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For release 10:00 a.m. (EDT) Wednesday, June 20, 2012
USDL-12-1245
Technical information: (202) 691-6392 • mlsinfo@bls.gov • www.bls.gov/mls
Media contact:
(202) 691-5902 • PressOffice@bls.gov
MASS LAYOFFS — MAY 2012
Employers took 1,380 mass layoff actions in May involving 130,191 workers, seasonally adjusted, as
measured by new filings for unemployment insurance benefits during the month, the U.S. Bureau of
Labor Statistics reported today. Each mass layoff involved at least 50 workers from a single employer.
Mass layoff events in May decreased by 8 from April, and the number of associated initial claims
decreased by 5,409. Year-to-date mass layoff events (6,768) and initial claims (636,484) both recorded
their lowest figures since 2007. In May, 264 mass layoff events were reported in the manufacturing
sector, seasonally adjusted, resulting in 29,675 initial claims. (See table 1.)
Chart 1. Mass layoff initial claims and unemployment rate, seasonally adjusted, May 2001‐May 2012 Unemployment Rate
14.0
Initial Claims
350,000
300,000
12.0
250,000
10.0
200,000
8.0
150,000
6.0
100,000
4.0
50,000
2.0
0
May‐01
May‐02
May‐03
May‐04
Total mass layoff initial claims
May‐05
May‐06
May‐07
May‐08
Manufacturing mass layoff initial claims
May‐09
May‐10
May‐11
0.0
May‐12
Unemployment rate
The national unemployment rate was 8.2 percent in May, essentially unchanged from the prior month
but down from 9.0 percent a year earlier. Total nonfarm payroll employment increased by 69,000 over
the month and by 1,782,000 over the year.
Industry Distribution (Not Seasonally Adjusted)
The number of mass layoff events in May was 1,201, not seasonally adjusted, resulting in 109,259 initial
claims for unemployment insurance. (See table 2.) Over the year, the number of average weekly mass
layoff events decreased by 42 to 300, while associated average weekly initial claims decreased by 2,663
to 27,315. Thirteen of the 19 major industry sectors in the private economy reported over-the-year
decreases in average weekly initial claims, with the largest decrease occurring in manufacturing. (See
Table A. Six-digit NAICS industries with the largest number of mass layoff initial claims
in May 2012, private nonfarm, not seasonally adjusted
May peak
Industry
Initial Claims
Year
Initial claims
Food service contractors ..........................................
1
Temporary help services ........................................
Child day care services .............................................
Motion picture and video production ........................
Department stores, except discount ..........................
School and employee bus transportation ...................
Discount department stores ......................................
Light truck and utility vehicle manufacturing ...............
1
Professional employer organizations .......................
Industrial building construction ..................................
1
2
10,326
6,857
5,962
4,131
2,868
2,632
2,390
(2)
1,517
1,423
2009
2002
2011
1999
2009
2008
2002
2009
2009
2003
11,216
16,992
6,616
8,985
3,379
6,323
3,981
3,570
5,898
3,463
See the Technical Note for more information on these industries.
Data do not meet BLS or state agency disclosure standards.
table 3.) In May 2012, the six-digit industry with the largest number of private nonfarm initial claims
was food service contractors. (See table A.)
In May 2012, the manufacturing sector accounted for 17 percent of mass layoff events and 19 percent of
associated initial claims in the private economy. Within manufacturing, the numbers of mass layoff
claimants were highest in food and in transportation equipment. Sixteen of the 21 manufacturing
subsectors experienced over-the-year decreases in average weekly initial claims, with the largest
decrease occurring in food manufacturing. (See table 3.)
Geographic Distribution (Not Seasonally Adjusted)
Among the census regions, the South registered the largest number of initial claims in May. Two of the
4 regions experienced over-the-year decreases in average weekly initial claims, with the largest decrease
occurring in the South. (See table 4.)
