[HISTORY: Adopted by the Board of Supervisors of East Hanover Township 6-29-2015 by Ord. No. 2015-03. Amendments noted where applicable.]
This chapter shall be known as, and may be cited as the "East Hanover Township Outdoor Lighting Ordinance."
To require and set minimum standards for outdoor lighting to:
A. 
Provide for and control lighting in outdoor public places where public health, safety and welfare are potential concerns.
B. 
Protect drivers and pedestrians from the disabling glare of nonvehicular light sources.
C. 
Protect neighbors and the night sky from nuisance glare and light trespass from improperly selected or poorly aimed, placed, applied, maintained or shielded light sources.
D. 
Promote energy-efficient lighting design and operation.
E. 
Protect and retain the intended character of the various portions of the Township.
A. 
The provisions of this chapter apply to all uses within the Township where there is interior or exterior lighting that creates a nuisance or hazard as viewed from outside, or exterior lighting that creates a nuisance when viewed from inside, including but not limited to, residential, commercial, industrial, public and private recreational/sports and institutional uses, and sign, billboard, architectural and landscape lighting.
B. 
The Township may, in its sole discretion, require lighting to be incorporated for other uses, applications and locations or may restrict lighting in any of the above uses, as deemed necessary.
C. 
The glare-control requirements herein contained apply to lighting in all uses, applications and locations.
D. 
Temporary seasonal decorative lighting is exempt from the requirements of this chapter, except when it creates a hazard or nuisance.
E. 
Emergency lighting, as may be required by any public agency while engaged in the performance of their duties, or for illumination of the path of egress during an emergency as described in NFPA 75 and NFPA 101, are exempt from the requirements of this chapter.
F. 
Rotating, traveling, pulsing, flashing or oscillating light sources, lasers, beacons, searchlights or strobe lighting shall not be permitted.
As used in this chapter, the following terms shall have the meanings indicated:
CANDELA
A unit of luminous intensity. A common candle emits light with a luminous intensity of roughly one candela.
CUTOFF
A lighting fixture from which no more than 2.5% of its lamp's intensity is emitted at or above a horizontal plane drawn through the bottom of the luminaire and no more than 10% of its lamp's intensity is emitted between 80° and that horizontal plane.
Light Cutoffs.tif
FOOTCANDLE
The unit of measure expressing the quantity of light received on a surface. One footcandle is the illuminance produced by a candle on a surface one foot square from a distance of one foot.
FULL CUTOFF
A term used by the lighting industry to describe a luminaire from which no light is emitted at or above a horizontal plane drawn through the lowest light-emitting portion of the luminaire and no more than 10% of the lamp's light intensity is emitted at or above an angle 10° below that horizontal plane, at all lateral angles around the luminaire. Implicit in the definition is a fixture that is aimed straight down and has a flat lens. A full-cutoff luminaire, by definition, also is "fully shielded."
FULLY SHIELDED
Attribute of a luminaire from which no light is emitted at or above a horizontal plane drawn through the lowest light-emitting portion of the luminaire.
GLARE
The brightness of a light source that causes annoyance, discomfort, or loss in visual performance and visibility to the eye.
A. 
DISABLING GLAREGlare that:
(1) 
Impairs the visibility and creates a potentially hazardous situation for either pedestrians or motorists or
(2) 
Precludes the operation of a nearby business or the provision of activities, programs or services on nearby property.
B. 
NUISANCE GLAREGlare that:
(1) 
Creates an annoyance or aggravation but does not create a potentially hazardous situation; or
(2) 
Creates an annoyance or aggravation that impairs or impedes a person's right of quiet enjoyment of his/her property.
ILLUMINANCE
The quantity of incident light measured in footcandles.
LED
Light emitting diode.
LIGHT TRESPASS
Light emitted by a luminaire or lighting installation, which is cast beyond the boundaries of the property on which the lighting installation is sited.
