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Warning Signs of Alcohol Abuse |
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New Jersey Population, Income, Education, Employment, and Federal Funds
New Jersey Population |
|
Total |
Year |
1980 |
7,365,011 |
1990 |
7,730,188 |
2000 |
8,414,350 |
2009 (latest estimates) |
8,707,739 |
New Jersey Income |
|
Total |
New Jersey Per-capita income (2008 dollars) |
2007 |
50,364 |
2008 |
51,473 |
Percent change |
-1.6 |
|
New Jersey Earnings per job (2008 dollars) |
2007 |
61,703 |
2008 |
59,910 |
Percent change |
-2.9 |
|
New Jersey Poverty rate (percent) |
1979 |
9.5 |
1989 |
7.6 |
1999 |
8.5 |
2008 (latest model-based estimates) |
8.7 |
New Jersey Education (Persons 25 and older) |
|
Total |
New Jersey Percent not completing high school |
1980 |
32.6 |
1990 |
23.3 |
2000 |
17.9 |
|
New Jersey Percent completing high school only |
1980 |
35.9 |
1990 |
31.1 |
2000 |
29.4 |
|
New Jersey Percent completing some college |
1980 |
13.2 |
1990 |
20.7 |
2000 |
22.9 |
|
New Jersey Percent completing college |
1980 |
18.3 |
1990 |
24.9 |
2000 |
29.8 |
New Jersey Employment |
|
Total |
New Jersey Total number of jobs |
2007 |
5,128,037 |
2008 |
5,176,293 |
|
New Jersey Percent employment change |
2006-2007 |
0.2 |
2007-2008 |
-0.2 |
2008-2009 |
-3.3 |
|
New Jersey Unemployment rate (percent) |
2008 |
5.5 |
2009 |
<
9.2 |
New Jersey Federal Funds, FY 2008 |
|
Total |
New Jersey Federal funding, dollars per person |
New Jersey All Federal funds |
8,624 |
|
New Jersey Federal funding by purpose |
New Jersey Agriculture and natural resources |
5 |
New Jersey Community resources |
1,230 |
New Jersey Defense and space |
907 |
New Jersey Human resources |
168 |
New Jersey Income security |
5,486 |
New Jersey National functions |
827 |
|
New Jersey Federal funding by type of payments |
New Jersey Grants |
1,621 |
New Jersey Direct loans |
73 |
New Jersey Guaranteed/insured loans |
1,018 |
New Jersey Retirement/disability payments |
2,601 |
New Jersey Other direct payments to
individuals |
1,717 |
New Jersey Direct payments, not to
individuals |
59 |
New Jersey Procurement contracts |
1,034 |
New Jersey Salaries and wages |
500 |
New Jersey Organic Agriculture
|
|
2008 |
Number of certified operations |
67 |
New Jersey Crops (acres) |
1,680 |
New Jersey Pasture & rangeland (acres) |
8,915 |
New Jersey Total acres |
10,595 |
New Jersey Farm Characteristics
New Jersey 2007 Census of Agriculture |
|
|
2007 |
New Jersey Approximate total land area (acres) |
4,707,863 |
New Jersey Total farmland (acres) |
733,450 |
Percent of total land area |
15.6 |
|
New Jersey Cropland (acres) |
488,697 |
Percent of total farmland |
66.6 |
Percent in pasture |
8.2 |
Percent irrigated |
19.3 |
|
New Jersey Harvested Cropland (acres) |
415,542 |
|
New Jersey Woodland (acres) |
131,312 |
Percent of total farmland |
17.9 |
Percent in pasture |
8.7 |
|
New Jersey Pastureland (acres) |
54,007 |
Percent of total farmland |
7.4 |
|
New Jersey Land in house lots, ponds,
roads, wasteland, etc. (acres) |
59,434 |
Percent of total farmland |
8.1 |
|
New Jersey Conservation practices |
New Jersey Farmland in conservation or
wetlands reserve programs
(acres) |
5,976 |
|
New Jersey Average farm size (acres) |
71 |
|
New Jersey Farms by size (percent) |
1 to 99 acres |
85.3 |
100 to 499 acres |
11.8 |
500 to 999 acres |
1.8 |
1000 to 1,999 acres |
0.9 |
2,000 or more acres |
0.2 |
|
New Jersey Farms by sales (percent) |
Less than $9,999 |
67.3 |
$10,000 to $49,999 |
17.1 |
$50,000 to $99,999 |
4.5 |
$100,000 to $499,999 |
7.2 |
More than $500,000 |
3.9 |
|
New Jersey Tenure of farmers |
New Jersey Full owner (farms) |
8,351 |
Percent of total |
80.9 |
|
New Jersey Part owner (farms) |
1,366 |
Percent of total |
13.2 |
|
New Jersey Tenant owner (farms) |
610 |
Percent of total |
5.9 |
|
New Jersey Farm organization |
New Jersey Individuals/family, sole
proprietorship (farms) |
8,679 |
Percent of total |
84.0 |
|
New Jersey Family-held corporations
(farms) |
726 |
Percent of total |
7.0 |
|
New Jersey Partnerships (farms) |
726 |
Percent of total |
7.0 |
|
New Jersey Non-family corporations (farms) |
103 |
Percent of total |
1.0 |
|
New Jersey Others - cooperative, estate or
trust, institutional, etc. (farms) |
93 |
Percent of total |
0.9 |
|
New Jersey Characteristics of principal farm operators |
Average operator age (years) |
57.1 |
Percent with farming as their
primary occupation |
