Employment and Training Administration (ETA) Program Year (PY) 2023 Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA) Section 167, National Farmworker Jobs Program (NFJP) Grantee Allotments, 31279-31281 [2023-10370]

Download as PDF Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 94 / Tuesday, May 16, 2023 / Notices lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with NOTICES1 30 days of the publication of this notice on the following website www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRAMain. Find this particular information collection by selecting ‘‘Currently under 30-day Review—Open for Public Comments’’ or by using the search function and entering either the title of the information collection or the OMB Control Number 1121–0094. This information collection request may be viewed at www.reginfo.gov. Follow the instructions to view Department of Justice, information collections currently under review by OMB. DOJ seeks PRA authorization for this information collection for three (3) years. OMB authorization for an ICR cannot be for more than three (3) years without renewal. The DOJ notes that information collection requirements submitted to the OMB for existing ICRs receive a month-to-month extension while they undergo review. Overview of This Information Collection 1. Type of Information Collection: Revision of a currently approved collection. 2. Title of the Form/Collection: Annual Survey of Jails (ASJ). 3. Agency form number, if any, and the applicable component of the Department of Justice sponsoring the collection: Form: CJ–5, The applicable component within the Department of Justice is the Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS), in the Office of Justice Programs. 4. Affected public who will be asked or required to respond, as well as a brief abstract: Affected Public: State, Local and Tribal Governments. Abstract: The ASJ is the only national collection that tracks annual changes in the local jail population in the United States and provides national estimates on the number of persons confined in jails, the number of persons jails supervised in programs outside jail, characteristics of the jail population, counts of admissions and releases, and number of staff employed. Policymakers, correctional administrators, and government officials use the ASJ data to develop new policies and procedures, plan budgets, and maintain critical oversight. The ASJ is fielded every year except in the years when BJS conducts the Census of Jails (OMB Control No. 1121–0100). BJS requests clearance for the 2023 and 2025 ASJ under OMB Control No. 1121–0094. In 2024, BJS plans to conduct the Census of Jails and will not field the ASJ in the same year. In 2023, BJS will introduce a verification module to the web instrument to update (1) the agency’s contact information; (2) regional and VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:33 May 15, 2023 Jkt 259001 private jail flags; (3) the name and address of the facilities under the agency’s jurisdiction; and (4) eligibility of each facility to be included in the ASJ. 5. Obligation to Respond: Voluntary. 6. Total Estimated Number of Respondents: 940. 7. Total Estimated Number of Responses: 940. 8. Time per Response: 88 minutes. 9. Total Estimated Annual Time Burden: 1,378 hours. 10. Total Estimated Annual Other Costs Burden: $0. If additional information is required, contact: John R. Carlson, Department Clearance Officer, Policy and Planning Staff, Justice Management Division, United States Department of Justice, Two Constitution Square, 145 N Street NE, 4W–218 Washington, DC 20530. Dated: May 4, 2023. John R. Carlson, Department Clearance Officer for PRA, U.S. Department of Justice. [FR Doc. 2023–09886 Filed 5–15–23; 8:45 am] BILLING CODE 4410–18–P DEPARTMENT OF LABOR Employment and Training Administration Employment and Training Administration (ETA) Program Year (PY) 2023 Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA) Section 167, National Farmworker Jobs Program (NFJP) Grantee Allotments Employment and Training Administration, Labor. ACTION: Notice; request for comments. AGENCY: This notice announces allotments for Program Year (PY) 2023 for the National Farmworker Jobs Program (NFJP). DATES: The PY 2023 NFJP allotments become effective for the grant period that begins July 1, 2023. Written comments on this notice are invited and must be received on May 30, 2023. ADDRESSES: Comments are accepted via email to NFJP@dol.gov. Please enter ‘‘PY23 National Farmworker Jobs Program Grantee Allotments Public Comment’’ in the subject line of the email. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Steven Rietzke, Chief, Division of National Programs, Tools and Technical Assistance, Office of Workforce Investment, at 202–693–3980. (This is not a toll-free number.) SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This notice is published pursuant to Section SUMMARY: PO 00000 Frm 00062 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4703 31279 182(d) of the WIOA, Prompt Allotment of Funds. I. Background The Department is announcing preliminary PY 2023 allotments for the NFJP. This notice provides information on the amount of funds available during PY 2023 to state service areas awarded through the PY 2020 Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA) for the NFJP Career Services and Training and Housing Grants. The allotments are based on the funds appropriated in the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023, Public Law 117–328 (from this point forward will be referred to as the ‘‘the Act’’). In appropriating these funds, Congress provided $90,134,000 for formula grants (of which $90,032,000 was allotted after $102,000 was set aside for program integrity), $6,591,000 for migrant and