LUMEN
The light-output rating of a lamp (light bulb), as used in the context of this chapter. One lumen equals one footcandle falling onto one square foot of area.
LUMINAIRE
A lighting fixture complete with the light source or lamp, the reflector for directing the light, an aperture (with or without a lens), the outer shell or housing for lamp alignment and protection, an electrical ballast, if required, and connection to a power source.
LUX
A unit of illuminance stated in lumens per square meter. One lux is a unit of incident illuminance approximately equal to 1/10 footcandle.
NIT
A unit of measurement of luminance, or the intensity of visible light, where one nit is equal to one candela per square meter. Nits are used to describe the brightness of video displays, such as LCD and CRT monitors.
SHIELDED
A luminaire from which no direct glare is visible at normal viewing angles by virtue of its being properly aimed, oriented, and located and properly fitted with such devices as shields, barn doors, baffles, louvers, skirts or visors.
A. 
Illumination levels. Lighting, where required by this chapter, or otherwise required or allowed by the Township or other applicable jurisdiction, shall have intensities and uniformity ratios in accordance with, but not limited, to the following:
Illumination Levels
Use/Task
Illumination*
Uniformity Ratio** (Avg/Min)
Pedestrian walkways
0.2–0.4 avg
5:1
Sidewalks, commercial/industrial
0.4–1.0 avg
5:1
Local commercial/industrial streets, intersections of streets-parking areas
0.4–1.0 avg
6:1
Local residential streets, intersection of streets, parking areas
0.4-0.6 avg
4:1
Parking: multifamily
0.6 min–0.8 max
4:1
Parking: commercial/industrial
High activity, e.g., regional shopping centers/fast food facilities
0.9 min–1.8 max
4:1
Medium activity, e.g., community shopping centers, office parks, hospitals, commuter lots
0.6 min–1.2 max
4:1
Low activity, e.g., neighborhood shopping, industrial employee parking
0.2 min–0.4 max
4:1
Building entrances: commercial, industrial, institutional
5.0 avg
Service station pump islands
20.0 avg
4:1
Car dealerships
20.0 max
5:1
Illuminated signs
0.6–1.0 avg
6:1
Recreational uses/parks
0.6–0.8 avg
4:1
*
Illumination levels are maintained horizontal footcandles on the task, e.g., pavement or area surface.
**
Uniformity ratios dictate that average illumination values shall not exceed minimum values by more than the product of the minimum value and the specified ratio (e.g., for commercial parking, high activity, the average footcandles shall not be in excess of 3.6 [0.9 x 4]).
Abbreviations: avg - average; min - minimum; max - maximum
B. 
Lighting fixture design.
(1) 
Luminaires shall be of a type and design appropriate to the lighting application and aesthetically acceptable to the Township.
(2) 
Luminaires shall be shielded and shall be installed and aimed so as to not project their output into the windows of neighboring residences, adjacent uses, past the object being illuminated, skyward or onto a public roadway. Luminaires with an aggregate rated lamp output not exceeding 500 lumens, e.g., the rated output of a standard nondirectional 40-watt incandescent or 10-watt compact fluorescent lamp, are exempt from the requirements of this subsection. In the case of decorative streetlighting, the Township may approve the use of luminaires that are fully shielded or comply with Illuminating Engineering Society of North America (IESNA) cutoff criteria rather than full cutoff.
C. 
Control of nuisance and disabling glare.
(1) 
All lighting shall be aimed, located, designed, fitted and maintained so as not to present a hazard to drivers or pedestrians by impairing their ability to safely traverse and so as not to create a nuisance by projecting or reflecting objectionable light onto a neighboring use or property.
(2) 
Floodlights and spotlights that are not full-cutoff or fully shielded, where specifically approved by the Township, shall be so installed and aimed that they do not project their output onto the properties of neighboring residences, adjacent uses, past the object being illuminated, skyward or onto a public roadway or pedestrian way. When a floodlight creates glare as viewed from an adjacent residential property, the floodlight shall be required to be re-aimed and/or fitted with a shielding device to block the view of the glare source from that property.
