antennas are exempt from this section.
(3) 
The antennas and associated equipment shall be located on the building roof and screened so as to minimize their visual impact or be located inside the building.
Site plan review shall not be required for wireless communication antennas and associated equipment proposed in accordance with this Subsection B.
C. 
Collocation of communication antennas on existing towers. Collocation of wireless communication antennas on existing towers and associated equipment compounds is permitted as a conditional use in all zoning districts and shall be treated as a minor site plan. The conditional use standards that apply to such use are those standards set forth below in this Subsection C and those standards set forth in Subsection E.
(1) 
Height. An existing communication tower may be modified or rebuilt to a taller height, not to exceed 12 feet over such tower's existing height, to accommodate the collocation of additional communication antennas. The wireless communication antennas shall be no higher than necessary to achieve service area requirements.
(2) 
Need analysis. The applicant shall submit as part of its application a statement as to the purpose of the proposed wireless communication facility (e.g., to address a coverage or capacity issue, or a combination of both) and the type/mode (e.g., in vehicle or in building) and geographic area(s) where this is an issue (e.g., what streets, facilities or neighborhoods). The applicant shall provide propagation studies showing both current (without the proposed site) and projected (with the proposed site) coverage and service in the area of the application, including all surrounding sites (built and approved). The report shall include the design parameters used for the propagation studies, including antenna types, location, orientation and elevation, operating frequencies, ERP, and signal strength thresholds or "cut-offs." The analysis shall show the entire area where there is insufficient service or coverage and which the application is intended, at least in part, to address. Additional supporting data can be submitted, including (but not limited to) traffic data, drive tests, etc. No wireless communications facility shall be approved unless the applicant demonstrates a need for the facility at the location proposed.
(3) 
Visual impact. The proposed facility shall be designed so as to have the least visual impact reasonably possible.
(4) 
Alternatives analysis. The applicant shall undertake an alternatives analysis describing other approaches, solutions or sites it evaluated to address the need as stated in Subsection C(2) above and shall submit a report with respect thereto. This analysis shall include the location of all of its existing wireless communications facilities within the Township and outside the Township but providing service within the boundaries of the Township; the location and type of other sites considered; the availability of those sites; the extent to which other sites do not meet the applicant's service, engineering, or other needs; and the reason why the subject site was chosen over the alternatives. The analysis shall also address any alternative technologies that may be available and why such technologies are not being used. The analysis of alternatives shall include a comprehensive approach to address the need in the area where the need analysis shows insufficient service or coverage, demonstrating how the applicant intends to address the entirety of the need, including any areas or issues that would not be addressed by the proposed facility. The plan shall provide for the fewest feasible number of sites for wireless communications facilities. The applicant shall indicate any future sites it anticipates at the time of the application, to the extent currently known or forecast. Future applications by the applicant or its successor will be evaluated for consistency with this plan, and any deviation from it shall be justified to the satisfaction of the board of jurisdiction. No wireless communication facility shall be approved unless the applicant demonstrates that there are no suitable alternatives that are less visually intrusive than the proposed application.
(5) 
Additional submission requirements. In addition to the applicable documentation required for site plan approval, the following documentation shall be submitted as part of the minor site plan submission:
(a) 
Documentation by a qualified expert that any proposed wireless communications facility will have sufficient structural integrity to support the proposed antennas and anticipated future collocated antennas and that the structural standards developed for antennas by the Electronic Industries Association (EIA) and/or the Telecommunications Industry Association (TIA) have been met;
(b) 
A letter of intent by the applicant, in a form to be reviewed and approved by the board attorney, indicating that the applicant, to the extent it has the authority to do so, will share the use of the tower, including extensions, and compounds to the extent feasible, with other approved providers of wireless communications services; and
(c) 
A visual impact study, graphically simulating, through models, computer-enhanced graphics, or similar techniques, the appearance of any proposed wireless communications facility and indicating its view from at least five locations around and within one mile of the proposed wireless communications facility where such facility will be most visible. Aerial photographs of the impact area shall also be submitted.
D. 
Collocation of communication antennas on towers on public property.
(1) 
Collocation policy. The Township of West Windsor shall plan for and accommodate the growing demand for communication antennas by collocating such new antennas on towers sited on publicly owned sites controlled or designated by the Township and which are appropriate locations for facilitating wireless communications and for minimizing visual and other impacts on the public associated with communication antennas.