Among the states, California recorded the highest number of mass layoff initial claims in May, followed
by Pennsylvania, Illinois, New York, and Texas. Thirty-four states and the District of Columbia
experienced over-the-year decreases in average weekly initial claims, led by Alabama, Mississippi,
Ohio, and Florida. (See table 4.)
Note
The monthly data series in this release cover mass layoffs of 50 or more workers beginning in a given
month, regardless of the duration of the layoffs. For private nonfarm establishments, information on the
length of the layoff is obtained later and issued in a quarterly release that reports on mass layoffs lasting
more than 30 days (referred to as “extended mass layoffs”). The quarterly release provides more
information on the industry classification and location of the establishment and on the demographics of
-2-
the laid-off workers. The monthly data series in this release are subjected to average weekly analysis,
which mitigates the effect of differing lengths of months. See the Technical Note for more detailed
definitions and for a description of average weekly analysis.
____________
The Mass Layoffs news release for June is scheduled to be released on Friday, July 20, 2012, at
10:00 a.m. (EDT).
-3-
Technical Note
The Mass Layoff Statistics (MLS) program is a federalstate program that uses a standardized automated approach to
identifying, describing, and tracking the effects of major job
cutbacks, using data from each state's unemployment
insurance database. Each month, states report on employers
which have at least 50 initial claims filed against them during
a consecutive 5-week period. These employers then are
contacted by the state agency to determine whether these
separations lasted 31 days or longer, and, if so, other
information concerning the layoff is collected. States report
on layoffs lasting more than 1 month on a quarterly basis.
A given month contains an aggregation of the weekly
unemployment insurance claims filings for the Sunday
through Saturday weeks in that month. All weeks are
included for the particular month, except if the first day of the
month falls on Saturday. In this case, the week is included in
the prior month's tabulations. This means that some months
will contain 4 weeks and others, 5 weeks. The number of
weeks in a given month may be different from year to year,
and the number of weeks in a year may vary. Therefore, data
users who intend to perform analysis of over-the-year change
in the not seasonally adjusted series should use the average
weekly mass layoff figures displayed in tables 3 and 4 of this
release. The average weekly adjustment process produces a
consistent series for each month across all years, permitting
over-the-year analysis to be performed using strictly
comparable data.
The MLS program resumed operations in April 1995
after it had been terminated in November 1992 due to lack of
funding. Prior to April 1995, monthly layoff statistics were
not available.
Information in this release will be made available to
sensory impaired individuals upon request. Voice phone:
(202) 691-5200; Federal Relay Service: (800) 877-8339
Definitions
Average weekly mass layoff events and initial claimants.
The number of events and initial claimants in a given month
divided by the number of weeks contained within that month.
Employer. Employers in the MLS program include
those covered by state unemployment insurance laws.
Information on employers is obtained from the Quarterly
Census of Employment and Wages (QCEW) program, which
is administered by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).
Industry. Employers are classified according to the 2007
version of the North American Industry Classification System
(NAICS). For temporary help and professional employer
organization industries, monthly MLS-related statistics
generally reflect layoffs related to underlying client
companies in other industries. An individual layoff action at a
client company can be small, but when initial claimants
associated with many such layoffs are assigned to a
temporary help or professional employer organization firm, a
mass layoff event may trigger.
Initial claimant. A person who files any notice of unemployment to initiate a request either for a determination of
entitlement to and eligibility for compensation, or for a
subsequent period of unemployment within a benefit year or
period of eligibility.
Mass layoff event. Fifty or more initial claims for
unemployment insurance benefits filed against an employer
during a 5-week period, regardless of duration.
Seasonal adjustment
Effective with the release of data for January 2005, BLS
began publishing six seasonally adjusted monthly MLS
series. The six series are the numbers of mass layoff events
and mass layoff initial claims for the total, private nonfarm,
and manufacturing sectors.
