Data from the 2020 Census Bureau which have just been released show B’H a significant increase over the previous 2010 Census in the number of people in the major religious Jewish communities in the Northeast of the United States.

The data included a sharp increase of 45% in the population of Lakewood, N.J. which has risen from 92,843 to 135,138 people in the past decade, making it the state’s fifth-largest city.

Figures from the census released Thursday show that Kiryas Joel, N.Y grew by a booming 63% in the last decade, pushing its population past that of the nearby cities of Middletown and Newburgh and of towns much larger than the 1.5-square-mile Hasidic village, which has risen from a few dozen families in the 1970’s to over 33,000 people B’H. More than 3,500 condominiums are being built or planned in the village’s limited remaining space to help meet the constant housing demand.

The census data for Monsey and Spring Valley show a growth from 49,710 in 2010 to a current population of 60,020, a rise of over 20% in the last decade B’H.

Brooklyn’s population increased by over 230,000 people in the past decade, marking the biggest increase of any borough in New York City, and far outpacing expectations, according to the newly released data.

The current census will be used by local government to determine where to build everything from schools to supermarkets, and from homes to hospitals. The census assists government decisions on how to allocate funds and assistance to states and localities.