44.8 |
Men |
8,066 |
Women |
2,261 |
|
New Jersey Farm Financial Indicators
Farm income and value added data |
|
2008 |
|
New Jersey Number of farms |
10,300 |
|
|
Thousands $ |
Final crop output |
937,965 |
+ Final animal output |
178,694 |
+ Services and forestry |
205,985 |
= Final agricultural sector output |
1,322,644 |
|
- Intermediate consumption outlays |
520,267 |
+ Net government transactions |
-69,264 |
= Gross value added |
733,113 |
|
- Capital consumption |
124,757 |
|
= Net value added |
608,356 |
|
- Factor payments |
245,287 |
Employee compensation (total hired labor) |
242,574 |
Net rent received by nonoperator landlords |
-36,476 |
Real estate and nonreal estate interest |
39,189 |
|
= Net farm income |
363,069 |
|
New Jersey Top Commodities, Exports, and Counties
NJ. Top 5 agriculture commodities, 2009 |
|
Value of receipts
thousand $ |
1. Greenhouse/nursery |
380,401 |
2. Horses/mules |
66,000 |
3. Blueberries |
65,260 |
4. Tomatoes |
33,942 |
5. Peaches |
33,660 |
|
All commodities |
1,000,459 |
|
Top 5 agriculture exports, estimates, FY 2009 |
|
Value
million $ |
1. Other |
191.0 |
2. Fruits and preparations |
25.1 |
3. Vegetables and preparations |
22 |
20.8 |
4. Soybeans and products |
19.3 |
5. Wheat and products |
17.2 |
|
Overall rank |
310.7 |
|
Top 5 counties in agricultural sales 2007 |
|
Thousands $ |
1. Cumberland County |
156,939 |
2. Atlantic County |
128,339 |
3. Monmouth County |
105,413 |
4. Gloucester County |
93,883 |
5. Burlington County |
86,302 |
|
State total |
986,885 |
|
State Offices
New Jersey Drug Policy, Enforcement and Government Agencies
Governor's Office
Office of the Governor
State House
Trenton, NJ 08625
(609) 292-6000
State Legislative Contact
Office of Legislative Services
State House, CN 068
Trenton, NJ 08625
(609) 292-4661
State Drug Program Coordinator
Governor's Council on Alcoholism and Drug Abuse
122 West State Street, CN 345
Trenton, NJ 08625
(609) 777-0526
Attorney General's Office
Department of Law and Public Safety
CN 081
Trenton, NJ 08625
(609) 292-4925
Law Enforcement Planning
State Law Enforcement Planning Agency and
Coordination Section
Division of Criminal Justice
CN 085
Trenton, NJ 08625
(609) 292-5939
Crime Prevention Offices
New Jersey Crime Prevention Officers Association
593 Lincoln Avenue
Orange, NJ 07050-2016
(201) 266-4140
New Jersey Department of Community Affairs
Crime Prevention Program
363 West State Street
Trenton, NJ 08625
(609) 292-6110
Statistical Analysis Center
Research and Evaluation
Department of Law and Public Safety
Hughes Justice Complex, CN 085
Trenton, NJ 08625
(609) 984-5693
Uniform Crime Reports Contact
Division of State Police
Box 7068
West Trenton, NJ 08628-0068
(609) 882-2000
BJA Strategy Preparation Agency
Policy and Research Bureau
Division of Criminal Justice
CN 085
Trenton, NJ 08625
(609) 984-0055
Judicial Agency
Administrative Office of the Courts
Hughes Justice Complex
CN 037
Trenton, NJ 08625
(609) 984-0275
Corrections Agency
Department of Corrections
Whittlesey Road
CN 863
Trenton, NJ 08625
(609) 292-4036
RADAR Network Agency
New Jersey State Department of Health
Division of Alcoholism, Drug Abuse and Addiction
Services
129 East Hanover Street
Trenton, NJ 08625
(609) 292-0729
HIV-Prevention Program
Department of Health
AIDS Program
50 East State Street, CN363
Trenton, NJ 08625
(609) 984-6050
Drug and Alcohol Agency
New Jersey State Department of Health
Division of Alcoholism, Drug Abuse and Addiction
Services
CN 362
Trenton, NJ 08625-0362
(609) 292-2737
State Coordinator for Drug-Free Schools
New Jersey State Department of Education
Office of Educational Programs and Student Services
240 West State Street, CN500
Trenton, NJ 08625
(609) 292-5780
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New Jersey
What is considered alcohol abuse in New Jersey? Just like the rest of the country, alcohol abuse in New Jersey can be defined as a pattern of drinking that commonly results in one or more of the following during a twelve-month time period: the failure to attend to important responsibilities at home, work, or school; ongoing alcohol-related difficulties; alcohol-related physical injury; and the experience of recurring alcohol-related legal problems (such as multiple DWIs). Due to the fact that abusive and excessive drinking can eventually turn into alcohol dependency, it is important for all "problem drinkers" to get immediate professional New Jersey alcohol abuse treatment.
