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ZIP Code 07922

Zip code area 07922 in Berkeley Heights, Union County, NJ

  •   State: 
    New Jersey
      Counties: 
    Union County
      Cities: 
    Berkeley Heights
      County FIPS: 
    34039
      Area total: 
    5.618 sq mi
      Area land: 
    5.581 sq mi
      Area water: 
    0.037 sq mi
      Elevation: 
    671 feet
  •   Latitude: 
    40,6761
      Longitude: 
    -74,4305
      Dman name cbsa: 
    New York-Newark-Jersey City NY-NJ-PA
      Timezone: 
    Eastern Standard Time (EST) UTC-5:00; Eastern Daylight Time (EDT) UTC-4:00
      Coordinates: 
    40.67518, -74.42817
      GMAP: 

    New Jersey 07922, USA

  •   Population: 
    28,013 individuals
      Population density: 
    32,208.46 people per square miles
      Households: 
    9,997
      Unemployment rate: 
    4.3%
      Household income: 
    $171,875 average annual income
      Housing units: 
    4,302 residential housing units
      Health insurance: 
    1.0% of residents who report not having health insurance
      Veterans: 
    0.3% of residents who are veterans

The ZIP 07922 is a Northeast ZIP code and located in the preferred city/town Berkeley Heights, Union County, New Jersey with a population estimated today at about 13.221 peoples. The preferred city may be different from the city where the zip code 07922 is located. Berkeley Heights is usually the name of the main post office. When sending a package or mail, always indicate your preferred or accepted cities. Using any city from the list of invalid cities may result in delays.

Berkeley Heights is the primary city, acceptable cities are Berkeley Hts.

  • Living in the postal code area 07922 of Berkeley Heights, Union County, New Jersey 48.4% of population who are male and 51.6% who are female.

    The median age for all people, for males & for females based on 2020 Census data. Median is the middle value, when all possible values are listed in order. Median is not the same as Average (or Mean).

  • Household income staggered according to certain income ranges.

    The median commute time of resident workers require for a one-way commute to work in minutes.

    The distribution of different age groups in the population of the zip code area of Berkeley Heights, Union County 07922.

    The percentage distribution of the population by race.

    Estimated residential value of individual residential buildings as a percentage.

    The age of the building does not always say something about the structural condition of the residential buildings.

    The percentage of education level of the population.

Union County

  •   State: 
    New Jersey
      County: 
    Union County
      Zips: 
    07061
    07091
    07061
    07207
    07902
    07062
    07036
    07206
    07063
    07063
    07088
    07062
    07023
    07027
    07204
    07206
    07974
    07060
    07203
    07092
    07922
    07033
    07205
    07208
    07060
    07066
    07202
    07076
    07081
    07065
    07016
    07201
    07090
    07901
    07036
    07083
      Coordinates: 
    40.65993247280737, -74.30822401654441
      Area total: 
    105.49 sq. mi., 273.22 sq. km, 67512.96 acres
      Area land: 
    102.77 sq. mi., 266.16 sq. km, 65770.24 acres
      Area water: 
    2.72 sq. mi., 7.05 sq. km, 1742.72 acres
      Established: 
    1857
      Capital seat: 

    Elizabeth
    Address: 10 Elizabethtown Plaza
    County Administration Building
    Elizabeth, NJ
    Governing Body: Board of Freeholders with 9 board size
    Governing Authority: Home Rule

  • Union County, New Jersey, United States

  •   Population: 
    575,345; Population change: 7.24% (2010 - 2020)
      Population density: 
    5593.5 persons per square mile
      Household income: 
    $64,229
      Households: 
    183,480
      Unemployment rate: 
    9.90% per 276,211 county labor force
  •   Sales taxes: 
    7.00%
      Income taxes: 
    8.97%
      GDP: 
    $35.94 B, gross domestic product (GDP)
  • Union County's population of New Jersey of 305,209 residents in 1930 has increased 1,89-fold to 575,345 residents after 90 years, according to the official 2020 census. U.S. Bureau of the Census beginning in 1900. Data for 1870-1890 are on a de facto or unspecified basis; data for 1900 and later years are resident totals.

