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Join us for a casual social with Democratic friends
Time & Date: Friday, March 11th, 6:30 pm
Rachel Maddow talks about the NBC/WSJ Poll We Are Wisconsin |
For weeks now, there has been a steady stream of news stories about school districts laying off, or planning to lay off, hundreds or thousands of teachers as Texas legislators more closer to slashing billions from the state education budget for the next two years. Many districts have already started to fire administrators and other non-teachers, but is clear that many teachers must be fired given the deep budget cuts. As Texas parents become increasingly worried about their children's education Republicans are tell them to "move along, nothing to see here..."
Two years ago a blue ribbon panel with conservative business leaders appointed by Governor Perry reported that Texas “faces a downward spiral in both quality of life and economic competitiveness if it fails to educate more of its growing population.” The panel focused on the need to increase college attendance and to improve higher education.
Governor Perry’s budget proposes a 20% cut in state support for higher education. For the impact of the current proposed budget cuts on specific student aid programs and colleges throughout the state, click here.
Please circulate this information to other Texans, and let your elected officials know what you think about this. You can also join the discussion about these cuts on the Facebook page, www.facebook.com/BillWhiteTexas.
It is not right to blame the recession for these cuts. It is just common sense: the state's economy hasn't gone down by 20%!
These cuts reflect a lack of leadership and planning for the future.
The education of our workforce is the most important investment in Texas' future. My dad came off a subsistence farm with help from the GI Bill, and a scholarship I earned opened the door to a college my family couldn’t afford. But the current budget proposal cuts student assistance by 41%. Even support for community colleges won't be spared during a period when their enrollment is surging.
In the last decade eight countries have caught up with or tied the U.S. in the percentage of young workers with college degrees. Texas has been lagging behind other states.
If you love our state like I do, please share this information with other Texans.
Respectfully,
Bill White
The Statesman: Texans for Fiscal Responsibility, a group that advocates for lower taxes and less government spending, has been making hundreds of thousands of [robo-]calls to voters around the state in an effort to push back against school districts that say the state’s budget shortfall will force them to lay off thousands of teachers.
Michael Sullivan, the president of Texans for Fiscal Responsibility, said his group has called about 350,000 households around the state, with an emphasis on constituents of the lawmakers sitting on the budget-writing House Appropriations and Senate Finance committees.
“Right now, public education bureaucrats are threatening to scare parents and teachers by threatening the classroom,” Sullivan says on the call. “Superintendents and school board members say they’ll start making cuts by letting teachers go. That’s irresponsible. The classroom must be protected. … Tell your state legislators to stand firm on cutting the budget and tell them that cuts must be made outside the classroom.”
Sullivan has repeatedly proven himself to be an effective communicator with the conservative grass roots. Earlier this year, Texas Monthly named him one of the 25 most powerful people in Texas politics.
The argument from Sullivan and other conservatives is that cutting the budget won’t force schools to let teachers go, but rather that schools need to stop spending so much money on non-classroom expenses. An oft-cited number around the Capitol these days is that school districts employ as many non-teachers as teachers, but educators say most of those non-teachers are the people who, for instance, drive the buses, serve the food and clean the buildings.
Read the full story at The Statesman.
Planned Parenthood operates over 800 health clinics across the country. These clinics are often the only option for women who need vital services, including contraception, HIV testing or PAP smears to detect and prevent cancer and other life-threatening illness. Three million Americans go to Planned Parenthood every year, and one in five women in the United States will visit a Planned Parenthood clinic in their lifetime. The personal relationships developed at clinics inform Planned Parenthood’s critical and ongoing advocacy for federal support for reproductive health and freedom. As a trusted brand representing women in DC, Planned Parenthood Action Fund has successfully lobbied for greater access to healthcare, better educational resources for family planning and the preservation of a woman’s right to choose.
The nexus of service and advocacy is a powerful place to stand: simultaneously addressing direct needs and advocating for systemic redress of those needs is a winning equation for progressive power. Yet, we have precious few progressive organizations left in that spot at the national level, and the ones we have are under attack precisely because our opposition understands their power.
For the past two weeks, all eyes have been glued to Madison, Wisconsin. The collective and joyful resistance to Governor Scott Walker’s power-grabbing budget bill has inspired the demoralized progressive base and put the corporate-backed assault on working people front and center in the national conversation.
Once we recognize the critical role these progressive service organizations play in building progressive politics, the right’s broader strategy in Wisconsin and elsewhere becomes clear.
Read the full story at The Nation.
The Republican Governors Association (RGA) has also announced an ad of their own supporting Walker. Greg Sargent at The Washington Post argues that the RGA "badly distorts" the history of the standoff in Wisconsin by not acknowledging that the unions have already agreed to pay more for their benefits.
"The unions have already agreed to the benefit concessions Walker has asked for, as long as he doesn't roll back their bargaining rights," said Sargent. "Walker has refused. The sticking point has nothing to do with benefits.Video is from PCCC, uploaded to YouTube March 1, 2011.
Impact By School District
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Texas already spends less per capita than almost any other state, but Senate Finance Chair Steve Ogden -- a Republican who Rick Perry has described as the smartest budget man he knows, and someone he implicitly trusts with the budget -- warned today the proposed budge cuts will “decimate public education."Texas Republicans would rather put our children's future at risk than allow corporations to pay their fair share to help build the well educated workforce Texas businesses need to prosper in the future.
In fact, the recession has little to do with the $27 billion budget shortfall. Back in 2006 the Republican controlled Legislature concocted a Rube Goldberg-style [school funding and business tax reform] measure that simultaneously cut property taxes, implemented a new “margins” tax on business and rejiggered the way public schools are financed.Star-Telegram: A 68-page report released by Texas Comptroller Susan Combs on Monday reveals that Texas will give business $32.2 billion worth of tax exemptions for sales, franchise, and gasoline and motor vehicle sales taxes for the 2011 fiscal year that ends on Aug. 31, 2011.Problem was, as the state Legislative Budget Board pointed out at the time, the plan’s math didn’t wash because the margins tax wouldn’t bring in as much as the Legislature thought. In fact, the board said, it would leave a $5 billion hole in the state budget every year.
The upshot: Perry, who pushed the swap, knew full well he was helping to create today’s “crisis.”
Exemptions to the state sales tax, the state's biggest source of revenue, will total $30.8 billion for the current fiscal year, Combs said, although some items exempted from the sales tax are taxed from other sources. Gasoline tax exemptions will amount to $113 million. Motor vehicle sales tax exemptions will total $125 million.NYTimes OpEd "Leaving Children Behind" by Paul Krugman:
"While sales and use tax collections totaled $19.6 billion in fiscal 2010," Combs said, "the tax is limited in scope when compared with the total number and kind of transactions in the economy, because of various exemptions and exclusions," Combs said.