Seasonal adjustment is the process of estimating and
removing the effect on time series data of regularly recurring
seasonal events such as changes in the weather, holidays, and
the beginning and ending of the school year. The use of
seasonal adjustment makes it easier to observe fundamental
changes in time series, particularly those associated with
general economic expansions and contractions.
The MLS data are seasonally adjusted using the X-12ARIMA seasonal adjustment method on a concurrent basis.
Concurrent seasonal adjustment uses all available monthly
estimates, including those for the current month, in
developing seasonal adjustment factors. Revisions to the most
recent 5 years of seasonally adjusted data will be made once a
year with the issuance of December data. Before the data are
seasonally adjusted, prior adjustments are made to the
original data to adjust them for differences in the number of
weeks used to calculate the monthly data. Because weekly
unemployment insurance claims are aggregated to form
monthly data, a particular month's value could be calculated
with 5 weeks of data in 1 year and 4 weeks in another. The
effects of these differences could seriously distort the
seasonal factors if they were ignored in the seasonal
adjustment process. These effects are modeled in the X-12ARIMA program and are permanently removed from the
final seasonally adjusted series.
Table 1. Mass layoff events and initial claimants for unemployment insurance, June 2008 to May 2012,
seasonally adjusted
Total
Date
Private nonfarm
Manufacturing
Initial
claimants
Events
Initial
claimants
Events
Initial
claimants
2008
June .............................................................
July ...............................................................
August ..........................................................
September ...................................................
October ........................................................
November ....................................................
December ....................................................
1,612
1,589
1,763
2,159
2,201
2,406
2,437
163,425
163,572
181,853
229,180
226,853
239,239
244,889
1,471
1,452
1,632
1,990
2,043
2,247
2,261
152,133
153,060
172,147
215,749
213,454
225,404
230,621
491
465
578
629
698
907
935
68,862
62,210
77,464
82,011
93,252
103,836
116,181
2009
January ........................................................
February .......................................................
March ...........................................................
April ..............................................................
May ..............................................................
June .............................................................
July ...............................................................
August ..........................................................
September ...................................................
October ........................................................
November ....................................................
December ....................................................
2,254
3,059
2,999
2,566
2,710
2,466
2,186
2,340
2,261
1,969
1,757
1,719
235,371
326,392
299,322
249,129
284,468
247,597
222,941
216,047
214,018
195,752
164,454
155,056
2,083
2,901
2,800
2,349
2,516
2,257
1,979
2,115
2,048
1,772
1,588
1,543
221,653
310,378
282,414
232,632
267,869
230,502
203,911
197,172
198,761
178,172
151,172
140,835
726
1,251
1,230
1,007
1,181
1,048
636
751
786
571
472
424
92,293
145,839
154,168
116,051
147,184
137,649
75,728
77,894
91,125
65,217
52,855
44,096
2010
January ........................................................
February .......................................................
March ...........................................................
April ..............................................................
May ..............................................................
June .............................................................
July ...............................................................
August ..........................................................
September ...................................................
October ........................................................
November ....................................................
December ....................................................
1,707
1,631
1,676
1,637
1,608
1,695
1,519
1,588
1,510
1,654
1,592
1,477
168,044
156,292
149,816
154,558
150,996
151,435
138,091
159,329
133,576
149,589
161,145
135,849
1,529
1,465
1,469
1,452
1,357
1,475
1,316
1,399
1,295
1,446
1,410
1,271
154,187
141,831
134,518
138,503
130,273
132,742
122,162
136,697
115,349
132,146
145,494
121,171
471
374
356
368
302
325
304
390
328
354
360
322
53,817
43,620
40,705
44,506
29,932
33,298
32,253
43,154
34,333
38,937
39,977
36,267
2011
January ........................................................
February .......................................................
March ...........................................................
April ..............................................................
May ..............................................................
June .............................................................
July ...............................................................
August ..........................................................
September ...................................................
October ........................................................
November ....................................................
December ....................................................