    Approximately 51.33% female residents and 48.67% male residents live in as of 2020, 56.04% in Union County, New Jersey are married and the remaining 43.96% are single population.

    As of 2020, 56.04% in Union County, New Jersey are married and the remaining 43.96% are single population.

  •   Housing units: 
    209,908 residential units of which 95.46% share occupied residential units.

    31.1 minutes is the average time that residents in Union County require for a one-way commute to work. A long commute can have different effects on health. A Gallup poll in the US found that in terms of mental health, long haul commuters are up to 12 percent more likely to experience worry, and ten percent less likely to feel well rested. The Gallup poll also found that of people who commute 61­–90 minutes each day, a whopping one third complained of neck and back pain, compared to less than a quarter of people who only spend ten minutes getting to work.

    70.63% of the working population which commute to work alone in their car, 11.67% of the working population which commutes to work in a carpool, 10.53% of the population that commutes using mass transit, including bus, light rail, subway, and ferry. 2.36% of the population that has their home as their principal place of work.

  • Of the total residential buildings in Union County, New Jersey 57.72% are owner-occupied homes, another 36.69% are rented apartments, and the remaining 5.59% are vacant.

  • The 62.34% of the population in Union County, New Jersey who identify themselves as belonging to a religion are distributed among the following most diverse religions.

    Since the 1860s, the two main parties have been the Republican Party (here in 2022 = 35.410%) and the Democratic Party (here in 2022 = 63.580%) of those eligible to vote in Union County, New Jersey.

Berkeley Heights

Township of Berkeley Heights

  •   State: 
    New Jersey
      County: 
    Union County
      City: 
    Berkeley Heights
      County FIPS: 
    34039
      Coordinates: 
    40°40′34″N 74°25′22″W
      Area total: 
    6.26 sq mi (16.21 km²)
      Area land: 
    6.22 sq mi (16.11 km²)
      Area water: 
    0.04 sq mi (0.10 km²)
      Elevation: 
    394 ft (120 m)
      Established: 
    Incorporated November 8, 1809 (as New Providence Township ) Renamed November 6, 1951 (as Berkeley Heights Township )
  •   Latitude: 
    40,6761
      Longitude: 
    -74,4305
      Dman name cbsa: 
    New York-Newark-Jersey City, NY-NJ-PA
      Timezone: 
    Eastern Standard Time (EST) UTC-5:00; Eastern Daylight Time (EDT) UTC-4:00
      ZIP codes: 
    07922
      GMAP: 

    Berkeley Heights, Union County, New Jersey, United States

  •   Population: 
    1,032
      Population density: 
    2,135.9 residents per square mile of area (824.7/km²)
      Household income: 
    $128,617
      Households: 
    4,477
      Unemployment rate: 
    9.50%
  •   Sales taxes: 
    7.00%
      Income taxes: 
    8.97%

Berkeley Heights is a township in Union County, New Jersey, United States. As of the 2010 U.S. Census, the township's population was 13,183, reflecting a decline of 224 (1.7%) from the 13,407 counted in the 2000 Census. The township was named for John Berkeley, 1st Baron Berkeley of Stratton, one of the founders of the Province of New Jersey. In Money magazine's 2013 Best Places to Live rankings, Berkeley Heights was ranked 6th in the nation, the highest among the three places in New Jersey included in the top 50 list. In its 2008 rankings of the "Best Places To Live" New Jersey Monthly magazine ranked Berkeley Heights as the 59th best place to live in the state. The town was listed as the 2nd safest city in New. Jersey as well as the 9th safest town in the country according to a 2022 crime statistic compilation from Safewise.com. The Lenape Native Americans were known to inhabit the region, including the area now known as Berkeley Heights, dating back to the 1524 voyage of Giovanni da Verrazzano to what is now the lower New York Bay. In 1793, a regional government was formed. It encompassed the area from present-day Springfield Township, Summit, New Providence, and Berkeley Heights. In 1809, Springfield Township divided into Springfield Township and New Providence Township. On March 14, 1899, the Borough of New Providence seceded from New. Providence Township and remained as New Providence.

