New Jersey (U.S. state)
New Jersey is a geographically small state on the northeastern coast of the United States of America. It has the highest average density of people per square mile in the entire nation[1] The state is dominated by two major urban areas, one in the middle of the state across the Hudson River from New York, New York and another farther south across the Delaware River from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania that includes the state capital of Trenton, New Jersey.
Broadcast media in the state is typically sourced from either New York City or Philadelphia, and state-wide political campaigns must target both markets. The more densely urban areas in a belt across the center of the state between the two urban nexuses (in the corridor running from New York to Philly) tend to vote Democrat, and the more suburban and rural areas tend to vote Republican. The state has recently had governors from both parties. The two state senators have been Democrats in recent decades, and most (but not all) of the U.S. congressional representatives as well.
New Jersey is bordered on the south by Delaware (mostly across the Delaware Bay); on the west by Pennsylvania; on the north by New York state; and on the east by the Atlantic Ocean.
New Jersey was one of the original thirteen states of the U.S. Its state motto is "The Garden State", and despite dense suburban sprawl, it still has numerous farms and wooded lands.
As of 2022, all aspects of reproductive choice including abortion are protected by law.[2]
There are strict gun registration laws (no open carry).
Due to past industrial activity, New Jersey has had more Superfund toxic waste sites than any other state in the union--and this despite it's small geographic size. Fewer than a quarter of New Jersey’s Superfund sites--35 out of about 150 that have been on the EPA’s list at various times since the law was passed in 1980--have actually been cleaned up.
In 2022, the Sales Tax rate was 6.625%. It is a "progressive" sales tax, in that certain items are exempt from sales tax, such as food, clothing, drugs, and manufacturing machinery. Also, certain specially designated Urban Enterprise Zones have their rate cut in half (in 2022, these zones existed in parts of Elizabeth, Bridgeton, Camden, Newark, Trenton, Plainfield, New Brunswick and Gloucester City).
Residential land is scarce, and property taxes tend to be high relative to other parts of the United States.
About a third of adults in the state identify as Catholic, another third as Christian, and the remaining third divided between various world religions on the one hand and agnostic/atheistic leanings on the other hand[3].
See also
References
- ↑ In 2020, the state had an average of 1,134.5 people per square mile. The sparsest state, Montana, only has an average of just 6.86 people per square mile.
- ↑ Text of the reproductive choice law passed by NJ in 2022, from the state of NJ website, last access 12/9/2022
- ↑ Religious Landscape of New Jersey since 2000, by Pew Research.