seasonal farmworker housing (of which $6,584,000 was allotted after $7,000 was set aside for program integrity and of which not less than 70 percent shall be for permanent housing), and another $671,000 was set aside for discretionary purposes. The Housing grant allotments are distributed as a result of a competition and according to language in the appropriations law requiring that of the total amount available, not less than 70 percent shall be allocated to permanent housing activities, leaving not more than 30 percent to temporary housing activities. This notice includes the following sections: • Section II of this notice provides a discussion of the data used to populate the formula. • Section III describes the holdharmless provision for the implementation year. • Section IV describes minimum funding provisions to address State service areas that would receive less than $60,000. • Section V describes the application of the formula and the hold-harmless provision using preliminary state allotments for PY 2023. II. Description of Data Files and Allotment Formula As with all state planning estimates since 1999, the PY 2023 estimates are based on four data sources: (1) Statelevel, 2017 hired farm labor expenditure data from the United States Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Census of Agriculture (COA); (2) regional-level, 2017 average hourly earnings data from the USDA’s Farm Labor Survey; (3) regional-level, 2010–2018 demographic data from the ETA’s National E:\FR\FM\16MYN1.SGM 16MYN1 31280 Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 94 / Tuesday, May 16, 2023 / Notices Agricultural Workers Survey (NAWS); and, (4) 2015–2019 (5-year file) data from the United States Census Bureau’s American Community Survey (ACS). The formula’s original methodology is described in the Federal Register notice 64 FR 27390, May 19, 1999. In PY 2018, ETA incorporated two modifications to the allotment formula to provide more accurate estimates of each state service area’s relative share of persons eligible for the program. The formula also used updated data from each of the four data files serving as the basis of the formula since 1999. The revised formula methodology is described in the Federal Register notice 83 FR 32151, July 11, 2018. In PY 2021, ETA incorporated two modifications to the allotment formula. These modifications are described in Federal Register notice 86 FR 32063, June 16, 2021. The Federal Register notices are accessible at https:// www.federalregister.gov/. The Department will continue to apply the modifications that were incorporated in the PY 2021 allotments to the PY 2023 allotments, including the expansion to include farmworkers who are in families with total family incomes at or below 150 percent of the poverty line rather than the higher of the poverty line or 70 percent of the lower living standard income level. ETA will subsequently revise the PY 2024 guidance regarding the definition of ‘‘low-income individual’’ as needed if the same provision is not included in subsequent appropriations. III. Description of the Hold-Harmless Provision ETA will continue the hold-harmless provision as instituted in PY 2018. The hold-harmless provision provides for a stop loss/stop gain limit to transition to the use of the updated data. This approach is based on a state service area’s previous year’s allotment percentage, which is its relative share of the total formula allotments. The stop gain provision provides that no state service area will receive an amount that is more than 150 percent of their previous year’s allotment percentage. The staged transition of the holdharmless provision is as follows: insufficient for sustaining an independently administered program. However, if practical, a state jurisdiction that would receive less than $60,000 may be combined with another adjacent state area. V. Program Year 2023 Preliminary State Allotments (1) In PY 2021, each state service area received an amount equal to at least 95 percent of their PY 2020 allotment percentage, as applied to the PY 2021 formula funds available. (2) In PY 2022, each state service area received an amount equal to at least 90 percent of their PY 2021 allotment percentage, as applied to the PY 2022 formula funds available. (3) In PY 2023, each state service area will receive an amount equal to at least 85 percent of their PY 2022 allotment percentage, as applied to the PY 2023 formula funds available. In PY 2024, since the Department has a responsibility to use the most current and reliable data available, amounts for the new awards will be based on updated data from the sources described in Section II, pending their availability. At that time, the Department will determine whether the changes to state allotments are significant enough to warrant another hold-harmless provision. Otherwise, allotments to each state service area will be for an amount resulting from a direct allotment of the proposed funding formula without adjustment. IV. Minimum Funding Provisions A state area that would receive less than $60,000 by application of the formula will, at the option of the DOL, receive no allotment or, if practical, be combined with another adjacent state area. Funding below $60,000 is deemed The state allotments set forth in the Table appended to this notice reflect the distribution resulting from the allotment formula described above. For PY 2022, $88,160,000 was allotted for career services and training grants, $6,447,000 was allotted for housing grants, and $657,000 was retained for other discretionary purposes. For PY 2023, the funding level provided for in the Act for the migrant and seasonal farmworker program is $97,396,000. Congress provided $90,134,000 for formula grants (of which $90,032,000 was allotted after $102,000 was set aside for program integrity), $6,591,000 for migrant and seasonal farmworker housing (of which $6,584,000 was allotted after $7,000 was set aside for program integrity and of which not less than 70 percent shall be for permanent housing), and another $671,000 was set aside for other discretionary purposes. For purposes of illustrating the effects of the updates to the allotment formula, columns 2 and 3 show the state allotments with the application of the 90 percent hold-harmless for PY 2022 and 85 percent hold-harmless for PY 2023. The dollar difference between PY 2022 and PY 2023 allotments is shown in column 4. The percent difference is reported in column 5. Brent Parton, Acting Assistant Secretary, Employment and Training, Labor. U.S. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR, EMPLOYMENT AND TRAINING ADMINISTRATION, NATIONAL FARMWORKER JOBS PROGRAM— CAREER SERVICES AND TRAINING GRANTS lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with NOTICES1 [PY 2023 Allotments to States] State PY 2022 90% StopLoss/ 150% StopGain PY 2023 85% StopLoss/ 150% StopGain $ Difference Total ................................................................................................................. Alabama ........................................................................................................... Alaska .............................................................................................................. Arizona ............................................................................................................. Arkansas .......................................................................................................... California .......................................................................................................... Colorado .......................................................................................................... Connecticut ...................................................................................................... Delaware .......................................................................................................... Dist of Columbia .............................................................................................. Florida .............................................................................................................. Georgia ............................................................................................................ $88,160,000 776,212 ........................ 2,553,478 1,265,495 23,164,574 1,763,318 531,602 163,949 ........................ 3,328,614 1,756,823 $90,032,000 800,937 ........................ 2,634,816 1,305,806 23,902,460 1,819,486 548,535 169,171 ........................ 3,266,891 1,812,785 $1,872,000 24,725 ........................ 81,338 40,311 737,886 56,168 16,933 5,222 ........................ (61,723) 55,962 VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:33 May 15, 2023 Jkt 259001 PO 00000 Frm 00063 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4703 E:\FR\FM\16MYN1.SGM 16MYN1 % Difference 2.12 3.19 0.00 3.19 3.19 3.19 3.19 3.19 3.19 0.00 ¥1.85 3.19 31281 Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 94 / Tuesday, May 16, 2023 / Notices U.S. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR, EMPLOYMENT AND TRAINING ADMINISTRATION, NATIONAL FARMWORKER JOBS PROGRAM— CAREER SERVICES AND TRAINING GRANTS—Continued [PY 2023 Allotments to States] PY 2022 90% StopLoss/ 150% StopGain State Hawaii .............................................................................................................. Idaho ................................................................................................................ Illinois ............................................................................................................... Indiana ............................................................................................................. Iowa ................................................................................................................. Kansas ............................................................................................................. Kentucky .......................................................................................................... Louisiana .......................................................................................................... Maine ............................................................................................................... Maryland .......................................................................................................... Massachusetts ................................................................................................. Michigan ........................................................................................................... Minnesota ........................................................................................................ Mississippi ........................................................................................................ Missouri ............................................................................................................ Montana ........................................................................................................... Nebraska .......................................................................................................... Nevada ............................................................................................................. New Hampshire ............................................................................................... New Jersey ...................................................................................................... New Mexico ..................................................................................................... New York ......................................................................................................... North Carolina .................................................................................................. North Dakota .................................................................................................... Ohio ................................................................................................................. Oklahoma ......................................................................................................... Oregon ............................................................................................................. Pennsylvania .................................................................................................... Puerto Rico ...................................................................................................... Rhode Island .................................................................................................... South Carolina ................................................................................................. South Dakota ................................................................................................... Tennessee ....................................................................................................... Texas ............................................................................................................... Utah ................................................................................................................. Vermont ........................................................................................................... Virginia ............................................................................................................. Washington ...................................................................................................... West Virginia .................................................................................................... Wisconsin ......................................................................................................... Wyoming .......................................................................................................... [FR Doc. 2023–10370 Filed 5–15–23; 8:45 am] BILLING CODE 4510–FN–P DEPARTMENT OF LABOR lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with NOTICES1 Agency Information Collection Activities; Submission for OMB Review; Comment Request; Generic Clearance for Quick Turnaround Surveys Notice of availability; request for comments. ACTION: The Department of Labor (DOL) is submitting this Employment and Training Administration (ETA)sponsored information collection request (ICR) to the Office of SUMMARY: VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:33 May 15, 2023 Jkt 259001 284,832 2,327,447 1,939,999 1,303,529 1,863,100 1,318,690 923,511 829,992 432,739 552,597 543,815 2,199,069 1,668,177 924,370 1,293,215 741,784 1,322,506 237,476 154,787 816,449 1,132,485 2,300,453 2,333,344 780,688 1,524,192 928,725 2,340,449 1,868,860 2,140,963 68,784 717,495 706,000 791,308 4,671,373 693,559 217,113 886,698 4,783,367 137,443 1,823,100 331,452 Management and Budget (OMB) for review and approval in accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA). Public comments on the ICR are invited. The OMB will consider all written comments that the agency receives on or before June 15, 2023. DATES: Written comments and recommendations for the proposed information collection should be sent within 30 days of publication of this notice to www.reginfo.gov/public/do/ PRAMain. Find this particular information collection by selecting ‘‘Currently under 30-day Review—Open for Public Comments’’ or by using the search function. ADDRESSES: PO 00000 Frm 00064 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4703 PY 2023 85% StopLoss/ 150% StopGain 247,248 2,401,585 2,001,796 1,345,052 1,922,448 1,360,695 864,671 856,431 446,523 570,199 561,137 2,269,118 1,721,315 953,815 1,334,410 765,413 1,364,634 245,041 159,717 842,456 1,168,559 2,373,732 2,179,435 805,556 1,572,744 958,308 2,415,002 1,928,391 2,112,901 70,975 718,772 728,488 686,894 4,788,352 715,651 224,029 811,392 4,935,737 119,307 1,881,174 342,010 $ Difference (37,584) 74,138 61,797 41,523 59,348 42,005 (58,840) 26,439 13,784 17,602 17,322 70,049 53,138 29,445 41,195 23,629 42,128 7,565 4,930 26,007 36,074 73,279 (153,909) 24,868 48,552 29,583 74,553 59,531 (28,062) 2,191 1,277 22,488 (104,414) 116,979 22,092 6,916 (75,306) 152,370 (18,136) 58,074 10,558 % Difference ¥13.20 3.19 3.19 3.19 3.19 3.19 ¥6.37 3.19 3.19 3.19 3.19 3.19 3.19 3.19 3.19 3.19 3.19 3.19 3.19 3.19 3.19 3.19 ¥6.60 3.19 3.19 3.19 3.19 3.19 ¥1.31 3.19 0.18 3.19 ¥13.20 2.50 3.19 3.19 ¥8.49 3.19 ¥13.20 3.19 3.19 Comments are invited on: (1) whether the collection of information is necessary for the proper performance of the functions of the Department, including whether the information will have practical utility; (2) if the information will be processed and used in a timely manner; (3) the accuracy of the agency’s estimates of the burden and cost of the collection of information, including the validity of the methodology and assumptions used; (4) ways to enhance the quality, utility and clarity of the information collection; and (5) ways to minimize the burden of the collection of information on those who are to respond, including the use of automated collection techniques or other forms of information technology. E:\FR\FM\16MYN1.SGM 16MYN1

