If you're in Jersey City, you've probably got something to do and somewhere to be, so we'll cut to the chase -- JC is one of the hardest working cities in America, according to a new report.

Out of 116 of the most populated cities in the United States, Jersey City tied with Garland, Texas, at the sixth most hard-working, according to finance website WalletHub.

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The top 10 hard-working cities were Anchorage, Alaska; Virginia Beach, Va.; Plano, Texas; Cheyenne, Wyo.; Irving, Texas; Jersey City and Garland tied at sixth; San Francisco; Denver; and Chesapeake, Va.

"We are a city of immigrants that believe in the American Dream and as a city we try to leverage that spirit to create more jobs for residents which is clearly working." Mayor Steven Fulop said in a statement.

And while JC may go by the nickname, "Chilltown," it seems its neighbor Newark is much chiller, coming in at No. 77.

To calculate their findings, WalletHub mostly looked at each city's average workweek hours and their labor force participation rate (the civilian population between ages 16 and 64 in the labor force divided by the total population between 16 and 64).

According to U.S. Census data, 68.9 percent of JC's population of 257,342 was in the labor force.

Other lesser factors were average commute time (JC's is about 35 minutes, Census data says), percentage of workers with multiple jobs, volunteer hours per resident, lack of sleep (average number of days each month that locals didn't get enough sleep) and average daily leisure time.

Recently, city officials announced that Jersey City had the lowest unemployment rate of any large city in N.J. at 6.5 percent, a drop from the 10.6 percent in July 2013. Unemployment statistics, however, were not directly factored into WalletHub's study.

Do you agree that Jersey City is one of the hardest working cities in the United States? Tell us in the comments below!