A number of lawmakers are calling for the elimination of at least some exemptions to boost revenue and help offset deep service reductions proposed in preliminary draft budgets. Others say canceling the breaks amounts to a tax increase, which Gov. Rick Perry and Republican legislative leaders have vowed to oppose.
Read more at the Star-Telegram
Consider, as a case in point, what’s happening in Texas, which more and more seems to be where America’s political future happens first.
Texas likes to portray itself as a model of small government, and indeed it is. Taxes are low, at least if you’re in the upper part of the income distribution (taxes on the bottom 40 percent of the population are actually above the national average). Government spending is also low. And to be fair, low taxes may be one reason for the state’s rapid population growth, although low housing prices are surely much more important.
But here’s the thing: While low spending may sound good in the abstract, what it amounts to in practice is low spending on children, who account directly or indirectly for a large part of government outlays at the state and local level.
And in low-tax, low-spending Texas, the kids are not all right. The high school graduation rate, at just 61.3 percent, puts Texas 43rd out of 50 in state rankings. Nationally, the state ranks fifth in child poverty; it leads in the percentage of children without health insurance. And only 78 percent of Texas children are in excellent or very good health, significantly below the national average.
But wait — how can graduation rates be so low when Texas had that education miracle back when former President Bush was governor? Well, a couple of years into his presidency the truth about that miracle came out: Texas school administrators achieved low reported dropout rates the old-fashioned way — they, ahem, got the numbers wrong.
It’s not a pretty picture; compassion aside, you have to wonder — and many business people in Texas do — how the state can prosper in the long run with a future work force blighted by childhood poverty, poor health and lack of education.
But things are about to get much worse.
A few months ago another Texas miracle went the way of that education miracle of the 1990s. For months, Gov. Rick Perry had boasted that his “tough conservative decisions” had kept the budget in surplus while allowing the state to weather the recession unscathed. But after Mr. Perry’s re-election, reality intruded — funny how that happens — and the state is now scrambling to close a huge budget gap. (By the way, given the current efforts to blame public-sector unions for state fiscal problems, it’s worth noting that the mess in Texas was achieved with an overwhelmingly nonunion work force.)
So how will that gap be closed? Given the already dire condition of Texas children, you might have expected the state’s leaders to focus the pain elsewhere. In particular, you might have expected high-income Texans, who pay much less in state and local taxes than the national average, to be asked to bear at least some of the burden.
But you’d be wrong. Tax increases have been ruled out of consideration; the gap will be closed solely through spending cuts. Medicaid, a program that is crucial to many of the state’s children, will take the biggest hit, with the Legislature proposing a funding cut of no less than 29 percent, including a reduction in the state’s already low payments to providers — raising fears that doctors will start refusing to see Medicaid patients. And education will also face steep cuts, with school administrators talking about as many as 100,000 layoffs.
The really striking thing about all this isn’t the cruelty — at this point you expect that — but the shortsightedness. What’s supposed to happen when today’s neglected children become tomorrow’s work force?
Anyway, the next time some self-proclaimed deficit hawk tells you how much he worries about the debt we’re leaving our children, remember what’s happening in Texas, a state whose slogan right now might as well be “Lose the future.”
This is not a budget issue," the policeman speaking to the cheering protesters jammed inside of the capital rotunda in Madison, WI, shouted this weekend, "This is a civil rights issue!"
"Mr. Walker, if you are listening to me, let me tell you something," he continued through the bullhorn as the crowd rallied, "We know pretty well now who you work for. Let me tell you who we work for. We work for all of these people!"
"We're not here, Mr. Walker, to do your bidding. We're here to do their bidding!" he told the crowd in a remarkable video-taped moment posted by RAW STORY on Sunday.
While a wide swath of Wisconsin society, entailing not only both public and private union members, but students, doctors, nurses, teachers, police officers (like the one mentioned above), and fire fighters have swarmed the streets and public buildings of Madison as part of a mass movement rivaling those we've recently seen on the streets of Cairo, there is one sector of our society who should be especially angry with the Wisconsin branch of Corporate America's wholly-owned, public subsidiary, GOP, Inc.
It is the uninformed and misinformed working class stiffs, aka "Tea Partiers," who should be most disturbed by the scam they've been subjected to over the past two years (and many more). It is they who were taken in by the lies and deceptions of billionaire sociopaths, like oil-baron David Koch of the infamous Koch Industries. Koch's aim is not liberty, freedom, and jobs but American fascism, corporatocracy, and the "eternal subjugation of the common man"...
Read the rest of the story at BradBlog
Murphy / Walker call - Part 1 |
Murphy / Walker call - part 2 |
In the news this week, Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker "ginned up" a budget crisis, then introduced legislation that removes collective bargaining rights from public employees, and over time effectively destroys their unions. Similar measures have been introduced by Republican governors or legislatures in several other states.Texas Observer: For many Texas legislators and conservative activists, the budget crisis is a thing of wonder—a once-in-a-generation chance to drown government in the bathtub, to use anti-tax crusader Grover Norquist’s infamous phrase.
This legislative attack on public employees follows more than a year of "preparing the ground" with a coordinated campaign from conservative organizations to convince the public that public employees are overpaid and that their pensions are "bankrupting" state governments -- not the effects of the recession.
In the news soon, the coming strategic "shutdown" of the federal government by Republicans. After decades of forcing through tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations, again and again -- most recently just a few weeks ago -- Republicans and corporate conservatives are engaged in a national campaign promoting the belief that there is a "deficit crisis." Their solutions involve gutting the things government does for We, the People like consumer, health, safety, labor and financial, retirement and income protections, while keeping things the government does for corporations and the wealthy "off the table."
We see variations of the same formula over and over. Here is how it works:Repeat as often as needed to create a plutocracy.
- Cut taxes for the rich and corporations (corporate stock is mostly owned by the top 1%); big deficits result.
- Claim a deficit emergency and use their domination of corporate-owned media to whip the public into a panic, creating the appearance of demand for corporate-approved "solutions." Manipulate the appearance of consensus.
- With taxes and military “off the table” push through cuts in the things government does for We, the People.
Read the rest of the story at the Campaign for America's Future.
In the mid 1980's conservative activist Grover Norquist famously said, "My goal is to cut government in half in twenty-five years, to get it down to the size where we can drown it in the bathtub."
