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News in Numbers

6
Hours a person can be held for psychiatric evaluation in Virginia when others believe he poses a risk to himself or others, compared to 30 hours in Maryland and 48 hours in Washington, D.C.
Hourly minimum wage proposed by Councilman Vincent Orange for Washington, D.C., which would be an increase of more than $3.00 an hour.
Number of nonfatal job-related injury or illness cases for every 100 full-time state employees in 2012, compared to just 3.4 in the private sector.
Amount of taxpayer dollars, contributed by Cobb County, Ga., needed to finance the new Atlanta Braves stadium; the team will provide $372 million.
Amount in additional tax credits available to 3,000 childless New York City residents making between $6,667 and $18,000 a year under the city's Paycheck Plus poverty-reduction pilot project.
Average annual cost of transportation in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area, compared to an average $10,359 a year for housing.
Total number of people who signed up for health insurance in October using the federal exchange on HealthCare.gov.
Number of full-time U.S. Postal Service employees, down from almost 800,000 in 2000.
Number of farmers markets throughout the country that accept food stamps, according to the Farmers Market Coalition. The number has tripled since 2009.
Number of jobs the federal government eliminated in the month of October, according to the U.S. Department of Labor.
3rd
Place that Red Sox designated hitter David Ortiz came in the Boston mayoral race. Ortiz wasn't running, but he got the most votes of any write-in candidate.
8.3
Percent of U.S. rental housing that's vacant, which is the lowest level since 2001.
Amount Washington, D.C.'s education department paid a Chicago consulting firm, SPC Consulting, for one-day services at a city education conference. Fee included a half-hour speech, three 45-minute parent workshops and copies of parenting books.
75
Percent of welfare applications the state of Kansas denies, more than double the denial rate in neighboring Missouri.
Estimated annual cost increase for the average family if voters in Washington state pass genetically modified food labeling laws, according to the Washington Research Council.
Total unemployment insurance paid to furloughed federal workers in Oregon, which they won't have to pay back despite receiving full compensation for their time off.
Amount spend by multi-national companies to help defeat an effort to require labeling of genetically modified foods in Washington State, compared to $7 million spent by supporters of the labeling.
Number of open jobs in Massachusetts for which employers did not hire people yet the state has 250,000 residents looking for work.
Decline in the number of statehouse reporters across the country, from 524 in 2003 to 355 in 2009.
Amount the federal government has paid to CGI Federal, the IT contractor that has orchestrated most of Healthcare.gov.
Number of school bullying incidents in Tennessee last year, according to the first-ever investigation attempting to count such incidents.
Detroit's projected 10-year budget deficit if it hadn't entered bankruptcy protection, according to a lawyer representing the city in its bankruptcy trial.
Amount per dollar that investors are likely to recover in city bonds in bankruptcy trials in Detroit; Jefferson County, Ala.; Stockton, Calif.; and Harrisburg, Pa.
The tax rate on a pack of cigarettes in Chicago (the highest rate in the nation), if Mayor Rahm Emanuel's proposed 75-cent increase goes into effect.
16
Percent of Americans relying on food stamps.
24
Percent of New Jersey residents who voted in the special election for U.S. Senate last week, which was the the lowest turnout for a general election in state history.
334
Number of retail marijuana stores that can operate in Washington state, according to state Liquor Control Board rules adopted Wednesday.
4.6
Percent of American students enrolled in charter schools, up from one percent in 2000.
20
Percent of children in foster care taking psychotropic drugs for mood and behavioral disorders, which is four times the rate of children covered by private health insurance.
Number of violent crimes per 100,000 people in Tennessee, the highest rate of any state in the nation.