Agencies

[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 94 (Tuesday, May 16, 2023)]
[Notices]
[Pages 31279-31281]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-10370]


=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------

DEPARTMENT OF LABOR

Employment and Training Administration


Employment and Training Administration (ETA) Program Year (PY) 
2023 Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA) Section 167, 
National Farmworker Jobs Program (NFJP) Grantee Allotments

AGENCY: Employment and Training Administration, Labor.

ACTION: Notice; request for comments.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

SUMMARY: This notice announces allotments for Program Year (PY) 2023 
for the National Farmworker Jobs Program (NFJP).

DATES: The PY 2023 NFJP allotments become effective for the grant 
period that begins July 1, 2023. Written comments on this notice are 
invited and must be received on May 30, 2023.

ADDRESSES: Comments are accepted via email to [email protected]. Please 
enter ``PY23 National Farmworker Jobs Program Grantee Allotments Public 
Comment'' in the subject line of the email.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Steven Rietzke, Chief, Division of 
National Programs, Tools and Technical Assistance, Office of Workforce 
Investment, at 202-693-3980. (This is not a toll-free number.)

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This notice is published pursuant to Section 
182(d) of the WIOA, Prompt Allotment of Funds.

I. Background

    The Department is announcing preliminary PY 2023 allotments for the 
NFJP. This notice provides information on the amount of funds available 
during PY 2023 to state service areas awarded through the PY 2020 
Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA) for the NFJP Career Services and 
Training and Housing Grants. The allotments are based on the funds 
appropriated in the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023, Public Law 
117-328 (from this point forward will be referred to as the ``the 
Act'').
    In appropriating these funds, Congress provided $90,134,000 for 
formula grants (of which $90,032,000 was allotted after $102,000 was 
set aside for program integrity), $6,591,000 for migrant and seasonal 
farmworker housing (of which $6,584,000 was allotted after $7,000 was 
set aside for program integrity and of which not less than 70 percent 
shall be for permanent housing), and another $671,000 was set aside for 
discretionary purposes. The Housing grant allotments are distributed as 
a result of a competition and according to language in the 
appropriations law requiring that of the total amount available, not 
less than 70 percent shall be allocated to permanent housing 
activities, leaving not more than 30 percent to temporary housing 
activities.
    This notice includes the following sections:
     Section II of this notice provides a discussion of the 
data used to populate the formula.
     Section III describes the hold-harmless provision for the 
implementation year.
     Section IV describes minimum funding provisions to address 
State service areas that would receive less than $60,000.
     Section V describes the application of the formula and the 
hold-harmless provision using preliminary state allotments for PY 2023.

II. Description of Data Files and Allotment Formula

    As with all state planning estimates since 1999, the PY 2023 
estimates are based on four data sources: (1) State-level, 2017 hired 
farm labor expenditure data from the United States Department of 
Agriculture's (USDA) Census of Agriculture (COA); (2) regional-level, 
2017 average hourly earnings data from the USDA's Farm Labor Survey; 
(3) regional-level, 2010-2018 demographic data from the ETA's National

[[Page 31280]]