History

Berkeley Heights is the primary city name, but also Berkeley Hts are acceptable city names or spellings. The official name is Township of Berkeley Heights. Berkeley Heights is a rural New Jersey town in Union County. It is home to the Littell-Lord Farmhouse Museum & Farmstead, an 18-acre (73,000 m2) museum surrounding two houses, one of which was built c.1760 and the other near the start of the 19th century. In 1958, part of a Nike missile battery was installed in Berkeley Heights, while the radar station was located in nearby Mountainside. Berkeley Heights is host to a traditional religious feast carried out by members of the Mt. Carmel Society. The feast is capped by the largest fireworks shows in the state of New Jersey. The township owes its rural character to its late development. Until 1941, when the American Telephone and Telegraph Company built the AT&T Bell Laboratories research facility in the township, it was a sleepy farming and farming community. The first European settler was Peter Willcox, who received a 424 acres (1.72 km²) land grant in 1720 from the Elizabethtown Associates. In 1845, David Felt, a paper manufacturer from New York, built a small village around the mill aptly named Feltville. Another early community is the 67-acre Free Acres, believed to have been established in 1910 by a New York entrepreneur and reformer who believed to be Lord John Berkeley, who was co-proprietor of the state from 1664 to 1674. The town's name is thought to have come from an area of town that was referred to by this moniker, which itself was assumed to be derived from Lord Berkeley.

Geography

Berkeley Heights is located in northwestern Union County, at the confluence of Union, Morris, and Somerset Counties. The township is bordered by New Providence and Summit to the east, Scotch Plains to the southeast, Chatham to the north, Watchung to the south, and Warren Township and Long Hill Township to the west. Unincorporated communities, localities and place names located partially or completely within the township include Benders Corners, Glenside Park, Stony Hill and Union Village. Certain portions of Berkeley Heights are located in various flood zones. Downtown is home to more than 20 restaurants which join with the Downtown Beautification Committee to hold an annual Restaurant Week each September. A memorial to the victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks adjoins a wooded area alongside Park Avenue, just southwest of downtown. A brick walk with personalized bricks engraved with the names of many long-time Berkeley Heights residents runs from near the railroad station towards the planned Stratton House development. Some residential homes, as well as some commercial areas along the downtown Springfield Avenue area, are impacted by flooding. The town is located on the crest of the Second Watchung Mountain and in the Passaic River Valley, aptly named as the passaic River forms the township's northern border. It is also located partially in the Raritan Valley region, in which the Green Brook (a tributary of theRaritan River) forms the eastern border near the Watchung Reservation. It has a population of 2,816.

Demographics

As of the 2000 United States Census there were 13,407 people, 4,479 households, and 3,717 families residing in the township. The 2010 U.S. census counted 13,183 people and 4,660 households. The median household income was $132,089 (with a margin of error of +/ $11,331) in 2010 inflation-adjusted dollars. The per capita income for the township was $56,737 (+/ $5,135). About 0.8% of families and 1.4% of the population were below the poverty line, including 1.7% of those under age 18 and 0.7%) in 2010. The 2020 United States census counted13,285 people, 3,718 families in the Township. The racial makeup was 85.64% (11,290) White, 1.49% (197) Black or African American, 0.02% (3) Native American, 10.43% (1,375) Asian,0.00% (0) Pacific Islander, and1.66% (219) from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 5.12% (675) of thePopulation. The average household size was 2.85 and the average family size was 3.26. For every 100 females ages 18 and older there were 87.5 males. The township the population was spread out, with 26.8%. under the age of 18, 5.2% from 18 to 24, 20.5%. from 25 to 44, 30.0% from 45 to 64, and 17.5% who were 65 or older.