(2) 
Public/Private partnership to implement collocation policy.
(a) 
Any collocation communication towers will be installed, maintained and operated by a private business and/or regulated public utility on public property under lease agreement with the Township of West Windsor pursuant to the Local Land and Buildings Law[1] and/or the Local Public Contracts Law[2] of the State of New Jersey and in compliance with the ordinance requirements of the Township.
[1]
Editor's Note: See N.J.S.A. 40A:12-1 et seq.
[2]
Editor's Note: See N.J.S.A. 40A:11-1 et seq.
(b) 
In order to assure that any tower at the above-referenced location will accomplish the intent of this section, any lease agreement with the private operator or regulated public utility shall include, but not be limited to, the following requirements:
[1] 
The tower will be constructed to be capable of supporting at least 200 antennas which meet radiofrequency requirements.
[2] 
The tower shall not exceed 225 feet from grade.
[3] 
Antenna space shall be rented to all interested carriers at a rate reflecting the fair market price for such services.
[4] 
The tower shall comply with the standards set forth in Subsections E and F.
(c) 
The private entity or regulated public utility which will install, maintain and operate the collocation tower will be selected through an open public bidding process under specifications and a lease agreement to be prepared for the Mayor and Council under applicable New Jersey law governing public-private agreements. Specifications will include, but not be limited to, a demonstration of suitable past site management experience and compliance with prescribed construction standards with a cost and revenue analysis for the first five years of operation.
(d) 
Installation of wireless communication facilities on or at towers on public property shall not require site plan review.
E. 
Conditional use standards. The following design and performance standards shall apply as additional conditional use standards to communication antennas collocated on existing towers, support structures, and associated equipment compounds proposed pursuant to Subsection C hereof and shall be the standards applicable to towers, antennas, and support structures, and associated equipment compounds on public property proposed pursuant to Subsection D.
(1) 
Telecommunications equipment compound design. No buildings shall be permitted in the equipment compound. Communication equipment may be stored in cabinets.
(2) 
Fencing. A chain-link fence or wall not less than seven feet in height from finished grade shall be provided around each communication tower and equipment compound. Access to the tower shall be through a locked gate. The fence and supporting structures shall have a black matte finish.
(3) 
Landscaping. The visual impact of a communication tower and equipment compound shall be mitigated for nearby viewers through landscaping or other screening materials at the equipment compound. The following landscaping and buffering shall be required around the perimeter of the tower and equipment compound, except that the standards may be waived by the Planning Board for those sides of the proposed tower that are located adjacent to undevelopable lands and lands not in public view. Landscaping shall be installed on the outside of fences. Further, existing vegetation shall be preserved to the maximum extent practicable and may be used as a substitute for or in supplement towards meeting landscaping requirements.
(a) 
A continuous evergreen hedge at least seven feet high at planting.
(b) 
All landscaping shall be of the evergreen variety.
If the landscaping set forth above cannot be installed because it is prohibited, either by the owner of the site, by law, or otherwise, the applicant shall propose alternative landscaping designed to mitigate the visual impact of the communication tower and equipment compound.
(4) 
Method of determining communication tower height. For purposes of measurement, communication tower height shall include antenna, base pad and other appurtenances and shall be measured from the finished grade of the parcel.
(5) 
Illumination. Communication towers shall not be artificially lighted except as required by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), in which case the least intrusive type of lighting permitted by the FAA shall be used, and except as necessary for inspection of and repairs within the equipment compound, in which case the lighting may only be located within the compound and may only be turned on manually, with a mechanism to shut it off after a reasonable time to be set by the Planning Board after testimony by the applicant's representative. Lighting within the equipment compound shall not produce glare and shall be designed so as to minimize its spillover outside the compound.
(6) 
Finished color. Wireless communication improvements to existing communication towers not requiring FAA painting/marking shall have a finish that matches the existing tower.
(7) 
Structural design. Communication towers shall be constructed to the EIA/TIA 222-F standards, or such subsequent revision as is in place at the time of the Planning Board decision, as published by the Electronic Industries Association, which may be amended from time to time, and all Township construction/building codes. Further, any improvements and/or additions (e.g., antennas, satellite dishes, etc.) to existing communication towers shall require submission of site plans sealed and verified by a professional engineer which demonstrate compliance with the EIA/TIA 222-E standards. The applicant shall include in its design the opportunity for collocation by others or explain why collocation is not feasible.