Agricultural Workers Survey (NAWS); and, (4) 2015-2019 (5-year file) 
data from the United States Census Bureau's American Community Survey 
(ACS).
    The formula's original methodology is described in the Federal 
Register notice 64 FR 27390, May 19, 1999. In PY 2018, ETA incorporated 
two modifications to the allotment formula to provide more accurate 
estimates of each state service area's relative share of persons 
eligible for the program. The formula also used updated data from each 
of the four data files serving as the basis of the formula since 1999. 
The revised formula methodology is described in the Federal Register 
notice 83 FR 32151, July 11, 2018. In PY 2021, ETA incorporated two 
modifications to the allotment formula. These modifications are 
described in Federal Register notice 86 FR 32063, June 16, 2021. The 
Federal Register notices are accessible at https://www.federalregister.gov/.
    The Department will continue to apply the modifications that were 
incorporated in the PY 2021 allotments to the PY 2023 allotments, 
including the expansion to include farmworkers who are in families with 
total family incomes at or below 150 percent of the poverty line rather 
than the higher of the poverty line or 70 percent of the lower living 
standard income level. ETA will subsequently revise the PY 2024 
guidance regarding the definition of ``low-income individual'' as 
needed if the same provision is not included in subsequent 
appropriations.

III. Description of the Hold-Harmless Provision

    ETA will continue the hold-harmless provision as instituted in PY 
2018. The hold-harmless provision provides for a stop loss/stop gain 
limit to transition to the use of the updated data. This approach is 
based on a state service area's previous year's allotment percentage, 
which is its relative share of the total formula allotments. The stop 
gain provision provides that no state service area will receive an 
amount that is more than 150 percent of their previous year's allotment 
percentage. The staged transition of the hold-harmless provision is as 
follows:

    (1) In PY 2021, each state service area received an amount equal 
to at least 95 percent of their PY 2020 allotment percentage, as 
applied to the PY 2021 formula funds available.
    (2) In PY 2022, each state service area received an amount equal 
to at least 90 percent of their PY 2021 allotment percentage, as 
applied to the PY 2022 formula funds available.
    (3) In PY 2023, each state service area will receive an amount 
equal to at least 85 percent of their PY 2022 allotment percentage, 
as applied to the PY 2023 formula funds available.

    In PY 2024, since the Department has a responsibility to use the 
most current and reliable data available, amounts for the new awards 
will be based on updated data from the sources described in Section II, 
pending their availability. At that time, the Department will determine 
whether the changes to state allotments are significant enough to 
warrant another hold-harmless provision. Otherwise, allotments to each 
state service area will be for an amount resulting from a direct 
allotment of the proposed funding formula without adjustment.

IV. Minimum Funding Provisions

    A state area that would receive less than $60,000 by application of 
the formula will, at the option of the DOL, receive no allotment or, if 
practical, be combined with another adjacent state area. Funding below 
$60,000 is deemed insufficient for sustaining an independently 
administered program. However, if practical, a state jurisdiction that 
would receive less than $60,000 may be combined with another adjacent 
state area.

V. Program Year 2023 Preliminary State Allotments

    The state allotments set forth in the Table appended to this notice 
reflect the distribution resulting from the allotment formula described 
above. For PY 2022, $88,160,000 was allotted for career services and 
training grants, $6,447,000 was allotted for housing grants, and 
$657,000 was retained for other discretionary purposes.
    For PY 2023, the funding level provided for in the Act for the 
migrant and seasonal farmworker program is $97,396,000. Congress 
provided $90,134,000 for formula grants (of which $90,032,000 was 
allotted after $102,000 was set aside for program integrity), 
$6,591,000 for migrant and seasonal farmworker housing (of which 
$6,584,000 was allotted after $7,000 was set aside for program 
integrity and of which not less than 70 percent shall be for permanent 
housing), and another $671,000 was set aside for other discretionary 
purposes.
    For purposes of illustrating the effects of the updates to the 
allotment formula, columns 2 and 3 show the state allotments with the 
application of the 90 percent hold-harmless for PY 2022 and 85 percent 
hold-harmless for PY 2023. The dollar difference between PY 2022 and PY 
2023 allotments is shown in column 4. The percent difference is 
reported in column 5.

Brent Parton,
Acting Assistant Secretary, Employment and Training, Labor.