Living in New Jersey, you may have heard of a form of alcohol abuse known as "binge drinking". Binge drinking is a type of alcohol abuse that is characterized by the following: a male having five or more drinks at one sitting or a female drinking four or more alcoholic beverages at one drinking occasion. Some people in New Jersey seemingly do not realize that drinking excessively even a few times per year is dangerous and is in fact, a form of alcohol abuse. The danger in getting drunk "only once or twice" per year is this: even though the excessive and abusive drinking may be infrequent, this type of drinking (known as binge drinking) can result in a fatal alcohol overdose.
The number of New Jersey alcohol abuse treatment centers is rising to meet the growing number of individuals with addictions and alcoholism. Alcoholism is nowhere near being a silent issue. Anyone who comes in contact with the alcohol addict is affected. Many times, it is not the alcoholic, but loved ones who first seeks help from a New Jersey alcohol abuse treatment center. Alcohol intervention is becoming more of a norm as society realizes that the alcoholic is extremely reluctant to seek help for themselves.
Signs of alcohol abuse include
Separating self from family and friends
Increase in lying and other unwanted behavior
Irrational and unpredictable behavior
More temper outbursts
Alcohol abuse and alcoholism in New Jersey often leads to criminal behavior. Loved ones of alcoholics often begin to cover up for the alcoholic, thus enabling them to continue. It is an ugly, vicious cycle, and one that New Jersey alcohol abuse treatment would like to end.
There are several different alcohol abuse treatment recovery programs available, and most are put together specifically for each individual. Alcohol detox is usually the first order of business. From there, the alcoholic may attend outpatient services, or may be asked to participate with in-patient programs. Alcohol abuse treatment programs in New Jersey are tailor made to each individual. There is no one combination of treatments that works for everyone.
What can you expect in a New Jersey alcohol abuse treatment program? The first phase is often alcohol detox. For any alcoholic, undergoing alcohol detox in a qualified alcohol rehab center is a far better option than simply throwing away all the bottles and attempting to stoically endure the aftermath alone. Many alcoholics suffer from other physical or emotional problems which may surface after the mask of alcohol is removed. If alcohol detox is attempted without the help of an alcohol detox center, these problems could become serious or even life-threatening. Alcohol detox should be undertaken with care and forethought. Mismanaged or poorly supervised, it could do great harm to the patient and result in problems equal to or even greater than the original substance abuse. Properly managed, alcohol detox is the start of recovery.
There is no question learning about staying clean and alcohol addiction greatly improves a person's chances of long term recovery. By going into a New Jersey alcohol rehab center, a person gains the knowledge, tools and assistance to help them stay clean. There are all different types of New Jersey alcohol rehab centers. They vary in size, philosophy, services and the kind of treatment modalities they offer their clientele. Going to an alcohol rehab center is the easiest surest way to stay clean and off drugs for 30 days, which is considered the toughest period of time in recovery.
