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Fanciest Postal Code Is About To Be Split Up

By GARY SHAPIRO, Staff Reporter of the Sun | March 19, 2007

The swankiest zip code in New York is about to get even more exclusive. The U.S. Postal Service has plans to announce that the affluent neighborhood now identified by the 10021 zip code — stretching between East 61st and East 80th streets, from Central Park to the East River — will be divided into three zip codes in July, leaving 10021 for roughly a third of its original area.

"Too many people" is a reason for the change, Rep. Carolyn Maloney said, adding that was also why the Upper East Side needs the Second Avenue subway. She met with a postal district manager, Robert Daruk, on Friday. Ms. Maloney said, "Pretty soon the other two numbers will be just as honored and prestigious" as 10021.

Not everyone agrees. "This is a puzzle to me," said the co-chairwoman of Defenders of the Historic Upper East Side, Teri Slater. Ms. Slater said 10021 was widely considered "the zip code" to live in on the Upper East Side. She joked that like Gaul, it was being divided into three parts. She said the post office would have to demonstrate a real need. "I don't think this is going to sit favorably with many people," she said.

An Upper East Side resident and president of a co-op on East 79th Street, Theodore Siouris, said people in his neighborhood have expressed concern over no longer being in the 10021 zip code.

Council Member Jessica Lappin said, "I would imagine many feel attached to the 10021 zip code." The neighborhood has a reputation for fierce resistance to change. In recent months it has resisted the expansion of the Whitney Museum, which now plans a new branch in Chelsea instead; raised an outcry against a proposed glass tower by Norman Foster at 980 Madison Avenue, which the Landmarks Preservation Commission ultimately rejected; and expressed concern over turning the Seventh Regiment Armory into a Park Avenue performing arts space.

Ms. Lappin said that like the 212 area code, 10021 has cachet. In 1999 there was a stir in some areas of Manhattan when the interloper 646 was introduced, 14 years after 718 entered use.

Just how wealthy are 10021 residents? According to a nonprofit organization called Public Campaign, nearly 40% of the households have incomes of $100,000 or over. According to its Color of Money project, 10021 was the top zip code for contributions nationwide to federal election campaigns in 2000 and 2002, donating $28.4 million. That amount is more than the total from the 532 zip codes nationwide with the largest percent of African Americans combined, or from the 533 zip codes nationwide with the largest percent of Latinos combined.

Ms. Maloney said the most important issue is that everyone wants to get his or her mail on time. Ms. Slater suggested stemming the flow of junk mail instead. A spokeswoman for the USPS, Pat McGovern, said the growth in the number of addresses and the volume of mail in the neighborhood are prompting the two additional zip codes. Without describing exactly where the cutoff will be, she said the middle area would remain 10021; the area to the south would be 10065 and to the north would be 10075. She said the mail for all three zip codes would still operate out of the Lenox Hill Station on East 70th Street.

The president of the East 79th Street Neighborhood Association and a longtime community leader, Betty Cooper Wallerstein, said she could understand why the zip code change would be made. She said a contributing cause was more tall buildings appearing on "each postage-stamp-size lot" on the Upper East Side. She suggested, akin to telemarketer's "no call lists," a federal system to eliminate all the extra mail people neither requested nor wanted.

She said her building installed a larger waste can to hold all the junk mail.

Ms. Maloney said moving mail screening from FDR Station to the main post office has helped delivery. She said also that the postal service has said it is addressing her constituents' complaints about long lines and vending machine problems at the Peter Stuyvesant post office further downtown.

Changes have occurred previously on the East Side. The zip code 10128, which runs from East 87 to East 96th Street, was carved out of 10028 in 1983. And compared with the 20 blocks covered by the 10021 zip code, 10028 covers just a six-block sliver from East 81st through East 86th streets.


Reader comments on this article

Comment By Date

I lived on E 20th St in the 70's and 80's. Had the misfortune to be served by the Peter... [MORE]

Bob Levine 

Mar 19, 2007 07:20

I can't believe what I am reading about some numbers. First of all its not that big of a deal... [MORE]

Not stuck up NewYorker 

Mar 20, 2007 15:40

Gee, when the zip codes are split are they going to contract out these routes? [MORE]

larry the mailman 

Mar 19, 2007 09:49

I'm sure that stemming the flow of unwanted solicitations would certainly make a difference. Another great idea would be to... [MORE]

Ed Lehane 

Mar 19, 2007 12:50

I can't believe people are actually concerned about this at all. Never mind wasting time to write it and paper... [MORE]

L. M. 

Mar 19, 2007 13:11

Typical of the snobs. Give up your precious status symbol and join the rest of America. [MORE]

common sense 

Mar 19, 2007 13:16

Hey - I'm not a snob. But I am a third generation Manhattanite and my granparents, parents, and myself have... [MORE]

Shauna 

Mar 20, 2007 13:41

To you suburbanites or exurbanites all over the US of A, there's no difference between driveways. Not even the junk... [MORE]

Driveways Anonymous 

Mar 23, 2007 11:32

Maybe they can write "Upper East Side" instead of "New York" in their address, if they must demonstrate their superiority... [MORE]

Rhywun 

Mar 20, 2007 01:49

When one looks at the present 10021 Zip code its clear that the area contains some of the most upscale... [MORE]

LS 

Mar 20, 2007 22:43

I HAVE LIVED HERE(EAST 66TH. STREET) FOR MORE THAN 20 YEARS. THE IDEA OF HAVING TO CHANGE MY ZIP CODE... [MORE]

SUSAN BAYER-WAITE 

Mar 21, 2007 12:25

Zip codes are just the way that the post office does business. I am sorry that some people have used... [MORE]

Danielle 

Mar 21, 2007 14:44

I just think that it's absolutely outrageous to simply change a zip code like that. I live in the area... [MORE]

Eloise 

Mar 21, 2007 17:13

I just put a deposit down on an apartment four blocks south on East 75th Street. I will not tolerate... [MORE]

Varlery Carter 

Mar 24, 2007 20:10

It's obvious what's going on here. If you look up Presidential campaign contributions, you'll see that 10021 is the zip... [MORE]

Haywood Jablowmee 

Apr 16, 2007 04:17

I lived in 10028 and remember when we became 10128. But at least it was a "related" zip code. In... [MORE]

Emese Latkoczy 

Apr 25, 2007 16:20

I live on east 88th St. and also remember when we were designated 2 zips, because of over crowding. That... [MORE]

pat murray 

Oct 29, 2007 08:03

Yet another example of how the wealthy have little perspective on what's important. And yes, I live in manhattan, but... [MORE]

Jae 

May 10, 2007 19:04

Primary, it's not the zip code that makes a neighborhood fancy or not. The only thing that's kind of a... [MORE]

Unknown 

Jul 2, 2007 15:04

To all those people who are fretting: get a life-- to think you could be so impacted by a number! [MORE]

Simon 

Jul 12, 2007 11:36

It's taken me a decade to move to 73rd and Lexington and I do not want my newly found status... [MORE]

Betsy 

Jan 8, 2008 14:58