"Starving the beast" so it is small enough to "drown in the bathtub" is a fiscal-political strategy adopted by American conservatives in the 1970's to create and greatly increase budget deficits via tax cuts so that it forces ever increasing reductions to government.
The term "beast" refers to the government and the programs it funds, particularly social programs such as welfare, Social Security, Medicare and Public Schools. [see Forbes]
As Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst succinctly put it in his inaugural speech: “We pronounce the word ‘C-R-I-S-I-S’ as ‘opportunity.’” [Texas Observer]
Its title is plain enough: "Why Budget Cuts Don't Bring Prosperity." And its content wouldn't have seemed that striking until very recently, when one of America's two major political parties suddenly embraced the belief that government spending had somehow caused a private-sector housing and financial crisis and then a demand-side recession, and that radical cuts in government spending would put the economy on the right track via "business confidence" or some such magical term.Starving the government beast [see Forbes] in Texas Governor Perry and the Republican-controlled Texas legislature propose to cut up to $31 billion more from the next state budget, without using any money from the $9 billion rainy day fund, to cut government spending by firing tens of thousands of teachers, closing K-12 schools, closing of community colleges, eliminating tuition support for 60,000 college students, closing correctional facilities and drastic reducing state services for the poor, elderly, and young and for those with mental health problems.
The simplest term for this delusion is probably Hooverism, since many Americans are aware, however dimly, that the Great Depression was significantly worsened by the policies of a president who was ideologically opposed to any major stimulation of the economy by the public sector.
Read the full story at the The Democratic Strategist.
Giving Texas Corporations Taxpayer Money: Apparently, the idea is that the [Corporate Welfare] slush funds Gov. Perry controls are good for job growth. How you can believe that while pushing budgets that would result in the firing of 100,000 teachers, among other things, is a special talent on loan to our Governor. Here’s more about this, with Sen. John Whitmire playing the “you’ve gotta be kidding me” role.Texas Observer: For many Texas legislators and conservative activists, the budget crisis is a thing of wonder—a once-in-a-generation chance to drown government in the bathtub, to use anti-tax crusader Grover Norquist’s infamous phrase.
More Enterprise Fund failures - Gov. Rick Perry’s office has rewritten contracts for companies that are struggling to create the promised number of jobs after getting millions of taxpayer dollars from the Texas Enterprise Fund
As Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst succinctly put it in his inaugural speech: “We pronounce the word ‘C-R-I-S-I-S’ as ‘opportunity.’”John Heleman, chief revenue estimator for Comptroller Susan Combs, in testimony before state senators in early February 2011 said Texas' budget problems will not go away when legislators eventually sign a balanced budget later this year. The school funding and business tax reform legislation passed in 2006 generates at least a $10 billion budget short fall every year. [Texas' Finances Not As Rosy As They Seemed and Budgeting with smoke and mirrors]
The state is short $27 billion, more than one-quarter of the state’s $100 billion discretionary budget. About 91 percent is consumed by public schools, higher education, and health and human services. Texas already spends less per capita than almost any other state, but even more “devastating” cuts are all but certain.
In case anybody’s looking for a culprit, Gov. Rick Perry said Texas’ deficit was “reflective of the national recession’s lingering impact on state revenue.” In fact, the recession has little to do with the $27 billion shortfall.
Back in 2006 the Legislature concocted a Rube Goldberg-style [school funding and business tax reform] measure that simultaneously cut property taxes, imposed a new “margins” tax on business and rejiggered the way public schools are financed. Wowee zowee—three birds with only one stone!Problem was, as the state Legislative Budget Board pointed out at the time, the plan’s math didn’t wash because the margins tax wouldn’t bring in as much as the Legislature thought. In fact, the board said, it would leave a $5 billion hole in the state budget every year.The budget shortfall is not the cause of the pain. It’s the justification. For 30 years, anti-government forces have been in the ascendancy with a platform of free markets, deregulation, privatization, the evisceration of social programs and the systematic debasement of the greater good.
The upshot: Perry, who pushed the swap, knew full well he was helping to create today’s “crisis.”
In Texas, where Republicans control more than two-thirds of the state House and a little less than two-thirds of the state Senate, this ideology now has its moment in the sun.
“The bottom line is there are no excuses now,” Republican Sen. Dan Patrick of Houston, the right-wing radio talk-show host and founder of the Tea Party Caucus, told the Associated Press in January. “It’s a perfect storm, in a positive way, for conservatism.”
Clasaic Union Ad Firefighter Mike DeGarmo, criticizing Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker for refusing to drop his assault on public employee bargaining rights. |
Texas: As ThinkProgress has reported, Gov. Perry spent the last two years traveling around the country attacking the stimulus and other Obama administration initiatives, all while touting the “Texas Miracle” (low taxes, low services, and low regulations). However, as Matt Yglesias noted, “It looks like the secret behind Texas’ ability to avoid the kind of budget woes that afflicted so many states last year was two-year budgeting rather than the miracle of low-tax, low-service, lax-regulation policies.” Moreover, Perry relied more on the stimulus than any other state to fill his 2010 budget gap, with stimulus funds plugging a full 97 percent of the gap.Read the complete story @ Think Progress
In facing down a $25 billion budget crisis on par with that of California, Perry categorically rejected any tax increases. Texas, as Paul Krugman said, already takes a “hard, you might say brutal, line toward its most vulnerable citizens,” as indicated by its poor educational performance and sky-high 25 percent child poverty rate. Still, Perry also refuses to use any of the $9.4 billion in the state’s rainy day fund (some of which, ironically, comes from stimulus funds intended to help states stave off draconian cuts that Perry instead squirreled away) and is instead contemplating deep cuts to child services programs and education, among other things. Perry even floated a plan to drop Medicaid entirely. Perry’s proposed education cuts are so deep that they prompted an unlikely source to take to the pages of the Houston Chronicle to write in opposition to them — none other than former First Lady Laura Bush. Bond ratings agency Standard & Poors has also weighed in, saying Texas’ cuts-only approach “won’t solve the state’s long-term fiscal problems” and that revenue increases need to be considered alongside the deep cuts being proposed.
Wisconsin: Gov. Scott Walker first gained national headlines for joining Ohio’s Kasich in a future-losing decision to cancel an $800 million investment — fully paid for the by the federal government — in high-speed rail. This decision prompted train manufacturer Talgo to announce it was leaving the state and will likely cost the state thousands of jobs.
Walker is of course now famous for his high-stakes war against Wisconsin’s workers. Walker has used a very small short-term shortfall and larger shortfall to come (which is still smaller than shortfalls the state has faced in recent years) to move forward with an unpopular plan to destroy the state’s public employee unions. As Ezra Klein and many others have noted, Wisconsin’s unions aren’t to blame for the state’s budget problems and taking away their collective bargaining rights will have no impact on the state’s fiscal situation.