1,536
1,434
1,275
1,548
1,600
1,513
1,562
1,551
1,447
1,335
1,332
1,384
148,952
131,569
115,391
145,836
144,412
143,384
145,078
164,275
147,353
118,924
131,627
145,648
1,348
1,242
1,118
1,383
1,404
1,334
1,348
1,347
1,306
1,205
1,192
1,238
131,869
116,745
102,722
131,317
127,793
128,410
125,285
149,874
134,038
107,330
120,760
130,583
337
297
251
341
374
344
346
382
364
341
324
351
37,477
26,696
28,988
37,053
39,180
36,265
36,312
49,194
38,026
33,926
36,563
39,081
2012
January ........................................................
February .......................................................
March ...........................................................
April ..............................................................
May ..............................................................
1,434
1,293
1,273
1,388
1,380
129,920
119,463
121,310
135,600
130,191
1,298
1,153
1,125
1,222
1,222
119,102
108,577
109,421
120,213
117,654
341
282
261
287
264
33,597
27,388
26,348
33,243
29,675
Events
Table 2. Mass layoff events and initial claimants for unemployment insurance, June 2008 to May 2012,
not seasonally adjusted
Total
Date
Private nonfarm
Manufacturing
Events
Initial
claimants
Events
Initial
claimants
Events
Initial
claimants
2008
June .............................................................
July ...............................................................
August ..........................................................
September ...................................................
October ........................................................
November ....................................................
December ....................................................
1,622
1,891
1,427
1,292
2,125
2,574
3,377
166,742
200,382
139,999
129,586
221,784
241,589
351,305
1,315
1,687
1,343
1,202
1,917
2,389
3,232
140,916
186,018
133,146
122,505
205,553
226,657
340,220
309
760
414
361
689
997
1,378
42,097
108,733
51,912
46,391
100,457
107,620
172,529
2009
January ........................................................
February .......................................................
March ...........................................................
April ..............................................................
May ..............................................................
June .............................................................
July ...............................................................
August ..........................................................
September ...................................................
October ........................................................
November ....................................................
December ....................................................
3,806
2,262
2,191
2,547
2,738
2,519
3,054
1,428
1,371
1,934
1,870
2,310
388,813
218,438
228,387
256,930
289,628
256,357
336,654
125,024
123,177
193,904
164,496
214,648
3,633
2,173
2,107
2,385
2,572
2,051
2,659
1,334
1,258
1,678
1,679
2,166
375,293
210,755
221,397
243,321
274,047
216,063
296,589
117,193
115,141
172,883
150,751
203,655
1,461
945
940
887
1,005
674
1,133
436
448
566
517
615
172,757
103,588
114,747
100,872
123,683
85,726
154,208
41,151
51,126
69,655
55,053
64,540
2010
January ........................................................
February .......................................................
March ...........................................................
April ..............................................................
May ..............................................................
June .............................................................
July ...............................................................
August ..........................................................
September ...................................................
October ........................................................
November ....................................................
December ....................................................
2,860
1,183
1,197
1,840
1,354
1,861
2,124
976
920
1,642
1,676
1,931
278,679
102,818
111,727
199,690
123,333
171,190
206,254
92,435
77,654
148,638
158,048
184,130
2,682
1,091
1,111
1,697
1,170
1,355
1,732
897
806
1,373
1,477
1,763
265,074
96,022
105,514
184,654
109,203
125,872
172,248
83,021
67,987
127,865
142,591
172,881
962
282
273
424
216
212
532
230
187
351
389
465
104,846
30,728
29,745
55,178
19,334
21,083
64,200
23,088
19,403
40,861
41,383
52,816
2011
January ........................................................
February .......................................................
March ...........................................................
April ..............................................................
May ..............................................................
June .............................................................
July ...............................................................
August ..........................................................
September ...................................................
October ........................................................
November ....................................................
December ....................................................