Economy

Berkeley Heights is home to the Murray Hill Bell Labs headquarters of Nokia. The transistor, solar cell, laser, and AT&T Unix (precursor to Unix) were invented in this facility. It is also home to L'Oréal USA's New Jersey headquarters. In 2003, Summit Medical Group signed a deal to build its main campus on the site of the former D&B Corporation headquarters located on Diamond Hill Road. Summit Medical group merged with CityMD in 2019 to form Summit Health, which has 2,500 health care providers in the New York City area and Oregon and will be based in New Jersey. It will be the largest health care provider in the U.S. and one of the largest in the world, with more than 1.5 million patients a year. It also has its own hospital, which was built in the 1970s on the former site of D &B's headquarters. It was the first hospital in the United States to be built on a site that was not on the East Coast, and the first in the country to have a hospital on the West Coast. It has been in the same location since the 1950s, when it was part of AT&Ts Bell Labs, and is now home to Nokia's Bell Labs. The Bell Labs campus is located on the east side of the New Jersey Turnpike, near the intersection of New Jersey and New Jersey Avenues. The Turnpikes and the Hudson River are just a short walk from the Bell Labs building.

Arts and culture

Musical groups from Berkeley Heights include the alternative rock band, BEDlight for BlueEYES. Berkeley Heights is a suburb of San Francisco. It is home to the San Francisco Symphony and the Berkeley College of Music. The Berkeley Heights area is known for its arts and culture, including music and theater.

Parks and recreation

Columbia Park boasts tennis courts, two baseball fields, basketball courts, and a large children's play area. Athletic fields are located along Horseshoe Road (Sansone Field) and along Springfield Avenue (Passaic River Park) There are three swimming clubs located in Berkeley Heights: the Berkeley Heights Community Pool (Locust Avenue), the Berkeley Swim Club (behind Columbia Park), and Berkeley Aquatic (off of Springfield Avenue). The Watchung Reservation has hiking trails, horseback riding trails, a large lake (Lake Surprise), the deserted community of Feltville and picnic areas. The Passaic River Parkway is in the township and maintained by Union County. The township is home to the Bergen County Medical Examiner's Office, which conducts autopsies on the elderly and the disabled. It is also the home of the New Jersey Department of Health and Human Services, which provides health care services to the elderly, the disabled, and the chronically ill. The Bergen Medical Examiner also provides health services for the homeless and the elderly. It also provides care for the sick and elderly, as well as mental health services such as addiction and substance abuse treatment. The town is also home to New Jersey's oldest public library, which was established in 1872. It was the first public library in the United States and is now the second oldest in the state. The library is located on the corner of Locust Avenue and Springfield Avenue, and is open to the public every day. It has a large number of sports fields, including tennis, baseball, and basketball courts.

Government

Berkeley Heights is located in the 7th Congressional District and is part of New Jersey's 21st state legislative district. The Mayor of Berkeley Heights is Democrat Angie D. Devanney, whose term of office ends on December 31, 2022. Union County is governed by a Board of County Commissioners, whose nine members are elected at-large to three-year terms of office on a staggered basis with an appointed County Manager overseeing the day-to-day operations of the county. As of May 18, 2017, there were a total of 3,368 registered voters in Berkeley Heights Township, of which 2,387 (25.0% vs. 45.5% statewide) were registered as Republicans. There were 3,780 (39.5%) registered as Unaffiliated with the U.S. Electoral College. In the 2016 presidential election, Hillary Clinton received 3,48% of the vote (vs. 3.94% of Donald Trump), with 3359 votes ahead of Trump, with 65% of county voters ahead of him. The Township Committee has been replaced with a Township Council comprised of six members elected to staggered, three year terms. The responsibilities of the Township Administrator are unchanged. The Council President serves as Acting Mayor in the Mayor's absence; the Council Vice President serves in the absence of both the Mayor and the Council President. For the 117th United States Congress, New Jersey is represented by Tom Malinowski (D, Rocky Hill) and Bob Menendez (Harrison, term ends 2025). For the 2022-2023 session, the 21st Legislative District of the New Jersey Legislature is represented in the State Senate by Jon Bramnick (R, Westfield) and in the General Assembly by Michele Matsikoudis.