Indeed, the unions offered to concede to all of Walker’s financial demands, so long as they could retain their collective bargaining rights. Walker balked at this offer, betraying his true motive: busting unions. Walker is also late in offering his budget, but it is believed that in spite of the supposed “crisis” and being “broke,” as Walker himself has said, his budget plans will include “a LOT more tax breaks” for the rich and corporations that will have to be balanced on the backs of workers or with painful cuts to state services and the state’s Medicaid programs, BadgerCare. It’s also worth noting that the last time Scott Walker went union busting, it turned into a massive boondoggle when he was overruled by an arbiter, wasting hundreds of thousands of taxpayers dollars in the process. When Republican governors speak of “shared sacrifice,” it seems that the only thing they mean is sacrifices by the poor and middle class in order to fund massive tax breaks for the rich and corporations.
Lawmakers have proposed spending $10.4 billion less than the Texas Education Agency says it needs to keep things running like they're running now. Is that current level of services sufficient for public education? Two-thirds of our panel said no, it's not.The Texas Tribune this week also looked at the Mixed Signals on Budget Cuts that Texans are sending in a UT/Texas Tribune Poll:
On the question; Should lawmakers free local schools to raise their property taxes to make up for money lost to state cuts? Most of our insiders — 70 percent — said yes, while 27 percent said no.
More @ Texas Tribune.
By a margin of more than 2 to 1, Texas voters believe that lawmakers should solve the state's massive shortfall by cutting the budget, according to the latest University of Texas/Texas Tribune poll, but their enthusiasm dissipates when asked if they support specific cuts.This is, to me, a very Pavlovian thing. Pavlov conducted an experiment where for a period of time he rang a bell every time he set food down for his dogs. The dogs soon associated the bell with food and soon began to salivate as soon as they heard the bell, even when food was nowhere in sight.
"We [Texans] really want to slash the budget, but not anything in it," says pollster Daron Shaw, a professor of government at UT.
Given a list of things that could be cut to balance the budget and asked to check each that they'd consider, the voters were protective of state programs, and overwhelmingly so.
They oppose cuts to public education, 82 percent; pre-kindergarten, 62 percent; state grants to college students, 73 percent; state contributions to teacher and state employee retirement programs, 69 percent; the Children's Health Insurance Program, 87 percent; to state environmental regulation that could be picked up by the federal government, 65 percent; cuts to Medicaid providers like doctors and hospitals, 86 percent; state funding for nursing home care, 90 percent; prisons for adults or for juveniles, both 67 percent; new highway construction, 63 percent; border security, 85 percent; or for closing four community colleges, 77 percent.
Many of the items on that list are among the prime cuts made in proposed budgets from the House, the Senate and the governor. "Frankly, if you're assuming the results of the last election mean you should cut and that people meant government should completely go away, you're overreaching," says pollster Jim Henson, who teaches government and runs the Texas Politics Project at UT.
More @ Texas Tribune
Charles and David Koch are conservative titans of industry who have infamously used their vast wealth to undermine President Obama and fight legislation they detest, such as the cap-and-trade climate bill, the health care reform act, and the economic stimulus package. For years, the billionaires have made extensive political donations to Republican candidates across the country and have provided millions of dollars to astroturf right-wing organizations.Starving the [Government] BeastKoch Industries' political action committee has doled out more than $2.6 million to candidates. And one prominent beneficiary of the Koch brothers' largess is Scott Walker.