2,558
1,024
908
1,750
1,367
1,661
2,176
961
1,189
1,101
1,393
2,433
246,463
85,585
85,095
189,919
119,911
159,930
216,774
99,213
117,232
96,914
127,750
263,665
2,372
919
844
1,625
1,221
1,238
1,759
875
1,095
950
1,245
2,258
229,765
78,718
80,014
176,478
108,531
122,821
174,078
93,159
107,300
83,748
117,474
247,916
693
222
191
397
270
226
602
228
296
265
349
658
75,006
18,471
20,869
47,104
25,199
22,986
71,814
26,916
32,058
28,447
37,799
75,033
2012
January ........................................................
February .......................................................
March ...........................................................
April ..............................................................
May ..............................................................
1,705
895
1,125
1,421
1,201
141,703
73,974
117,817
146,358
109,259
1,587
820
1,040
1,293
1,081
132,754
69,076
110,954
132,697
100,434
415
196
242
256
186
38,021
16,555
24,241
32,518
18,800
Table 3. Industry distribution: Mass layoff events and initial claimants for unemployment insurance, not seasonally adjusted
1
Mass layoff totals
Industry
Events
Average weekly mass layoffs
Events
Initial claimants
Initial claimants
May
May
May
May
May
May
May
May
2011
2012
2011
2012
2011
2012
2011
2012
1,367
1,243
22
1,201
1,099
18
119,911
109,881
1,350
109,259
101,354
920
342
311
6
300
275
5
29,978
27,470
338
27,315
25,339
230
Total, private nonfarm ...................................................
Mining ..........................................................................
Utilities .........................................................................
Construction ................................................................
Construction of buildings .........................................
Heavy and civil engineering construction ................
Specialty trade contractors ......................................
Manufacturing ..............................................................
Food ........................................................................
Beverage and tobacco products ..............................
Textile mills ..............................................................
Textile product mills .................................................
Apparel ....................................................................
Leather and allied products .....................................
Wood products ........................................................
Paper .......................................................................
Printing and related support activities .....................
Petroleum and coal products ...................................
Chemicals ................................................................
Plastics and rubber products ...................................
Nonmetallic mineral products ..................................
Primary metals ........................................................
Fabricated metal products .......................................
Machinery ................................................................
Computer and electronic products ..........................
Electrical equipment and appliances .......................
Transportation equipment .......................................
Furniture and related products ................................
Miscellaneous manufacturing ..................................
1,221
5
1,081
5
108,531
308
100,434
262
305
1
270
1
27,133
77
25,109
66
(3)
137
26
45
66
270
64
(3)
129
26
40
63
186
48
(3)
9,875
1,932
3,536
4,407
25,199
6,036
(3)
9,617
2,250
3,198
4,169
18,800
4,487
(3)
34
7
11
17
68
16
(3)
32
7
10
16
47
12
(3)
2,469
483
884
1,102
6,300
1,509
(3)
2,404
563
800
1,042
4,700
1,122
(3)
12
(3)
7
4
10
4
6
16
5
5
5
9
6
12
12
4
19
9
(3)
1,045
(3)
685
266
711
262
628
1,373
546
300
488
641
384
1,175
913
723
3,836
1,049
(3)
3
(3)
2
1
3
1
2
4
1
1
1
2
2
3
3
1
5
2
(3)
261
(3)
171
67
178
66
157
343
137
75
122
160
96
294
228
181
959
262
Wholesale trade ..........................................................
4
Retail trade ...............................................................
Building material and garden supply stores ............
Food and beverage stores ......................................
Clothing and clothing accessories stores ................
General merchandise stores ...................................
4
Transportation and warehousing ...............................
Truck transportation ................................................
Transit and ground passenger transportation .........
Support activities for transportation .........................
Information ..................................................................
Finance and insurance ................................................
Real estate and rental and leasing ..............................
Professional and technical services ............................
Management of companies and enterprises ...............
Administrative and waste services ..............................
Educational services ...................................................
Health care and social assistance ...............................
Arts, entertainment, and recreation .............................
Accommodation and food services .............................
