New Jersey Administrative Code
Title 5 - COMMUNITY AFFAIRS
Chapter 11 - RELOCATION ASSISTANCE AND EVICTION
Subchapter 2 - ELIGIBILITY
Section 5:11-2.1 - Building, housing, and health code enforcement
Current through Register Vol. 56, No. 18, September 16, 2024
(a) Whenever a State Agency or unit of local government undertakes a program of building code enforcement, housing code enforcement or health code enforcement that causes the displacement of any person, the said State Agency or unit of local government shall provide relocation payments and assistance to all lawful occupants who are displaced, as provided in N.J.A.C. 5:11-3 and 4. The date of eligibility shall be the date occupants received formal written notice to vacate from the State Agency or unit of local government. Said written notice shall include the information required pursuant to 5:11-4.2.
(b) An order to vacate issued by a State Agency or unit of local government, pursuant to the State Uniform Construction Code Act (52:27D-119 et seq.) and 5:23-2.32(b)1, because a building has become unsafe or uninhabitable as a direct result of a natural disaster, soil subsidence, fire, a latent defect or other sudden and unforeseeable occurrence is not displacement within the meaning of these rules and no relocation benefits shall be due any occupants or former occupants of such a building. However, a municipality may, pursuant to 20:4-3.1, voluntarily provide relocation benefits to such displacees but shall receive no reimbursement through any State grant-in-aid for the cost of doing so.
(c) An owner-occupant who is displaced by health, building or housing code enforcement shall not be entitled to relocation benefits if the code violation which resulted in displacement was caused by factors for which the owner is liable. Any such owner-occupant who is entitled to benefits shall be entitled to the benefits applicable to tenants only.
(d) No tenant displaced by code enforcement shall be eligible for benefits if the code violation which resulted in displacement was primarily caused by that tenant's own conduct and not by factors for which the owner is liable under 20:4-4.1.