According to Wisconsin campaign finance filings, Walker's gubernatorial campaign received $43,000 from the Koch Industries PAC during the 2010 election.
That donation was his campaign's second-highest, behind $43,125 in contributions from housing and realtor groups in Wisconsin. The Koch's PAC also helped Walker via a familiar and much-used politicial maneuver designed to allow donors to skirt campaign finance limits.
The PAC gave $1 million to the Republican Governors Association, which in turn spent $65,000 on independent expenditures to support Walker. The RGA also spent a whopping $3.4 million on TV ads and mailers attacking Walker's opponent, Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett. Walker ended up beating Barrett by 5 points. The Koch money, no doubt, helped greatly.
The Kochs also assisted Walker's current GOP allies in the fight against the public-sector unions. Last year, Republicans took control of the both houses of the Wisconsin state legislature, which has made Walker's assault on these unions possible. And according to data from the Wisconsin Democracy Campaign, the Koch Industries PAC spent $6,500 in support of 16 Wisconsin Republican state legislative candidates, who each won his or her election.
Read the rest of the story at Mother Jones
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2010 Interactive State and County Census Map |
Voting District Precinct | Area Land in Sq Miles | Ave Age of Reg Voter | Housing Units | TL Pop | TL VAP | VAP Reg to vote | White alone | Hispanic Latino alone | Black or Af/Am alone | Asian alone | Am Indian or Alaskan Native alone | Two or More Races |
1 | 1.0 | 51 | 1,549 | 3,521 | 2,661 | 1,526 | 1,609 | 764 | 221 | 20 | 8 | 35 |
2 | 2.3 | 44 | 2,949 | 6,409 | 4,635 | 2,719 | 2,568 | 1,250 | 592 | 126 | 31 | 54 |
3 | 5.5 | 47 | 1,771 | 5,991 | 3,887 | 1,815 | 567 | 2,434 | 807 | 21 | 9 | 37 |
4 | 23.2 | 51 | 469 | 1,068 | 836 | 743 | 725 | 75 | 10 | 8 | 9 | 8 |
5 | 1.8 | 53 | 577 | 1,450 | 1,119 | 958 | 925 | 110 | 52 | 8 | 14 | 9 |
6 | 1.6 | 42 | 2,702 | 8,866 | 5,623 | 4,400 | 3,452 | 612 | 580 | 874 | 10 | 80 |
7 | 0.5 | 44 | 807 | 2,051 | 1,543 | 1,521 | 1,054 | 227 | 143 | 96 | 8 | 14 |
8 | 16.1 | 48 | 1,881 | 4,977 | 3,613 | 2,394 | 2,744 | 736 | 40 | 29 | 25 | 34 |
9 | 25.2 | 47 | 2,609 | 6,954 | 4,922 | 3,370 | 3,771 | 771 | 223 | 54 | 34 | 65 |
10 | 10.8 | 50 | 231 | 635 | 489 | 393 | 416 | 59 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 8 |
11 | 54.6 | 49 | 2,570 | 6,632 | 4,841 | 3,575 | 3,660 | 816 | 260 | 28 | 23 | 50 |
12 | 1.3 | 48 | 2,274 | 6,025 | 4,181 | 4,043 | 3,624 | 248 | 141 | 99 | 20 | 42 |
13 | 19.4 | 46 | 1,445 | 4,006 | 2,756 | 2,228 | 2,153 | 276 | 216 | 63 | 19 | 26 |
14 | 1.4 | 42 | 2,634 | 5,662 | 4,163 | 1,768 | 1,950 | 330 | 412 | 1,351 | 1 | 118 |
15 | 0.5 | 51 | 1,545 | 3,659 | 2,762 | 1,434 | 1,373 | 782 | 204 | 351 | 6 | 45 |
16 | 20.6 | 46 | 2,140 | 6,061 | 4,077 | 3,394 | 3,294 | 501 | 161 | 28 | 34 | 54 |
17 | 16.7 | 43 | 1,764 | 5,284 | 3,512 | 2,432 | 2,555 | 586 | 265 | 26 | 27 | 48 |
18 | 26.7 | 51 | 613 | 1,516 | 1,118 | 757 | 947 | 138 | 13 | 1 | 7 | 12 |
19 | 0.4 | 50 | 782 | 1,981 | 1,575 | 1,608 | 1,311 | 76 | 50 | 108 | 6 | 24 |
20 | 28.6 | 49 | 550 | 1,345 | 1,040 | 966 | 925 | 91 | 11 | 1 | 2 | 9 |
21 | 1.5 | 50 | 2,138 | 5,405 | 4,277 | 3,641 | 3,101 | 343 | 246 | 499 | 9 | 66 |
22 | 57.7 | 47 | 1,936 | 5,514 | 3,830 | 3,146 | 2,918 | 700 | 127 | 16 | 23 | 39 |
23 | 3.5 | 44 | 1,462 | 4,120 | 2,781 | 917 | 696 | 1,263 | 615 | 170 | 1 | 30 |
24 | 0.4 | 41 | 2,565 | 4,119 | 3,546 | 2,097 | 2,002 | 560 | 618 | 250 | 16 | 75 |
25 | 2.8 | 45 | 2,641 | 9,429 | 5,797 | 4,709 | 3,339 | 422 | 542 | 1,346 | 22 | 113 |
26 | 1.2 | 49 | 1,162 | 3,129 | 2,249 | 1,397 | 1,220 | 711 | 170 | 108 | 9 | 28 |
27 | 1.7 | 43 | 1,572 | 5,062 | 3,306 | 2,611 | 2,308 | 452 | 342 | 139 | 15 | 43 |
28 | 0.8 | 47 | 1,824 | 3,842 | 3,067 | 2,292 | 1,993 | 267 | 256 | 494 | 7 | 44 |
29 | 19.0 | 45 | 1,517 | 4,656 | 3,030 | 2,454 | 2,435 | 422 | 88 | 30 | 18 | 36 |
30 | 9.8 | 45 | 2,718 | 7,680 | 5,101 | 4,111 | 3,610 | 839 | 344 | 211 | 23 | 54 |