Accommodation .......................................................
Food services and drinking places ..........................
Other services, except public administration ...............
Unclassified ................................................................
21
108
7
18
11
34
38
8
12
4
36
24
7
50
(3)
203
15
102
24
148
33
115
28
-
Government .....................................................................
Federal ........................................................................
State ............................................................................
State government education ..................................
Local ............................................................................
Local government education ..................................
124
12
32
22
80
43
2
Total ........................................................................
Total, private ....................................................................
Agriculture, forestry, fishing and hunting .....................
1
3
( )
10
(3)
10
9
14
(3)
8
14
6
11
11
12
12
7
45
12
5
(3)
16
117
8
18
14
49
38
7
13
3
39
31
4
56
4
169
11
95
26
120
13
107
29
3
( )
102
7
24
15
71
37
3
( )
1,174
(3)
755
934
1,182
(3)
503
1,082
635
1,053
848
2,054
731
1,049
4,146
888
456
1,777
8,244
516
1,391
761
3,079
3,371
611
1,186
191
5,394
1,616
457
4,062
(3)
15,938
1,201
11,059
1,835
15,483
2,660
12,823
2,361
-
(3)
976
11,529
767
1,302
773
6,414
4,628
362
2,844
161
5,349
2,478
428
3,780
516
12,483
843
9,725
1,920
14,142
970
13,172
2,595
3
( )
7,905
519
1,856
1,008
5,530
2,359
10,030
1,160
2,136
1,404
6,734
3,068
3
( )
3
(3)
3
2
4
(3)
2
4
2
3
3
3
3
2
11
3
1
5
27
2
5
3
9
10
2
3
1
9
6
2
13
(3)
51
4
26
6
37
8
29
7
31
3
8
6
20
11
(3)
4
29
2
5
4
12
10
2
3
1
10
8
1
14
1
42
3
24
7
30
3
27
7
3
( )
26
2
6
4
18
9
3
( )
294
(3)
189
234
296
(3)
126
271
159
263
212
514
183
262
1,037
222
114
444
2,061
129
348
190
770
843
153
297
48
1,349
404
114
1,016
(3)
3,985
300
2,765
459
3,871
665
3,206
590
2,508
290
534
351
1,684
767
(3)
244
2,882
192
326
193
1,604
1,157
91
711
40
1,337
620
107
945
129
3,121
211
2,431
480
3,536
243
3,293
649
3
( )
1,976
130
464
252
1,383
590
2
Data were reported by all states and the District of Columbia.
lengths of months. There were 4 weeks in May 2011
3
Data do not meet BLS or state agency disclosure standards.
and 4 weeks in May 2012. Average weekly events
4
Includes other industries not shown.
and initial claimants may not sum to subtotals and totals
NOTE: Dash represents zero.
Average weekly analysis mitigates the effect of differing
due to rounding.
Table 4. Region and state distribution: Mass layoff events and initial claimants for unemployment insurance,
not seasonally adjusted
Mass layoff totals
Events
Census region and state
Average weekly mass layoffs¹
Initial Claimants
Events
May
2011
May
2012
May
2011
May
2012
Total ² ................................................
1,367
1,201
119,911
109,259
342
Northeast ..............................................
Connecticut .......................................
Maine ................................................
Massachusetts ..................................
New Hampshire ................................
New Jersey .......................................
New York ..........................................
Pennsylvania ....................................
Rhode Island ....................................
Vermont ............................................
210
11
4
10
197
11
17,726
769
318
1,068
18,817
864
53
3
1
3
(3)
2,937
4,743
7,541
(3)
1,967
6,199
7,483
439
334
South ....................................................
Alabama ...........................................
Arkansas ...........................................
Delaware ..........................................
District of Columbia ..........................
Florida ...............................................
Georgia .............................................
Kentucky ...........................................
Louisiana ..........................................
Maryland ...........................................
Mississippi ........................................
North Carolina ..................................