(3) 
Illumination for nonresidential building facades and/or surrounding landscapes for decorative or aesthetic purposes is prohibited between 11:00 p.m. and dawn, except that such lighting situated on the premises for a commercial, industrial, public recreational or institutional establishment may remain illuminated while the establishment is actually open for business, and until no more than one hour after closing. Such lighting shall be automatically extinguished.
(4) 
Security lighting proposed for use after 11:00 p.m. or after the normal hours of operation for commercial, industrial, institutional or municipal applications shall be accomplished by reducing the amount or intensity of lighting by 75% from then until the start of business in the morning. When it can be demonstrated to the satisfaction of the Township that an elevated security risk exists, e.g., a history of relevant crime, a lesser reduction may be permitted.
(5) 
Vegetation screens shall not be employed to serve as the primary means for controlling glare. Rather, glare control shall be achieved primarily through the use of such means as cutoff fixtures, shields and baffles, and appropriate application of fixture mounting height, wattage, aiming angle and fixture placement.
(6) 
The level of illumination projected onto a residential use from another property shall not exceed 0.1 initial vertical footcandle, measured line-of-sight at any point on the receiving property. The level of illumination projected onto a nonresidential use shall not exceed 1.0 initial vertical footcandle measured line of sight at the property line.
(7) 
The use of white strobe lighting for tall structures such as smokestacks, chimneys and radio/communications/television towers is prohibited during hours of darkness, except as specifically required by FAA.
(8) 
Under-canopy lighting for such applications as, but not limited to, gas/service stations, hotel/theater marquees, fast-food/bank/drugstore drive-ups, shall be accomplished using flat-lens full-cutoff luminaires aimed straight down and shielded in such a manner that the lowest opaque edge of the luminaire shall be below the light source and its light-directing surfaces, at all lateral angles around the luminaire.
D. 
Additional requirements for recreational uses. The nighttime illumination of outdoor recreational facilities for such aerial sports as baseball, basketball, soccer, tennis, track and field, and football typically necessitate higher than normally allowed luminaire mounting heights and aiming angles, utilize very high-wattage lamps and potentially produce unacceptable levels of light trespass and glare when located near residential properties. Permission to illuminate such facilities shall be granted only when the Township is satisfied that the health, safety and welfare rights of nearby property owners and the Township as a whole have been properly protected.
E. 
Lighting requirements for signs and billboards.
(1) 
For the lighting of billboards and externally illuminated signs, fixtures shall be designed, fitted and aimed to limit the light pattern to the sign or billboard, so as not to project their output into the windows of neighboring residences, adjacent uses, past the face of the billboard or sign, skyward or onto a public roadway.
(2) 
Externally illuminated billboards and signs shall have luminaires mounted at the top of the billboard or sign and aimed downward. The luminaires shall be designed, fitted and aimed to shield the lamp and its reflective surfaces from direct off-site view and to place the light output onto and not beyond the sign or billboard.
(3) 
At no point on the face of the sign or billboard and at no time shall the illumination exceed 30 vertical footcandles during hours of darkness.
(4) 
The illumination of billboards whose illuminated surface is visible from a residential zoning district or residential use within 400 feet of it shall not be permitted.
(5) 
Internally illuminated signs shall have a dark field and light message. The aggregate output of the light sources shall not exceed 500 initial lamp lumens per square foot of sign face per side.
(6) 
The level of illumination from a billboard or sign projected onto an adjacent residential property shall not exceed 0.1 initial vertical footcandle, measured line-of-sight at any point on the receiving property. The level of illumination shall not exceed 1.0 initial vertical footcandle when measured within an adjacent nonresidential property or public vehicle traffic area.