31 | 0.6 | 51 | 977 | 2,607 | 2,044 | 2,012 | 1,732 | 109 | 61 | 120 | 4 | 15 |
32 | 0.7 | 50 | 1,258 | 3,071 | 2,383 | 2,395 | 1,966 | 169 | 97 | 113 | 15 | 22 |
33 | 23.4 | 47 | 1,532 | 4,254 | 3,047 | 2,279 | 2,490 | 360 | 118 | 29 | 28 | 17 |
34 | 1.1 | 45 | 1,988 | 6,679 | 4,208 | 3,380 | 2,068 | 156 | 114 | 1,791 | 7 | 64 |
35 | 41.6 | 48 | 1,896 | 5,023 | 3,711 | 2,748 | 3,134 | 427 | 50 | 26 | 35 | 35 |
36 | 0.7 | 49 | 829 | 2,294 | 1,761 | 1,957 | 1,464 | 66 | 50 | 164 | 1 | 13 |
37 | 79.7 | 49 | 1,454 | 3,504 | 2,624 | 2,028 | 2,340 | 210 | 9 | 2 | 18 | 36 |
38 | 6.3 | 42 | 4,442 | 10,302 | 6,985 | 4,274 | 4,780 | 721 | 738 | 599 | 36 | 97 |
39 | 0.8 | 46 | 1,885 | 4,871 | 3,564 | 2,641 | 2,253 | 655 | 370 | 210 | 10 | 63 |
40 | 1.0 | 48 | 1,521 | 4,094 | 3,138 | 3,099 | 2,624 | 248 | 142 | 67 | 23 | 26 |
41 | 7.7 | 49 | 894 | 2,792 | 1,878 | 1,869 | 1,646 | 142 | 23 | 39 | 11 | 11 |
42 | 10.8 | 45 | 555 | 1,722 | 1,140 | 697 | 777 | 281 | 53 | 9 | 9 | 10 |
43 | 10.1 | 42 | 2,768 | 9,392 | 6,339 | 4,075 | 3,772 | 1,199 | 1,016 | 218 | 34 | 90 |
44 | 0.8 | 49 | 1,507 | 4,096 | 2,925 | 1,730 | 1,580 | 1,177 | 108 | 20 | 9 | 27 |
45 | 2.8 | 49 | 973 | 1,885 | 1,422 | 1,045 | 1,007 | 156 | 117 | 122 | 4 | 16 |
46 | 1.1 | 49 | 2,639 | 6,515 | 4,850 | 2,396 | 2,034 | 2,217 | 372 | 140 | 15 | 47 |
47 | 0.9 | 48 | 1,387 | 3,643 | 2,783 | 2,358 | 1,887 | 517 | 217 | 103 | 14 | 40 |
48 | 1.4 | 51 | 2,101 | 4,504 | 3,524 | 2,867 | 2,718 | 227 | 191 | 310 | 16 | 54 |
49 | 0.9 | 55 | 1,364 | 2,672 | 2,177 | 2,029 | 1,884 | 148 | 43 | 76 | 7 | 17 |
50 | 2.7 | 42 | 2,392 | 6,304 | 4,610 | 2,202 | 1,591 | 1,359 | 619 | 894 | 13 | 115 |
51 | 0.8 | 46 | 1,291 | 4,167 | 2,842 | 1,305 | 893 | 1,557 | 272 | 87 | 13 | 19 |
52 | 1.8 | 43 | 2,049 | 6,281 | 4,266 | 2,773 | 1,554 | 782 | 533 | 1,275 | 21 | 98 |
53 | 0.7 | 51 | 1,056 | 2,767 | 2,155 | 2,076 | 1,784 | 161 | 72 | 94 | 11 | 33 |
54 | 1.8 | 45 | 2,187 | 4,921 | 3,750 | 2,608 | 2,078 | 613 | 503 | 466 | 9 | 74 |
55 | 1.9 | 47 | 2,333 | 5,389 | 4,748 | 2,106 | 2,919 | 407 | 249 | 1,055 | 17 | 90 |
56 | 5.3 | 45 | 3,135 | 8,735 | 6,061 | 4,240 | 4,204 | 1,041 | 457 | 260 | 24 | 64 |
57 | 2.8 | 46 | 2,685 | 6,945 | 4,844 | 3,735 | 3,142 | 962 | 520 | 140 | 32 | 46 |
58 | 1.4 | 47 | 2,409 | 5,346 | 4,205 | 3,167 | 2,706 | 296 | 380 | 729 | 10 | 76 |
59 | 1.1 | 43 | 1,892 | 5,946 | 3,956 | 3,325 | 2,817 | 400 | 253 | 403 | 33 | 45 |
60 | 5.3 | 49 | 809 | 2,484 | 1,710 | 1,555 | 1,328 | 206 | 48 | 102 | 9 | 16 |
61 | 1.0 | 50 | 797 | 2,142 | 1,658 | 1,564 | 1,266 | 162 | 112 | 89 | 7 | 22 |
62 | 0.7 | 49 | 1,404 | 3,637 | 2,785 | 2,422 | 2,073 | 387 | 172 | 103 | 15 | 32 |
63 | 0.6 | 50 | 920 | 2,398 | 1,909 | 2,006 | 1,642 | 87 | 40 | 111 | 7 | 19 |
64 | 0.8 | 47 | 1,877 | 4,207 | 3,205 | 2,641 | 2,244 | 259 | 188 | 452 | 9 | 45 |
65 | 0.4 | 50 | 795 | 1,996 | 1,499 | 1,146 | 1,000 | 259 | 107 | 96 | 15 | 20 |
66 | 0.6 | 49 | 1,324 | 3,505 | 2,564 | 1,966 | 1,651 | 549 | 153 | 153 | 13 | 43 |
67 | 1.3 | 54 | 892 | 2,046 | 1,676 | 1,587 | 1,379 | 86 | 43 | 143 | 4 | 18 |
68 | 0.6 | 52 | 1,263 | 3,524 | 2,591 | 1,888 | 1,510 | 757 | 196 | 73 | 17 | 35 |
69 | 0.9 | 50 | 2,066 | 4,884 | 3,853 | 3,596 | 2,875 | 244 | 172 | 501 | 14 | 42 |
70 | 0.5 | 51 | 923 | 2,380 | 1,856 | 1,739 | 1,481 | 154 | 56 | 124 | 9 | 24 |
71 | 0.6 | 51 | 1,000 | 2,246 | 1,835 | 1,602 | 1,417 | 152 | 77 | 159 | 9 | 20 |
72 | 0.7 | 49 | 1,204 | 2,786 | 2,166 | 1,446 | 1,193 | 583 | 98 | 260 | 8 | 21 |
73 | 0.3 | 44 | 1,922 | 3,074 | 2,630 | 1,538 | 1,502 | 269 | 367 | 443 | 6 | 38 |
74 | 0.7 | 48 | 1,299 | 2,802 | 2,159 | 1,646 | 1,486 | 227 | 189 | 192 | 8 | 52 |
75 | 1.1 | 54 | 1,018 | 2,184 | 1,777 | 1,799 | 1,500 | 83 | 20 | 147 | 5 | 21 |
76 | 0.9 | 49 | 1,948 | 4,894 | 3,753 | 2,982 | 2,784 | 244 | 253 | 408 | 12 | 41 |
77 | 0.8 | 45 | 2,003 | 5,164 | 3,835 | 3,312 | 2,339 | 406 | 382 | 617 | 11 | 69 |
78 | 1.9 | 50 | 1,004 | 2,373 | 1,912 | 1,721 | 1,425 | 112 | 69 | 256 | 0 | 43 |
79 | 0.7 | 46 | 3,597 | 6,580 | 5,283 | 2,542 | 2,239 | 1,292 | 693 | 933 | 13 | 97 |
80 | 0.9 | 44 | 1,751 | 5,065 | 3,530 | 3,200 | 2,496 | 351 | 329 | 285 | 21 | 47 |