Education

The Berkeley Heights Public Schools serves students in pre-kindergarten through twelfth grade. As of the 202021 school year, the district, comprised of six schools, had an enrollment of 2,499 students and 230.2 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a studentteacher ratio of 10.9:1. The district's high school serves public school students of Berkeley Heights, along with approximately 300 students from neighboring Borough of Mountainside. Governor Livingston provides programs for deaf, hard of hearing and cognitively-impaired students in the district and those who are enrolled from all over north-central New Jersey who attend on a tuition basis. FlexSchool, a private school for twice-exceptional and gifted fifth through tw 12th graders, is the only private secondary school in Berkeley Heights. The Westminster Nursery School is located at the corner of Plainfield Avenue and Mountain Avenue. The Union Village Nursery is located bordering Warren Township at the corners of Mountain Avenue and Hillcrest Road. The Diamond Hill Montessori is located along Diamond Hill Road opposite McMane Avenue and Primrose on Springfield Avenue. There are four private pre-Kinderg preschool schools in the area. The school district is part of a sending/receiving relationship with the Mountainside School District that is covered by an agreement that runs through the end of 2021-2022 school year. New Jersey Monthly magazine's September 2018 cover story on the state's "Top Public High Schools" listed Governor Livingston as the 30th-ranked public high school in New Jersey.

Infrastructure

As of May 2010, the township had a total of 65.73 miles (105.78 km) of roadways, of which 50.46 miles (81.21 km) were maintained by the municipality and 12.11 miles (19.49 km) by Union County. The most significant highway serving Berkeley Heights is Interstate 78, which runs from New York City to Pennsylvania. The Summit Medical Group, located on Mountain Avenue, is the main medical facility in Berkeley Heights. The all-volunteer Rescue Squad provides emergency medical services to the township seven days per week. The library is a member of the Infolink region of libraries, the Morris Union Federation (MUF) and the Middlesex Union Reciprocal Agreement Libraries (MURAL) New Jersey Transit offers local bus service on the 986 route. Lakeland Bus Lines also provides commuter bus service to the Port Authority Bus Terminal in Midtown Manhattan and a connection to Gladstone. Newark Liberty International Airport is approximately 18 miles (29 km) east of Berkeley Heights, and the closest hospital emergency room is Overlook Hospital in Summit. As of April 2019, the squad had 60 riding members including college and high school students of which 32 are certified EMTs. The closest trauma centers are Morristown Medical Center (in MorristOWN) and University Hospital in Newark. The township is home to a volunteer fire department commanded by Chief James Hopkins. The fire department has members trained to respond to technical rescue and hazardous materials releases. It is located at the corner of Snyder Avenue and Locust Avenue.

Air Quality, Water Quality, Superfund Sites & UV Index

The Air Quality index is in Berkeley Heights, Union County, New Jersey = 2.8. These Air Quality index is based on annual reports from the EPA. Higher values are better (100=best). The number of ozone alert days is used as an indicator of air quality, as are the amounts of seven pollutants including particulates, carbon monoxide, sulfur dioxide, lead, and volatile organic chemicals. The Water Quality Index is 13. A measure of the quality of an area’s water supply as rated by the EPA. Higher values are better (100=best). The EPA has a complex method of measuring the watershed quality, using 15 indicators such as pollutants, turbidity, sediments, and toxic discharges. The Superfund Sites Index is 20. Higher is better (100=best). Based upon the number and impact of EPA Superfund pollution sites in the county, including spending on the cleanup efforts. The UV Index in Berkeley Heights = 3.8 and is a measure of an area's exposure to the sun's ultraviolet rays. This is most often a combination of sunny weather, altitude, and latitude. The UV Index has been defined by the WHO (www.who.int/news-room/questions-and-answers/item/radiation-the-ultraviolet-(uv)-index) and is uniform worldwide.

