U.S. Census Bureau
U.S. Department of Commerce News

EMBARGOED UNTIL: 12:01 A.M. EST, FEBRUARY 11, 2003 (TUESDAY)

                                
Mike Bergman                                               CB03-32
Public Information Office
(301) 763-3030/457-3670 (fax)
(301) 457-1037 (TDD)
e-mail: pio@census.gov                                Quotes & radio sound bites

The Nation's Data Book

              Recycling Gains, Hog Farming Wanes,
             According to New Statistical Abstract
                                
  Americans nearly doubled their recycling of trash over the past decade,
while the number of hog farms plummeted by more than half over a six-year
period, according to the new edition of the government's annual
statistical compendium released today by the Commerce Department's Census
Bureau.

  "Thirty percent of the residential and commercial waste generated in
municipal collections was recovered in 2000, compared to 16 percent 10
years earlier," said Lars Johanson, technical coordinator of the
Statistical Abstract of the United States: 2002.

  As for livestock operations with hogs and pigs, Johanson said there were
81,000 in 2001, down from 168,000 in 1995. "Almost all of the decline
occurred among operations with fewer than 500 head," he said.

  The Abstract, published every year since 1878, features 30 new tables
with Census 2000 long-form data. Another 49 new tables cover a variety of
topics, including carpooling, Internet use and voluntarism.

  The new edition has more than 1,400 tables and charts with statistics
from the most recent year or period available.

  Other highlights:

  - About 35.5 million individual tax returns (88 percent of itemized
    returns) claimed charitable contributions for 1999, amounting to 
    $126 billion in total deductions or an average of $3,541 per return.

  - In 2001, 57 percent of workers age 25 and older used a computer on
    the job. Usage ranged from 80 percent for managers and professionals 
    to 21 percent of operators, fabricators and laborers.

  - Households in the San Francisco-Oakland-San Jose, Calif., area spent
    the most for food ($7,442) and housing ($19,682) among selected 
    metropolitan areas in 1999-2000; Anchorage, Alaska, was the next 
    highest. Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, Fla., consumers spent the 
    least on food ($4,589) and Pittsburgh-Beaver Valley, Penn., spent
    the least on housing ($10,451).

  - The average cell phone call in 2001 lasted 2.74 minutes, and the 
    average monthly bill ran $47.37.

  - Of the 25 largest metro areas in Census 2000, Phoenix-Mesa, Ariz., 
    had the highest percentage of workers who carpooled to work 
    (15.3 percent), followed by Los Angeles-Riverside-Orange County, Calif., 
    (15.2 percent).

  - In 2000, 44 percent of adults did volunteer work, contributing an 
    average of 15 hours per month.

  - There were 2.7 million federal civilian employees at the end of 
    fiscal year 2001, down from 3.1 million 10 years earlier.

  - In 2000, nearly 51 million tourists arrived in the United States and 
    spent more than $85 billion while here.

  - The most densely populated country in the world was Monaco, with 
    41,235 people per square mile in 2001. Next was Singapore, with 
    17,849 per square mile. Greenland had less than one person per square 
    mile and the least densely populated country was Mongolia, with four.

  - States collected $39 billion in gross revenues from pari-mutuel and 
    amusement taxes in 2000. After prizes and administration, $12.4 
    billion in proceeds was available.

  - The states with the highest percentage of federally owned land in 
    2000 were Nevada (83 percent), Utah (65 percent) and Idaho (63 percent). 
    Alaska had the most acreage at 221 million.

  - Sault Sainte Marie, Mich., averages 117 inches of snow each year. 
    Juneau, Alaska, gets 99 inches and Buffalo, N.Y., shovels 93.

  The 2002 Statistical Abstract may be obtained by calling the U.S.
Government Printing Office on (202) 512-1800 (ISBN No. 003-024-09031-7,
$41 for the softbound edition; and No. 003-024-09032-5, $51 for the
hardbound edition).

  It may also be obtained by calling the National Technical Information
Service on (800) 553-6847 (PB2002-965801, $39 for the softbound edition;
and PB2002-965301, $47 for the hardbound edition).

  A CD-ROM version of the book will be available later.

                              -X-



Source: U.S. Census Bureau
Public Information Office
301-763-3030

Last Revised: February 11, 2003 at 08:58:26 AM

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