Oklahoma .........................................
South Carolina ..................................
Tennessee ........................................
Texas ................................................
Virginia ..............................................
West Virginia ....................................
Midwest ................................................
Illinois ................................................
Indiana ..............................................
Iowa ..................................................
Kansas ..............................................
Michigan ...........................................
Minnesota .........................................
Missouri ............................................
Nebraska ..........................................
North Dakota ....................................
Ohio ..................................................
South Dakota ....................................
Wisconsin .........................................
West .....................................................
Alaska ...............................................
Arizona .............................................
California ..........................................
Colorado ...........................................
Hawaii ...............................................
Idaho .................................................
Montana ............................................
Nevada .............................................
New Mexico ......................................
Oregon ..............................................
Utah ..................................................
Washington .......................................
Wyoming ...........................................
Puerto Rico .......................................
(3)
34
56
90
(3)
(3)
468
37
15
5
5
102
40
33
29
5
40
40
9
11
21
50
21
5
288
47
28
6
12
38
10
32
8
(3)
9
(3)
22
65
79
4
3
(3)
(3)
43,457
3,604
1,647
334
276
6,363
4,038
3,431
2,531
462
5,957
3,928
902
949
1,838
4,762
2,050
385
358
13
9
(3)
3
75
28
20
21
9
28
46
5
4
20
53
21
(3)
249
64
23
12
11
22
(3)
28
9
26,017
4,749
2,189
1,069
1,365
3,368
932
2,620
860
(3)
63
(3)
37
(3)
41
401
6
15
285
10
5
6
(3)
13
10
21
8
16
(3)
24
(3)
1,142
33,270
1,019
1,031
(3)
187
4,621
2,906
1,886
1,884
706
3,961
4,247
361
327
1,762
5,130
3,038
(3)
26,349
7,361
2,078
1,208
1,092
1,922
May
2011
Initial Claimants
May
2012
(3)
9
14
23
(3)
(3)
117
9
4
1
1
26
10
8
7
1
10
10
2
3
5
13
5
1
May
2011
May
2012
300
29,978
27,315
49
3
4,432
192
80
267
4,704
216
(3)
(3)
6
16
20
1
1
90
3
2
(3)
1
19
7
5
5
2
7
12
1
1
5
13
5
(3)
62
16
6
3
3
6
(3)
4,491
924
72
12
7
2
3
10
3
8
2
(3)
5,170
(3)
3,401
(3)
16
(3)
(3)
35
(3)
3,472
(3)
3,298
(3)
10
(3)
397
7
14
307
10
32,711
489
1,394
22,874
1,171
351
370
30,823
619
1,245
22,995
902
100
2
4
71
3
1
2
(3)
3
3
11
11
15
5
8
(3)
5
(3)
1,133
783
1,586
554
1,463
(3)
201
223
859
999
1,416
366
736
(3)
2,815
(3)
504
1
See footnote 1, table 3.
3
2
See footnote 2, table 3.
NOTE: Dash represents zero.
(3)
(3)
(3)
(3)
(3)
10,864
901
412
84
69
1,591
1,010
858
633
116
1,489
982
226
237
460
1,191
513
96
(3)
492
1,550
1,871
110
84
8,318
255
258
(3)
47
1,155
727
472
471
177
990
1,062
90
82
441
1,283
760
(3)
6,587
1,840
520
302
273
481
7
2
9
(3)
1,293
(3)
850
9
(3)
868
(3)
825
8,178
122
349
5,719
293
88
93
7,706
155
311
5,749
226
(3)
1,123
231
1
1
3
3
4
1
2
(3)
283
196
397
139
366
(3)
50
56
215
250
354
92
184
1
(3)
704
(3)
126
(3)
6
(3)
734
1,186
1,885
(3)
286
6,504
1,187
547
267
341
842
233
655
215
99
2
4
77
3
3
3
5
2
4
(3)
2
Data do not meet BLS or state agency disclosure standards.