Employed

The most recent city population of 1,032 individuals with a median age of 40.3 age the population dropped by -0.27% in Berkeley Heights, Union County, New Jersey population since 2000 and are distributed over a density of 2,135.9 residents per square mile of area (824.7/km²). There are average 2.88 people per household in the 4,477 households with an average household income of $128,617 a year. The unemployment rate in Alabama is 9.50% of the available work force and has dropped -3.41% over the most recent 12-month period and the projected change in job supply over the next decade based on migration patterns, economic growth, and other factors will increase by 23.68%. The number of physicians in Berkeley Heights per 100,000 population = 225.4.

Weather

The annual rainfall in Berkeley Heights = 48.4 inches and the annual snowfall = 27.7 inches. The annual number of days with measurable precipitation (over .01 inch) = 116. The average number of days per year that are predominantly sunny = 205. 86 degrees Fahrenheit is the average daily high temperature for the month of July and 22.8 degrees Fahrenheit is the average daily low temperature for the month of January. The Comfort Index (higher=better) is 46, where higher values mean a more pleasant climate. The Comfort Index measure recognizes that humidity by itself isn't the problem. (Have you noticed nobody ever complains about the weather being 'cold and humid?) It's in the summertime that we notice the humidity the most, when it's hot and muggy. Our Comfort Index uses a combination of afternoon summer temperature and humidity to closely predict the effect that the humidity will have on people.

Median Home Cost

The percentage of housing units in Berkeley Heights, Union County, New Jersey which are owned by the occupant = 88.93%. A housing unit is a house, apartment, mobile home, or room occupied as separate living quarters. The average age of homes = 46 years with median home cost = $501,930 and home appreciation of 2.10%. This is the value of the years most recent home sales data. Its important to note that this is not the average (or arithmetic mean). The median home price is the middle value when you arrange all the sales prices of homes from lowest to highest. This is a better indicator than the average, because the median is not changed as much by a few unusually high or low values. The property tax rate of $25.06 shown here is the rate per $1,000 of home value. If for simplification for example the tax rate is $14.00 and the home value is $250,000, the property tax would be $14.00 x ($250,000/1000), or $3500. This is the 'effective' tax rate.

Study

The local school district spends $8,657 per student. There are 12.5 students for each teacher in the school, 754 students for each Librarian and 457 students for each Counselor. 5.76% of the area’s population over the age of 25 with an Associate Degree or other 2-year college degree, 28.88% with a master’s degree, Ph.D. or other advanced college degree and 22.98% with high school diplomas or high school equivalency degrees (GEDs).

  • Berkeley Heights's population in Union County, New Jersey of 2,759 residents in 1930 has dropped 0,37-fold to 1,032 residents after 120 years, according to the official 2020 census.

    Approximately 52.08% female residents and 47.92% male residents live in Berkeley Heights, Union County, New Jersey.

    As of 2020 in Berkeley Heights, Union County, New Jersey are married and the remaining 29.40% are single population.

  • 32.7 minutes is the average time that residents in Berkeley Heights require for a one-way commute to work. A long commute can have different effects on health. A Gallup poll in the US found that in terms of mental health, long haul commuters are up to 12 percent more likely to experience worry, and ten percent less likely to feel well rested. The Gallup poll also found that of people who commute 61­–90 minutes each day, a whopping one third complained of neck and back pain, compared to less than a quarter of people who only spend ten minutes getting to work.

    76.92% of the working population which commute to work alone in their car, 3.93% of the working population which commutes to work in a carpool, 10.44% of the population that commutes using mass transit, including bus, light rail, subway, and ferry. 5.70% of the population that has their home as their principal place of work.

  • Of the total residential buildings in Berkeley Heights, Union County, New Jersey, 88.93% are owner-occupied homes, another 8.25% are rented apartments, and the remaining 2.82% are vacant.

  • The 62.34% of the population in Berkeley Heights, Union County, New Jersey who identify themselves as belonging to a religion are distributed among the following most diverse religions.

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