   U.S. Department of Labor, Employment and Training Administration, National Farmworker Jobs Program--Career
                                          Services and Training Grants
                                         [PY 2023 Allotments to States]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                    PY 2022 90%     PY 2023 85%
                      State                        StopLoss/150%   StopLoss/150%   $ Difference    % Difference
                                                     StopGain        StopGain
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total...........................................     $88,160,000     $90,032,000      $1,872,000            2.12
Alabama.........................................         776,212         800,937          24,725            3.19
Alaska..........................................  ..............  ..............  ..............            0.00
Arizona.........................................       2,553,478       2,634,816          81,338            3.19
Arkansas........................................       1,265,495       1,305,806          40,311            3.19
California......................................      23,164,574      23,902,460         737,886            3.19
Colorado........................................       1,763,318       1,819,486          56,168            3.19
Connecticut.....................................         531,602         548,535          16,933            3.19
Delaware........................................         163,949         169,171           5,222            3.19
Dist of Columbia................................  ..............  ..............  ..............            0.00
Florida.........................................       3,328,614       3,266,891        (61,723)           -1.85
Georgia.........................................       1,756,823       1,812,785          55,962            3.19

[[Page 31281]]

 
Hawaii..........................................         284,832         247,248        (37,584)          -13.20
Idaho...........................................       2,327,447       2,401,585          74,138            3.19
Illinois........................................       1,939,999       2,001,796          61,797            3.19
Indiana.........................................       1,303,529       1,345,052          41,523            3.19
Iowa............................................       1,863,100       1,922,448          59,348            3.19
Kansas..........................................       1,318,690       1,360,695          42,005            3.19
Kentucky........................................         923,511         864,671        (58,840)           -6.37
Louisiana.......................................         829,992         856,431          26,439            3.19
Maine...........................................         432,739         446,523          13,784            3.19
Maryland........................................         552,597         570,199          17,602            3.19
Massachusetts...................................         543,815         561,137          17,322            3.19
Michigan........................................       2,199,069       2,269,118          70,049            3.19
Minnesota.......................................       1,668,177       1,721,315          53,138            3.19
Mississippi.....................................         924,370         953,815          29,445            3.19
Missouri........................................       1,293,215       1,334,410          41,195            3.19
Montana.........................................         741,784         765,413          23,629            3.19
Nebraska........................................       1,322,506       1,364,634          42,128            3.19
Nevada..........................................         237,476         245,041           7,565            3.19
New Hampshire...................................         154,787         159,717           4,930            3.19
New Jersey......................................         816,449         842,456          26,007            3.19
New Mexico......................................       1,132,485       1,168,559          36,074            3.19
New York........................................       2,300,453       2,373,732          73,279            3.19
North Carolina..................................       2,333,344       2,179,435       (153,909)           -6.60
North Dakota....................................         780,688         805,556          24,868            3.19
Ohio............................................       1,524,192       1,572,744          48,552            3.19
Oklahoma........................................         928,725         958,308          29,583            3.19
Oregon..........................................       2,340,449       2,415,002          74,553            3.19
Pennsylvania....................................       1,868,860       1,928,391          59,531            3.19
Puerto Rico.....................................       2,140,963       2,112,901        (28,062)           -1.31
Rhode Island....................................          68,784          70,975           2,191            3.19
South Carolina..................................         717,495         718,772           1,277            0.18
South Dakota....................................         706,000         728,488          22,488            3.19
Tennessee.......................................         791,308         686,894       (104,414)          -13.20
Texas...........................................       4,671,373       4,788,352         116,979            2.50
Utah............................................         693,559         715,651          22,092            3.19
Vermont.........................................         217,113         224,029           6,916            3.19
Virginia........................................         886,698         811,392        (75,306)           -8.49
Washington......................................       4,783,367       4,935,737         152,370            3.19
West Virginia...................................         137,443         119,307        (18,136)          -13.20
Wisconsin.......................................       1,823,100       1,881,174          58,074            3.19
Wyoming.........................................         331,452         342,010          10,558            3.19
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

[FR Doc. 2023-10370 Filed 5-15-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510-FN-P


This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.