(7) 
LED billboard and sign lighting, shall not be located within 1,000 feet of an approaching interchange or traffic-merging lanes on a limited-access roadway. The illumination and/or intensity of the display shall be controlled so as to not create glare, hazards or nuisances. Such signs shall have a maximum nits level of 7,000 nits; provided the brightness of the digital and/or electronic sign shall not exceed 0.3 footcandle of light above the normal ambient light levels. Such sign shall be equipped with automatic dimming technology which automatically adjusts the brightness of the sign based on ambient light conditions. Such sign shall be dimmed to 500 nits between sunset and sunrise. The sign or billboard nighttime brightness shall be capable of being further dimmed if the Township requires a reduction in brightness when the lighting is judged to create a nuisance or hazard.
(a) 
The sign luminance specification shall be determined by a footcandle metering device held at a height of five feet and aimed towards the sign, from a distance of 175 feet.
(b) 
The metering device should be at a location perpendicular to the sign center (as seen in plain view), as this angle has the highest luminance.
(c) 
This check shall include the measurement of an all-white image displayed by the sign to evaluate the worst-case condition.
(d) 
If the difference in illuminance between the sign "on" and the sign "off" conditions is 0.3 footcandle or less, then the sign luminance is in compliance.
(8) 
The use of highly reflective signage that creates nuisance glare or a safety hazard shall not be permitted.
(9) 
The lighting of new or relighting of existing billboards and signs, whether from an internal or external lighting source, shall require a building permit, which shall be granted when the Township is satisfied that excessive illumination, light pollution, glare and light trespass have been adequately mitigated.
F. 
Installation. The installation of all lighting fixtures and signs shall conform to the requirements of the Uniform Construction Code (UCC), as may be amended from time to time.
G. 
Post-installation inspection. The Township reserves the right to conduct post-installation nighttime inspections to verify compliance with the requirements of this chapter and approved plans, and if appropriate, to require remedial action at no expense to the Township.
H. 
Maintenance. Luminaires and ancillary equipment shall be maintained so as to always meet the requirements of this chapter.
A. 
Where site lighting is required as part of subdivision and land development, conditional use, special exception, variance, and/or zoning/building permit applications; is required by this or any other governing Ordinance; is otherwise required by the Township or is proposed by an applicant, lighting plans shall be submitted for Township review and approval. The submitted information shall include the following:
(1) 
A plan or plans of the site, complete with all structures, parking spaces, building entrances, traffic areas (both vehicular and pedestrian), existing and proposed trees, and adjacent uses that might be adversely impacted by the lighting. The lighting plan shall contain a layout of all proposed and existing luminaires, including but not limited to area, architectural, building entrance, canopy, soffit, landscape, flag, sign, etc., by location, orientation, aiming direction, mounting height, lamp, photometry and type.
(2) 
A 10 feet by 10 feet illuminance grid (point-by-point) plot of maintained horizontal footcandles overlaid on the site plan, plotted out to 0.0 footcandles, which demonstrates compliance with the light trespass, illuminance and uniformity requirements as set forth in this chapter or as otherwise required by the Township. When the scale of the plan, as judged by the Township, makes a 10 feet by 10 feet grid plot illegible, a more legible grid spacing may be permitted.
(3) 
Light-loss factors, IESNA candela test-filename, initial lamp-lumen ratings and specific lamp manufacturer's lamp ordering nomenclature, used in calculating the plotted illuminance levels.
(4) 
Description of the proposed equipment, including luminaire catalog cuts, photometrics, glare reduction devices, lamps, on/off control devices, mounting heights, pole foundation details, pole protection means and mounting methods.
(5) 
Landscaping plans shall contain lighting fixture locations and shall demonstrate that the site lighting and landscaping have been coordinated to minimize conflict between vegetation and intended light distribution, both initially and at vegetation maturity.
B. 