81 | 0.7 | 46 | 2,134 | 4,472 | 3,472 | 2,539 | 2,330 | 371 | 251 | 433 | 12 | 66 |
82 | 0.7 | 47 | 1,734 | 4,573 | 3,290 | 2,524 | 2,139 | 693 | 255 | 144 | 15 | 41 |
83 | 4.5 | 45 | 2,498 | 7,241 | 4,950 | 3,912 | 3,795 | 656 | 314 | 74 | 37 | 64 |
84 | 0.6 | 47 | 2,126 | 3,825 | 3,139 | 2,215 | 2,069 | 402 | 397 | 216 | 11 | 35 |
85 | 0.7 | 46 | 1,711 | 4,532 | 3,456 | 2,867 | 2,188 | 400 | 240 | 546 | 6 | 65 |
86 | 0.9 | 48 | 1,667 | 4,175 | 3,097 | 2,564 | 2,054 | 212 | 265 | 493 | 9 | 53 |
87 | 4.6 | 43 | 1,400 | 4,923 | 2,906 | 2,447 | 1,980 | 163 | 124 | 570 | 13 | 46 |
88 | 0.5 | 39 | 3,044 | 4,161 | 3,463 | 1,720 | 1,584 | 516 | 1,062 | 213 | 9 | 65 |
89 | 1.3 | 46 | 2,687 | 7,334 | 5,345 | 4,375 | 3,009 | 274 | 306 | 1,611 | 16 | 116 |
90 | 1.3 | 48 | 1,432 | 4,053 | 2,841 | 2,696 | 2,136 | 168 | 97 | 393 | 6 | 35 |
91 | 0.7 | 47 | 1,432 | 3,704 | 2,706 | 2,151 | 1,996 | 271 | 174 | 201 | 17 | 43 |
92 | 2.0 | 46 | 2,115 | 4,869 | 3,527 | 2,264 | 1,939 | 1,124 | 292 | 103 | 6 | 54 |
93 | 9.6 | 49 | 180 | 449 | 346 | 281 | 314 | 29 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
94 | 2.2 | 47 | 1,779 | 5,767 | 3,766 | 3,207 | 2,024 | 195 | 193 | 1,276 | 9 | 65 |
95 | 0.7 | 44 | 1,441 | 4,420 | 2,959 | 2,617 | 1,911 | 244 | 327 | 402 | 8 | 53 |
96 | 4.5 | 38 | 592 | 2,487 | 1,803 | 935 | 821 | 438 | 481 | 32 | 4 | 19 |
97 | 0.7 | 53 | 582 | 1,549 | 1,182 | 1,244 | 1,099 | 35 | 13 | 15 | 7 | 12 |
98 | 3.1 | 70 | 930 | 2,135 | 1,591 | 800 | 847 | 690 | 31 | 5 | 4 | 9 |
99 | 0.3 | 49 | 610 | 1,610 | 1,171 | 655 | 615 | 468 | 77 | 1 | 2 | 8 |
100 | 1.4 | 54 | 20 | 48 | 40 | 26 | 34 | 5 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
101 | 1.8 | 44 | 1,521 | 4,476 | 2,958 | 2,615 | 2,196 | 226 | 134 | 339 | 12 | 44 |
102 | 1.1 | 49 | 1,085 | 3,207 | 2,227 | 2,277 | 2,004 | 98 | 24 | 69 | 12 | 16 |
103 | 0.4 | 48 | 912 | 2,810 | 1,966 | 1,179 | 921 | 800 | 159 | 44 | 16 | 25 |
104 | 0.4 | 40 | 3,112 | 4,839 | 4,021 | 2,296 | 1,875 | 659 | 1,028 | 338 | 14 | 84 |
105 | 1.6 | 49 | 889 | 1,918 | 1,583 | 1,020 | 1,110 | 135 | 112 | 188 | 9 | 20 |
106 | 0.4 | 44 | 1,016 | 2,912 | 2,039 | 1,785 | 1,505 | 200 | 180 | 124 | 8 | 22 |
107 | 0.8 | 47 | 1,611 | 4,633 | 3,343 | 3,040 | 2,276 | 167 | 128 | 698 | 7 | 61 |
108 | 1.1 | 46 | 1,989 | 4,788 | 3,555 | 2,551 | 1,896 | 332 | 266 | 939 | 12 | 102 |
109 | 2.7 | 46 | 1,749 | 4,697 | 3,210 | 2,813 | 2,235 | 221 | 210 | 473 | 10 | 53 |
110 | 0.8 | 51 | 1,558 | 3,550 | 2,995 | 2,521 | 2,000 | 163 | 168 | 624 | 5 | 32 |
111 | 2.4 | 45 | 2,512 | 6,665 | 4,605 | 3,410 | 3,156 | 794 | 293 | 283 | 30 | 41 |
112 | 0.7 | 48 | 1,349 | 3,971 | 2,809 | 2,335 | 1,785 | 131 | 54 | 781 | 9 | 43 |
113 | 0.8 | 44 | 1,992 | 5,626 | 3,932 | 2,505 | 2,583 | 694 | 402 | 167 | 12 | 64 |
114 | 13.2 | 47 | 1,702 | 4,620 | 3,261 | 2,213 | 2,419 | 703 | 54 | 35 | 20 | 26 |
115 | 0.8 | 49 | 1,825 | 3,585 | 2,924 | 2,589 | 2,138 | 268 | 189 | 274 | 2 | 48 |
116 | 2.4 | 46 | 1,984 | 5,598 | 3,800 | 3,502 | 2,683 | 184 | 142 | 728 | 7 | 53 |
117 | 1.5 | 43 | 2,848 | 6,624 | 4,732 | 3,360 | 3,106 | 581 | 425 | 511 | 20 | 74 |
118 | 1.1 | 45 | 2,237 | 6,130 | 4,150 | 3,839 | 3,314 | 316 | 139 | 300 | 25 | 53 |
119 | 1.2 | 47 | 2,256 | 6,952 | 4,889 | 4,632 | 3,178 | 197 | 203 | 1,211 | 11 | 79 |
120 | 2.7 | 46 | 2,727 | 8,142 | 5,300 | 4,584 | 3,747 | 319 | 244 | 881 | 19 | 85 |
121 | 1.1 | 45 | 2,109 | 6,626 | 4,333 | 3,169 | 1,971 | 214 | 183 | 1,849 | 11 | 100 |
122 | 1.6 | 47 | 1,886 | 5,663 | 3,696 | 3,557 | 3,112 | 221 | 148 | 153 | 14 | 44 |
123 | 1.0 | 46 | 1,454 | 3,038 | 2,273 | 1,974 | 1,594 | 169 | 186 | 286 | 5 | 29 |
124 | 0.9 | 47 | 2,787 | 5,505 | 4,288 | 2,656 | 2,302 | 296 | 318 | 1,267 | 22 | 77 |
125 | 2.0 | 46 | 2,528 | 7,178 | 4,899 | 3,666 | 2,525 | 316 | 497 | 1,445 | 18 | 86 |
126 | 1.0 | 43 | 2,176 | 6,932 | 4,429 | 3,835 | 3,072 | 463 | 516 | 287 | 23 | 59 |
127 | 1.1 | 44 | 2,082 | 5,554 | 3,963 | 3,089 | 2,747 | 428 | 279 | 428 | 17 | 59 |
128 | 15.3 | 48 | 1,607 | 5,009 | 3,366 | 3,281 | 2,947 | 157 | 119 | 86 | 21 | 33 |
129 | 1.3 | 46 | 1,674 | 3,637 | 2,646 | 2,105 | 1,994 | 248 | 268 | 77 | 9 | 43 |
130 | 3.5 | 45 | 2,844 | 8,093 | 5,391 | 4,260 | 3,565 | 365 | 239 | 1,119 | 14 | 80 |
