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Bill

Bill

S 116

An act relating to crimes against an unborn child

2025-2026 Regular Session Introduced by Larry Hart and 2 co-sponsors

Allows low impact home businesses to operate as permitted accessory uses in residential zones, under statewide standards with local thresholds and nuisance safeguards.

Read 1st time & referred to Committee on Judiciary
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Bill Summary · S 116

Summary — S 116: “Home Business Jobs Creation Act”

Status (as of documents): Introduced Jan 16, 2025; reported favorably with committee amendments by the Senate Economic Growth Committee (Feb 10, 2025); passed the Senate (May 14, 2025) and delivered to the Assembly. Committee amendments made the bill identical to Assembly Bill A2623. Effective date (as amended): one year after enactment.

Purpose / intent

S 116 creates statewide baseline rules allowing certain home-based businesses to operate as permitted accessory uses in residential zones. The goal is to increase legal certainty for home businesses (including many small and start‑up enterprises and teleworkers), reduce the need for municipal use variances, and balance economic opportunity with protection of residential neighborhood character and public health and safety.

Key provisions

  • Definition: “Home business” — any activity operated for pecuniary gain in, or directed from, a residential dwelling or unit by one or more persons residing there.
  • Permitted accessory use: A home business in a residential zone is allowed as an accessory use (no use variance required under N.J. law) if it meets specified conditions.
  • Conditions for permitted operation (all must be met):
    • Compatible with residential use of the property and surrounding homes.
    • Volume of employees, invitees, or guests visiting the home is not in excess of what’s compatible with the neighborhood.
    • No outside appearance of a business (e.g., no external signs, special parking or lights).
    • Volume of deliveries, truck/vehicular traffic, or parking is not beyond what’s normally associated with residential use.
    • No equipment/process creating noise, vibration, glare, fumes, odors, or electrical/electronic interference detectable by neighbors (including radio/TV interference).
    • No generation of solid waste or sewage beyond normal residential volumes/types.
    • No illegal activity.
    • Compliance with applicable liability insurance provisions (committee amendment references N.J.S.A.40A:10A‑1 et seq.).
  • Common‑interest ownership communities (condos/HOAs): The bill does not override deed restrictions, covenants, bylaws, or other governing documents that prohibit home businesses within such communities.
  • Municipal authority and uniform standards:
    • Municipalities are not required to change existing home‑business ordinances so long as they do not conflict with the bill.
    • Municipalities may, by ordinance, establish objective standards applicable across a district for acceptable volumes of invitees/guests, deliveries/truck traffic, and parking for home businesses.
    • The bill preserves municipal power to protect health, safety, and welfare — including investigation and elimination of nuisances.

Who is affected

  • Homeowners/residents who operate or plan to operate home‑based, for‑profit activities.
  • Small businesses and entrepreneurs using residences as business locations.
  • Municipal zoning authorities and planning boards (must apply the state standard and may adopt ordinances setting uniform thresholds).
  • Neighbors and residential communities — protections are included but enforcement will typically be municipal.
  • Common‑interest communities — their governing documents remain controlling if they prohibit home businesses.

Practical impact

S 116 provides statewide baseline permissibility for low‑impact home businesses, reducing reliance on variances and encouraging small business formation while allowing municipalities to set uniform, district‑level thresholds and to enforce nuisance/health/safety rules. It preserves HOA/condo restrictions and allows municipalities to retain enforcement authority and refine local standards by ordinance. The bill becomes effective one year after enactment.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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