When requested by the Township, the applicant shall also submit a visual-impact plan that demonstrates appropriate steps have been taken to mitigate potential consequences of on-site and off-site glare and to retain the intended character of the Township. This plan may require the inclusion of initial vertical footcandle values at specific off-site venues, e.g., bedroom windows of adjacent residential uses.
C. 
Plan notes. The following notes shall appear on the lighting plan:
(1) 
Post-approval alterations to lighting plans or intended substitutions for specified lighting equipment on the approved plan shall be submitted to the Township for review and approval prior to installation. Requests for substitutions shall be accompanied by catalog cuts of the proposed equipment that demonstrate the proposed substitution is equal to or exceeds the optical quality and maintainability of the specified luminaires; and accompanied by a lighting plan, including a point-by-point plot, which demonstrates that proposed substitutions will result in a lighting design that equals or exceeds the quality of the lighting on the approved plan.
(2) 
The Township reserves the right to conduct post-installation nighttime inspections to verify compliance with the requirements of this chapter and approved lighting plan commitments, and if appropriate, to require remedial action at no expense to the Township.
(3) 
Installer shall notify the Township to arrange for inspection and approval of all exterior lighting equipment, including building-mounted lighting, prior to its installation.
(4) 
All exterior lighting, including building-mounted lighting, shall meet IESNA full-cutoff or fully shielded criteria unless otherwise specifically approved by the Township.
A. 
Safety hazards.
(1) 
If appropriate officers or agents of the Township judge a lighting installation, including lighting poles, creates a safety or personal-security hazard, the person(s) responsible for the lighting shall be notified in writing and required to take remedial action.
(2) 
If appropriate corrective action has not been effected within 15 days of written notification, the Township may commence legal action as provided in §§ 125-9 and 125-10 below.
B. 
Nuisance glare and inadequate illumination levels.
(1) 
When appropriate officers or agents of the Township judge an installation produces unacceptable levels of nuisance glare, skyward light, excessive or insufficient illumination levels or otherwise varies from this chapter, Township may cause written notification of the person(s) responsible for the lighting and require appropriate remedial action.
(2) 
If appropriate corrective action has not been effected within 90 days of notification, the Township may commence legal action as provided in §§ 125-9 and 125-10 below.
Any lighting fixture or lighting installation legally installed and operative on the effective date of this chapter shall be considered as a lawful nonconformance subject to the following:
A. 
Nonconforming lighting shall not be changed to any other nonconforming lighting, structurally altered, altered in any way that increases its degree of nonconformance, or expanded or extended in scope.
B. 
Unless minor corrective action, such as re-aiming or shielding, is deemed by the Township to be an acceptable alternative, a nonconforming lighting fixture or lighting installation shall be made to conform with the applicable requirements of this chapter when:
(1) 
It is deemed by the Township to create a safety hazard.
(2) 
A fixture is added or replaced with another fixture or fixtures, abandoned or relocated.
(3) 
There is a change in use.
A. 
Any person who violates or permits a violation of this chapter shall, upon being found liable therefor in a civil enforcement proceeding commenced by the Township before a Magisterial District Judge, pay a fine of not more than $500, plus all court costs, including reasonable attorneys' fees, incurred by the Township in the enforcement of this chapter. No judgment shall commence or be imposed, levied or payable until the date of the determination of the violation by the Magisterial District Judge. If the defendant neither pays nor timely appeals the judgment, the Township may enforce the judgment pursuant to the applicable Rules of Civil Procedure. Each day a violation exists shall constitute a separate offense.
B. 
The appropriate officers or agents of the Township are hereby authorized to seek legal and/or equitable relief, including injunction, to enforce compliance with this chapter.
In addition to any other remedies provided in this chapter, any violation of § 125-5C hereof, Control of nuisance and disabling glare, shall constitute a nuisance and shall be abated by the Township by either seeking mitigation of nuisance or appropriate equitable or legal relief from a court of competent jurisdiction.
This chapter shall become effective five days after its enactment by the Board of Supervisors of the East Hanover Township.