131 | 2.1 | 46 | 2,770 | 7,467 | 5,078 | 4,553 | 4,139 | 349 | 272 | 215 | 32 | 61 |
132 | 0.6 | 47 | 2,022 | 3,914 | 3,195 | 2,588 | 2,276 | 260 | 292 | 307 | 9 | 49 |
133 | 2.4 | 44 | 1,644 | 4,416 | 3,036 | 1,941 | 1,958 | 500 | 366 | 141 | 22 | 48 |
134 | 13.9 | 42 | 4,324 | 13,151 | 8,423 | 5,539 | 4,749 | 967 | 1,147 | 1,339 | 19 | 171 |
135 | 1.1 | 44 | 2,369 | 6,057 | 4,218 | 2,970 | 2,442 | 359 | 360 | 958 | 10 | 78 |
136 | 0.6 | 52 | 1,504 | 2,719 | 2,275 | 1,762 | 1,574 | 280 | 275 | 103 | 12 | 27 |
137 | 0.9 | 47 | 1,250 | 2,827 | 2,116 | 1,787 | 1,410 | 135 | 118 | 395 | 6 | 52 |
138 | 0.4 | 52 | 558 | 1,467 | 1,174 | 1,166 | 1,049 | 55 | 11 | 36 | 9 | 13 |
139 | 1.5 | 45 | 3,462 | 7,693 | 5,568 | 3,436 | 3,457 | 494 | 612 | 866 | 22 | 109 |
140 | 2.6 | 46 | 3,668 | 10,338 | 6,723 | 3,820 | 5,464 | 446 | 418 | 270 | 29 | 91 |
141 | 1.6 | 48 | 1,284 | 3,801 | 2,793 | 2,519 | 1,914 | 226 | 233 | 370 | 8 | 36 |
142 | 0.9 | 47 | 2,232 | 4,504 | 3,634 | 2,525 | 2,256 | 205 | 280 | 814 | 11 | 63 |
143 | 1.5 | 48 | 988 | 2,282 | 1,766 | 1,672 | 1,389 | 86 | 68 | 183 | 4 | 33 |
144 | 1.7 | 47 | 1,236 | 3,881 | 2,676 | 2,326 | 1,734 | 133 | 299 | 462 | 13 | 35 |
145 | 0.5 | 42 | 701 | 2,207 | 1,481 | 1,223 | 928 | 154 | 181 | 186 | 6 | 21 |
146 | 1.5 | 43 | 2,441 | 6,978 | 4,766 | 3,870 | 3,130 | 553 | 480 | 470 | 18 | 100 |
147 | 1.5 | 45 | 1,227 | 2,950 | 2,036 | 1,346 | 1,222 | 237 | 238 | 299 | 13 | 25 |
148 | 0.1 | 49 | 34 | 97 | 77 | 66 | 59 | 2 | 3 | 9 | 0 | 4 |
149 | 2.5 | 44 | 1,236 | 3,805 | 2,467 | 1,989 | 1,665 | 299 | 296 | 145 | 15 | 35 |
150 | 16.7 | 52 | 217 | 539 | 412 | 345 | 379 | 26 | 3 | 0 | 2 | 0 |
151 | 0.4 | 42 | 677 | 2,232 | 1,448 | 990 | 755 | 143 | 231 | 276 | 6 | 26 |
152 | 0.2 | 43 | 339 | 1,174 | 889 | 62 | 35 | 834 | 9 | 6 | 2 | 1 |
153 | 2.5 | 44 | 1,271 | 3,814 | 2,621 | 1,961 | 1,629 | 251 | 294 | 407 | 3 | 32 |
154 | 0.0 | 37 | 126 | 434 | 213 | 133 | 51 | 33 | 114 | 8 | 0 | 7 |
155 | 1.2 | 45 | 1,528 | 3,367 | 2,205 | 3,622 | 1,756 | 177 | 160 | 80 | 8 | 22 |
156 | 1.6 | 44 | 2,257 | 6,651 | 4,469 | 3,784 | 3,185 | 529 | 447 | 228 | 21 | 53 |
157 | 3.5 | 45 | 1,848 | 6,145 | 3,832 | 3,028 | 2,342 | 223 | 243 | 922 | 15 | 81 |
158 | 1.9 | 46 | 852 | 2,654 | 1,869 | 1,310 | 823 | 144 | 245 | 615 | 7 | 33 |
159 | 2.0 | 43 | 2,602 | 8,349 | 5,376 | 3,496 | 2,762 | 1,027 | 839 | 644 | 12 | 82 |
160 | 0.2 | 57 | 7 | 12 | 10 | 14 | 10 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
161 | 0.2 | 0 | 4 | 10 | 9 | 6 | 9 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
162 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
163 | 4.5 | 41 | 3,923 | 10,764 | 7,142 | 4,954 | 4,608 | 1,034 | 897 | 446 | 24 | 116 |
164 | 0.6 | 81 | 450 | 467 | 466 | 444 | 448 | 4 | 0 | 8 | 2 | 3 |
165 | 3.7 | 50 | 324 | 936 | 676 | 653 | 536 | 29 | 23 | 65 | 3 | 20 |
166 | 1.5 | 44 | 1,378 | 4,606 | 2,992 | 2,044 | 1,467 | 255 | 344 | 866 | 7 | 47 |
167 | 1.4 | 45 | 2,507 | 7,146 | 4,882 | 3,718 | 2,508 | 308 | 295 | 1,645 | 7 | 116 |
168 | 0.9 | 45 | 668 | 2,329 | 1,433 | 1,390 | 1,150 | 70 | 59 | 127 | 11 | 13 |
169 | 1.0 | 41 | 1,387 | 3,837 | 2,571 | 1,860 | 1,619 | 335 | 299 | 264 | 14 | 37 |
170 | 0.6 | 44 | 975 | 2,466 | 1,713 | 1,355 | 1,259 | 165 | 147 | 112 | 5 | 20 |
171 | 4.2 | 44 | 2,748 | 7,062 | 4,854 | 3,181 | 3,420 | 308 | 296 | 737 | 21 | 63 |
172 | 22.4 | 45 | 1,628 | 4,570 | 3,144 | 2,395 | 2,404 | 523 | 110 | 28 | 31 | 45 |
173 | 0.9 | 46 | 944 | 2,964 | 2,004 | 1,761 | 1,626 | 149 | 101 | 103 | 6 | 16 |
174 | 6.4 | 44 | 2,125 | 6,280 | 4,204 | 3,055 | 2,893 | 602 | 418 | 194 | 21 | 66 |
175 | 2.3 | 44 | 1,145 | 3,792 | 2,527 | 1,928 | 1,746 | 256 | 271 | 208 | 8 | 33 |
176 | 3.2 | 39 | 3,717 | 5,136 | 4,655 | 2,129 | 3,056 | 455 | 451 | 550 | 13 | 111 |
177 | 4.3 | 45 | 3,200 | 5,528 | 4,527 | 2,343 | 3,121 | 424 | 476 | 381 | 28 | 80 |
178 | 8.8 | 46 | 2,316 | 6,137 | 3,920 | 2,987 | 3,280 | 262 | 211 | 96 | 21 | 45 |
179 | 7.7 | 58 | 2,100 | 4,940 | 4,003 | 3,910 | 3,685 | 152 | 31 | 67 | 29 | 33 |
Totals | 841.2 | 46 | 300,960 | 782,341 | 557,664 | 421,386 | 368,136 | 72,370 | 44,429 | 61,146 | 2,320 | 8,164 |