Kids & Family
East Hanover, Florham Park About Average in Charity Donations
Towns in the county and state also give more of their income to charity.

According to the Chronicle of Philanthropy's report on "How America Gives," East Hanover and Florham Park are close to the national average when it comes to donating to charity.
Based on data from 2008, the most recent available, in states like Utah and Mississippi the typical household gives 7 percent or more of its income to charity after taxes, housing, food, and other living expenses, while the average resident in Massachusetts and three other New England states gives less than 3 percent, on average, the report says.
Both towns fell slightly below the Morris County average, but above New Jersey average in median contributions. For percent of income given, both towns were below both state and county average. However, both towns' median discretionary income averaged more than the county and state. The United States averaged 4.7 percent of its income given per household, while East Hanover was at 3.3 percent and Florham Park at 2.9 percent. Morris County averaged 4.0 percent and New Jersey 3.7 percent.
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In East Hanover and Florham Park, the breakdown is as follows:
Philanthropy in East Hanover and Florham Park
East HanoverFlorham Park Morris County New Jersey Total Contributions $10 million $10 million $374.8 million $4.5 billion Median Contribution $2,304 $2,225 $2,288 $2,181 Median Discretionary Income $69,331 $77,457 $57,027 $59,113 Percent of Income Given 3.3% 2.9% 4.0% 3.7 percent
The study provides detail down to the ZIP-code level about the relative generosity of states, cities, and towns based on the share of discretionary income they give after.
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Religious Effect
Many cities and states in the Northeast, the least-religious region of the country, make up the bottom of 3 percent or less of their discretionary income to charity, according to the report. New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Maine, Vermont, New Jersey, and Rhode Island are the least-generous states, the report says.
But according to the chart released with the report, when religion is factored out of the giving picture the northeast rises to the top of the philanthropic chain. The chart is attached to this article.
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