Union County, New Jersey: Government Structure and Services
Union County occupies 536 square miles in northeastern New Jersey and comprises 21 municipalities, ranging from the city of Elizabeth — the county seat and largest city — to small boroughs such as Fanwood and Mountainside. The county operates under New Jersey's Board of County Commissioners form of government, a structure distinct from the elected freeholder board model that governed New Jersey counties prior to 2021 statutory changes. Understanding Union County's administrative framework is relevant to residents, contractors, applicants for public services, and researchers examining New Jersey county government structure.
Definition and scope
Union County was established by the New Jersey Legislature on March 19, 1857, carved from Essex County. As a New Jersey county, it functions as an administrative subdivision of state government, not a sovereign entity. The county's governing body — the Board of County Commissioners — consists of 9 members elected to 3-year staggered terms from three districts, each district electing 3 commissioners. The Board exercises authority over the county budget, road maintenance, corrections, social services, and parks, within limits set by New Jersey statute (N.J.S.A. Title 40).
The county administrator, a professional appointed position, manages day-to-day operations across county departments. Union County maintains a separate county clerk office, sheriff's office, surrogate's court, and prosecutor's office — each led by independently elected officials operating outside the Board's direct control.
Scope and coverage limitations: This page addresses Union County's governmental structure under New Jersey state law. Federal programs administered locally (such as FEMA disaster assistance or HUD housing funds) operate under separate federal frameworks not governed by Union County ordinance. Municipal-level governance within Union County — including zoning, local police, and school board operations — falls under individual municipal charters and is addressed separately under New Jersey municipal government. Services provided by New Jersey state agencies within Union County, such as New Jersey State Police operations or New Jersey Department of Transportation highway projects, are governed by state authority, not county authority.
How it works
Union County government delivers services through a departmental structure supervised by the county administrator. Core departments include:
- Department of Human Services — administers public assistance, disability services, and veteran benefits in coordination with the New Jersey Department of Human Services
- Department of Public Works — maintains approximately 300 miles of county roads and bridges
- Department of Parks and Recreation — manages 36 park areas covering over 6,700 acres, including Watchung Reservation
- County Clerk's Office — records deeds, mortgages, and other land instruments; administers elections at the county level in coordination with the New Jersey elections administration framework
- Prosecutor's Office — Union County Prosecutor handles criminal prosecution under New Jersey law, operating independently from the Board of County Commissioners
- Sheriff's Office — provides civil process service, courthouse security, and operates the county jail
- Surrogate's Court — handles probate, guardianship, and estate administration matters
Budgeting follows the New Jersey state budget process calendar, with the county required to adopt an annual budget compliant with state Department of Community Affairs (N.J.A.C. 5:30) fiscal regulations. Property tax levy authority is bounded by the state's 2 percent annual cap established under P.L. 2010, c. 44 (New Jersey Division of Local Government Services).
Common scenarios
Residents and professionals interact with Union County government across predictable transaction types:
- Property records searches: Conducted through the County Clerk's recorded documents system; instruments dating to the county's 1857 founding are archived, with digital access available for more recent filings
- Public records requests: Filed under the New Jersey Open Public Records Act (OPRA), with the designated records custodian varying by department
- Contractor licensing and permits: County-level construction on public property requires compliance with New Jersey's procurement and contracting standards; individual municipal building permits are issued by the 21 municipalities, not the county
- Election administration: The County Clerk administers voter registration and ballot management for all Union County municipalities, coordinating with the New Jersey Election Law Enforcement Commission on campaign finance oversight
- Social services eligibility: Union County's Division of Social Services determines eligibility for state-federal programs including SNAP, Medicaid (administered through New Jersey Department of Human Services), and General Assistance
Adjacent counties — Essex County, Middlesex County, Morris County, and Somerset County — share boundaries with Union County and operate independent boards of commissioners with no jurisdictional authority over Union County residents or property.
Decision boundaries
Union County authority applies within its 536 square miles but stops at several distinct lines:
County vs. Municipal: The 21 municipalities within Union County retain independent authority over zoning, local police departments, and municipal courts. Elizabeth, with a population exceeding 130,000 per the 2020 U.S. Census, operates its own city government and is accessible as a named entity through Elizabeth, New Jersey. Union City, despite its name, is located in Hudson County — not Union County — a distinction that generates persistent jurisdictional confusion (Union City, New Jersey).
County vs. State: State agencies set minimum standards that county operations must meet. The New Jersey Department of Corrections sets standards for the Union County jail; the New Jersey Department of Education governs the 16 school districts operating within county borders, tracked separately under New Jersey school districts.
County vs. Regional: The New Jersey Meadowlands Commission does not extend into Union County. However, regional planning bodies and authorities such as the New Jersey infrastructure authorities and New Jersey Transit governance operate within Union County on a service-area basis independent of county commission control.
The primary entry point for navigating New Jersey's full governmental architecture — including Union County's position within it — is available through the New Jersey Government Authority index.
References
- Union County, New Jersey — Official County Website
- N.J.S.A. Title 40 — Counties and Municipalities, New Jersey Legislature
- New Jersey Division of Local Government Services — Fiscal Regulations (N.J.A.C. 5:30)
- New Jersey Division of Local Government Services — Property Tax Levy Cap (P.L. 2010, c. 44)
- New Jersey Open Public Records Act (OPRA) — Government Records Council
- New Jersey Election Law Enforcement Commission
- U.S. Census Bureau — 2020 Decennial Census, New Jersey
- New Jersey Department of Community Affairs