(8) 
Underground utilities. All utilities serving any wireless communications facility shall be underground.
F. 
Standards applicable to all wireless communications facilities. The following standards, which are not conditional use standards, shall apply to all wireless communications facilities:
(1) 
Maintenance. Wireless communications facilities shall be maintained to ensure their continued structural integrity. The owner of a wireless communications facility shall also perform such other maintenance of the structure and of the site as to ensure that it does not create a visual nuisance.
(2) 
Inspection.
(a) 
An applicant may be required to inspect its wireless facility upon notice from the Township.
(b) 
Inspections shall be conducted by an engineer licensed to practice in the State of New Jersey. The results of such inspections shall be provided to the Township Engineer. Based upon the results of an inspection, the Township may require repair or removal of a communication tower. Upon removal of the wireless communications facility, if such facility is a tower, the site shall be restored in the manner acceptable to the Township Landscape Architect.
(3) 
Abandonment. Any wireless communications facility that is not operated for a continuous period of 12 months shall be considered abandoned. The owner of such facility shall remove it within 90 days of notice from the Zoning Officer that the facility is abandoned. If such facility is not removed within 90 days, the Township may remove such facility at the owner's expense. If the facility is to be retained, the provider shall establish that the facility will be reused within one year after such abandonment. If the facility is not reused within one year, the facility shall be removed. At the discretion of the Zoning Officer, upon good cause shown, the one-year reuse period may be extended for a period not to exceed one additional year.
(4) 
The wireless communications facility shall comply with all applicable FCC and FAA regulations.
(5) 
The wireless communications facility shall comply with all applicable building codes.
(6) 
Signs. Signs displaying owner contact information, warnings, and equipment information and safety instructions shall be provided. No other signage shall be permitted.
(7) 
Noise. No equipment shall be operated so as to produce a noise level on adjoining properties that exceeds the noise level permitted by Township Code.
(8) 
Activity and access. All equipment shall be designed and automated to the greatest extent possible in order to reduce the need for on-site maintenance and thereby to minimize the need for vehicular trips to and from the site. Access shall be from established site access points whenever possible. No more off-street parking than is necessary shall be permitted.
(9) 
Each application for any wireless communications facilities shall include either a preliminary or a certified statement that the operation of the facility, including reception and transmission functions, will operate within the parameters established by the applicable FCC licenses and regulation, so as to minimize the possibility of interfering with the usual and customary transmission or reception of radio, television, etc., and other licensed services enjoyed by adjacent residential and nonresidential properties. In the event that only a preliminary statement is submitted with the application, a final, certified statement of noninterference will be provided and approved by the Township prior to the issuance of a building permit. The statement shall be prepared by an engineer licensed to practice in the State of New Jersey or other professional accepted by the Township.
(10) 
Approval required from other governmental agencies. Each application shall include written approval or a statement of no objection from other federal, state or county agencies that regulate communication tower sighting, design and construction.
(11) 
The applicant shall submit a report certifying that its facilities will operate in accordance with all legal requirements regarding RF exposure (FCC Report and Order 96-326 regarding Guidelines for Evaluating the Environmental Effects of Radiofrequency Radiation and FCC OET Bulletin-65, Evaluating Compliance with FCC Guidelines for Human Exposure to Radiofrequency Electromagnetic Fields, and others). This report shall include the class of service, frequencies, maximum effective radiation power (ERP) of the antennas, anticipated operating ERP(s), antenna types, heights and orientation of all antennas and indicate predicted RF exposure levels under normal operations at the nearest occupied structure. A copy of the FCC license applicable to the use of the wireless communications facility shall also be submitted. The statement shall be prepared by an engineer licensed to practice in the State of New Jersey or other professional accepted by the Township.
[Added 5-1-2000 by Ord. No. 2000-07]
Billboards are permitted as a conditional use in the B-2 Business and ROM-1 Research Office and Manufacturing Zones, subject to the following conditions:
A. 