Year |
Total vs. Alcohol Related Fatalities in New Jersey |
Tot |
Alc-Rel |
% |
0.08+ |
% |
1982 |
1,061 |
622 |
59 |
515 |
49 |
1983 |
932 |
494 |
53 |
434 |
47 |
1984 |
922 |
451 |
49 |
380 |
41 |
1985 |
964 |
479 |
50 |
408 |
42 |
1986 |
1,039 |
490 |
47 |
394 |
38 |
1987 |
1,023 |
435 |
43 |
357 |
35 |
1988 |
1,051 |
457 |
43 |
392 |
37 |
1989 |
891 |
384 |
43 |
315 |
35 |
1990 |
886 |
366 |
41 |
304 |
34 |
1991 |
783 |
320 |
41 |
268 |
34 |
1992 |
763 |
280 |
37 |
222 |
29 |
1993 |
789 |
290 |
37 |
227 |
29 |
1994 |
761 |
289 |
38 |
251 |
33 |
1995 |
774 |
277 |
36 |
223 |
29 |
1996 |
814 |
283 |
35 |
229 |
28 |
1997 |
775 |
278 |
36 |
222 |
29 |
1998 |
741 |
267 |
36 |
207 |
28 |
1999 |
726 |
283 |
39 |
240 |
33 |
2000 |
731 |
322 |
44 |
271 |
37 |
2001 |
745 |
285 |
38 |
235 |
32 |
2002 |
771 |
281 |
36 |
240 |
31 |
2003 |
747 |
275 |
37 |
240 |
32 |
2004 |
731 |
270 |
37 |
227 |
31 |
2005 |
748 |
263 |
35 |
217 |
29 |
2006 |
771 |
285 |
37 |
224 |
29 |
2007 |
724 |
253 |
35 |
199 |
27 |
2008 |
590 |
197 |
33 |
154 |
26 |
New Jersey DUI Penalties
First-time DUI conviction, BAC .08-.10
- Maximum 30 days in jail
- $250-400 in fines
- 3 month license suspension
First-time DUI conviction BAC above .10
- Maximum 30 days in jail
- $300-500 in jail
- 7 months-1 year license suspension
Second DUI conviction (within 10 years)
- 2-90 days in jail
- $500-1000 in fines
- 2-year license suspension
- Mandatory installation of ignition interlock device
Third DUI conviction (anytime)
- 180 days-5 years in jail
- $1000 fine
- 10-year license suspension
- Mandatory installation of ignition interlock device
Breath Test Refusal Penalties
- First refusal: 7 months- 1 year license suspension
- Second refusal: Permanent driver's license revocation
New Jersey Alcohol Statistics Alcohol-Impaired Driving Fatality Data 2008 Alcohol-Impaired Driving Fatalities: | 154 | Youth Under 21 Alcohol-Impaired Driving Fatalities: | 17 | Alcohol-Impaired Driving Fatalities per 100,000 population | | Total All Ages: | 1.8 | Youth Under 21: | 0.7 | 1998-2008 Percent Change in Alcohol-Impaired Driving Fatalities per 100,000 Population | | Total All Ages: | -18.4 | Youth Under 21: | -37.1 | Hardcore Drunk Drivers Alcohol-Impaired Driving Fatalities Involving High BAC Drivers (.15+): | 73% | Alcohol-Impaired Driving Fatalities Involving Repeat Offenders by BAC level | | BAC .08 - .14: | 10% | BAC .15+: | 90% | Youth Alcohol Consumption Data 2006-2007 (12-20 Year Olds) Consumed Alcohol in the Past Month: | 29.5% | Binge Drinking in the Past Month: | 20.0% | Arrest Data 2008 Driving Under the Influence | | Under 18: | 342 | Total All Ages: | 24,313 | Liquor Laws | | Under 18: | 2,560 | Total All Ages: | 7,683 | Drunkenness | | Under 18: | 4 | Total All Ages: | 607 |
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New Jersey Jersey Shore star Snooki was hospitalized for alcohol poisoning
NEW JERSEY - Jersey Shore star Nicole “Snooki” Polizzi was rushed to a Miami hospital during the filming of the show's second season in May, according to startling new revelations from Rad
More | | New Bill Would Require New Jersey Drivers to Submit Alcohol Sobriety Tests
NEW JERSEY -- The New Jersey legislature is considering a bill that would make it mandatory for any driver involved in a traffic accident where a fatality or a serious injury occurred to take a sobrie
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Alcohol Treatment Centers by City in New Jersey Listed Alphabetically: | | Quick Drug Facts |
More than 70,000 students between the ages of 18 and 24 are victims of alcohol-related sexual assault or rape.
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What are the differences among alcoholic beverages? Beer, wine, and spirits contain different quantities of ethanol by weight or volume. Beer contains roughly 4-6% ethanol; wine, 10-13%; and spirits, 20-50%, with the majority being around 40% (80 proof). Some beverages are "lite" (beers and wines containing lower concentrations of ethanol), while some are "light" (in color) - white wine, vodka, gin, tequila. There is some evidence that these produce less hangover than darker beverages - red wine, bourbon, scotch. There is no evidence that people become addicted to spirits more readily than to beer or wine. Spirits, however, are more likely to produce death in overdose situations.
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The United States has the highest minimum drinking age in the entire world.
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According to one study, malt-liquor drinkers are more likely to be homeless, unemployed, or receiving public assistance than those who drink other alcoholic beverages. The study also concluded that malt-liquor drinkers consumed more alcohol than other drinkers, in part because malt liquor has a higher alcohol content than beer and is sold in larger containers.
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