Not more than one billboard structure containing not more than two advertising faces shall be constructed on any lot. The resulting billboard shall be one single- or double-faced sign.
B. 
Such billboard structure shall only be permitted on the following parcels as designated on the West Windsor tax rolls:
(1) 
Block 7.13, Lot 47.
(2) 
Block 86, Lot 11.
(3) 
Block 8, Lot 7 and Block 7, Lot 16.01, and such areas of State Highway Route 1 that may become part of these two lots.
C. 
Billboard use as permitted on the parcels identified above shall not be subject to any minimum lot size or leasable area requirement; however, those lots shall not be further subdivided unless in accordance with the applicable zoning requirements for the zone or as modified herein.
D. 
Each billboard shall be supported by a steel monopole and shall have dimensions not greater than 14 feet (vertical) and 48 feet (horizontal) with no advertising face greater than 672 total square feet. In no event shall any billboard exceed the height limits given in Subsection E below.
E. 
The top of a permitted billboard shall not exceed the following heights as measured from the adjacent grade of U.S. Route 1:
(1) 
Block 8, Lot 7: 30 feet.
(2) 
Block 7.13, Lot 47: 32 feet.
(3) 
Block 86, Lot 11: 30 feet.
(4) 
Block 7, Lot 16.01: 35 feet.
F. 
In addition, there shall be a distance of not less than 12 feet from grade to the bottom support of a billboard so as to provide a site distance underneath the billboard.
G. 
A billboard may be developed on one of the lots identified in Subsection B in conjunction with any other use which may be permitted on the same lot. Such other use shall be developed in accordance with the use and bulk provisions of the related zone or as modified in this section. The distance of any billboard to any building shall not be less than the height of the billboard, and in no case shall it be less than 30 feet.
H. 
No billboard shall be sited in a manner that results in the crossing of any existing or proposed right-of-way or existing property line. Also, all portions of any proposed billboard structure shall be located within 100 feet of the proposed U.S. Route 1 right-of-way in existence at the time of this section.
I. 
No new billboards may be constructed on Block 86, Lot 11, prior to the removal of billboards existing as of the date of this section at that site.
J. 
The construction of any new billboard shall include landscaping provided at and around the base of the structure that shall be approved by the Township Landscape Architect.
K. 
Billboards shall not contain moving, flashing or intermittently illuminated elements. Billboard illumination shall be shielded to prevent glare and focus on sign faces only.
L. 
The application for any billboard shall be required to be submitted as a minor site plan, as well as for conditional use approval.
[Added 6-28-2004 by Ord. No. 2004-12; amended 6-6-2005 by Ord. No. 2005-07; 3-18-2019 by Ord. No. 2019-03]
A. 
A mandatory affordable housing set-aside requirement of 25% shall be imposed on any multifamily development created through any Township or land use board action involving a rezoning, use variance, density variance, redevelopment plan or rehabilitation plan permitting redevelopment, which density is at or above six dwelling units per acre and results in the construction of five or more new units over the number of units previously permitted. The low- and moderate-income housing shall meet all of the applicable standards and requirements for affordable units, including those set forth in the Uniform Housing Affordability Controls (UHAC), N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.1 et seq., and § 200-237.
B. 
At least 50% of the affordable units shall be affordable to low-income households and at least 13% of all rental affordable units shall be made affordable to very-low-income households earning 30% or less of the regional median household income by household size, which very-low-income units shall be included as part of the low-income requirement. The remaining affordable units shall be made affordable to moderate-income households. The affordable units shall be located on-site and shall be reasonably dispersed throughout the development phased in accordance with the affordable housing construction scheduled set forth in N.J.A.C. 5:97-6.4(d).
C. 
Subdivision and site plan approval shall be denied by the board unless the developer complies with the requirements to provide low- and moderate-income housing pursuant to the provisions of this section. A property shall not be permitted to be subdivided so as to avoid meeting this requirement. The board may impose any reasonable conditions to ensure such compliance.
D. 
The mandatory affordable housing set-aside requirement shall not give any developer the right to any such rezoning, variance, or other relief as set forth above or establish any obligation on the part of the Township to grant such rezoning, variance or other relief.
[Added 9-15-2008 by Ord. No. 2008-19]
Development of residential dwelling units in common open space approved as part of a development application containing residential dwelling units is prohibited.