Number of Medicare FFS Emergency Transport Claims by State and County Or Equivalent Entity, 2017

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Number of Medicare FFS Emergency Transport Claims by State and County Or Equivalent Entity, 2017 Number of Medicare FFS Emergency Transport Claims by State, 2017 STATE/TERRITORY CLAIM COUNT ALABAMA 171,482 ALASKA 14,631 ARIZONA 140,516 ARKANSAS 122,909 CALIFORNIA 788,350 COLORADO 105,617 CONNECTICUT 152,831 DELAWARE 47,239 DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA 25,593 FLORIDA 637,127 GEORGIA 289,687 GUAM 2,338 HAWAII 19,028 IDAHO 35,581 ILLINOIS 419,315 INDIANA 229,877 IOWA 104,965 KANSAS 92,760 KENTUCKY 184,636 LOUISIANA 163,083 MAINE 72,731 MARYLAND 194,231 MASSACHUSETTS 318,382 MICHIGAN 327,029 MINNESOTA 146,030 MISSISSIPPI 141,840 MISSOURI 222,075 MONTANA 26,943 NEBRASKA 49,449 NEVADA 75,571 NEW HAMPSHIRE 57,423 NEW JERSEY 315,471 NEW MEXICO 55,554 NEW YORK 493,291 NORTH CAROLINA 418,959 NORTH DAKOTA 21,502 NORTHERN MARIANAS 826 STATE/TERRITORY CLAIM COUNT OHIO 390,605 OKLAHOMA 150,046 OREGON 98,867 PENNSYLVANIA 391,482 PUERTO RICO 7,769 RHODE ISLAND 40,743 SOUTH CAROLINA 219,186 SOUTH DAKOTA 26,748 TENNESSEE 237,657 TEXAS 629,151 UTAH 32,309 VERMONT 29,689 VIRGIN ISLANDS 1,577 VIRGINIA 271,194 WASHINGTON 179,466 WEST VIRGINIA 93,968 WISCONSIN 158,239 WYOMING 17,357 Number of Medicare FFS Emergency Transport Claims by State and County or Equivalent Entity, 2017 STATE/TERRITORY COUNTY/EQUIVALENT CLAIM COUNT ALABAMA Autauga 1,326 ALABAMA Baldwin 7,050 ALABAMA Barbour 1,256 ALABAMA Bibb 429 ALABAMA Blount 1,372 ALABAMA Bullock 246 ALABAMA Butler 1,058 ALABAMA Calhoun 5,975 ALABAMA Chambers 1,811 ALABAMA Cherokee 885 ALABAMA Chilton 1,298 ALABAMA Choctaw 777 ALABAMA Clarke 980 ALABAMA Clay 491 ALABAMA Cleburne 628 ALABAMA Coffee 1,941 ALABAMA Colbert 2,992 ALABAMA Conecuh 632 ALABAMA Coosa 338 ALABAMA Covington 2,488 ALABAMA Crenshaw 561 ALABAMA Cullman 2,931 ALABAMA Dale 1,959 ALABAMA Dallas 1,735 ALABAMA DeKalb 2,306 ALABAMA Elmore 1,769 ALABAMA Escambia 1,919 ALABAMA Etowah 5,325 ALABAMA Fayette 1,251 ALABAMA Franklin 1,579 ALABAMA Geneva 1,247 STATE/TERRITORY COUNTY/EQUIVALENT CLAIM COUNT ALABAMA Greene 388 ALABAMA Hale 800 ALABAMA Henry 853 ALABAMA Houston 4,088 ALABAMA Jackson 3,261 ALABAMA Jefferson 19,832 ALABAMA Lamar 652 ALABAMA Lauderdale 3,537 ALABAMA Lawrence 1,620 ALABAMA Lee 3,373 ALABAMA Limestone 3,047 ALABAMA Lowndes 260 ALABAMA Macon 568 ALABAMA Madison 13,954 ALABAMA Marengo 834 ALABAMA Marion 1,142 ALABAMA Marshall 5,816 ALABAMA Mobile 11,256 ALABAMA Monroe 1,000 ALABAMA Montgomery 6,824 ALABAMA Morgan 2,312 ALABAMA Perry 477 ALABAMA Pickens 891 ALABAMA Pike 981 ALABAMA Randolph 1,194 ALABAMA Russell 2,658 ALABAMA Shelby 3,765 ALABAMA St. Clair 2,571 ALABAMA Sumter 509 ALABAMA Talladega 2,350 ALABAMA Tallapoosa 2,251 ALABAMA Tuscaloosa 6,683 ALABAMA Walker 3,167 ALABAMA Washington 443 ALABAMA Wilcox 305 ALABAMA Winston 1,265 ALASKA Aleutians West 11 ALASKA Anchorage 6,606 STATE/TERRITORY COUNTY/EQUIVALENT CLAIM COUNT ALASKA Bethel 74 ALASKA Denali 36 ALASKA Dillingham 60 ALASKA Fairbanks North Star 1,624 ALASKA Hoonah Angoon 76 ALASKA Juneau 938 ALASKA Kenai Peninsula 1,564 ALASKA Ketchikan Gateway 674 ALASKA Kodiak Island 204 ALASKA Matanuska-Susitna 1,729 ALASKA Nome 207 ALASKA Northwest Arctic 168 ALASKA Petersburg 44 ALASKA Prince of Wales Hyder 74 ALASKA Sitka 270 ALASKA Southeast Fairbanks 112 ALASKA Valdez Cordova 123 ALASKA Wrangell 21 ALASKA Yukon-Koyukuk 16 ARIZONA Apache 1,135 ARIZONA Cochise 4,363 ARIZONA Coconino 3,789 ARIZONA Gila 3,337 ARIZONA Graham 710 ARIZONA Greenlee 178 ARIZONA La Paz 1,014 ARIZONA Maricopa 65,870 ARIZONA Mohave 8,978 ARIZONA Navajo 4,144 ARIZONA Pima 22,030 ARIZONA Pinal 8,288 ARIZONA Santa Cruz 611 ARIZONA Yavapai 9,318 ARIZONA Yuma 6,751 ARKANSAS Arkansas 781 ARKANSAS Ashley 954 ARKANSAS Baxter 3,192 ARKANSAS Benton 5,182 STATE/TERRITORY COUNTY/EQUIVALENT CLAIM COUNT ARKANSAS Boone 2,224 ARKANSAS Bradley 697 ARKANSAS Calhoun 83 ARKANSAS Carroll 1,257 ARKANSAS Chicot 772 ARKANSAS Clark 1,004 ARKANSAS Clay 1,156 ARKANSAS Cleburne 1,304 ARKANSAS Cleveland 381 ARKANSAS Columbia 1,189 ARKANSAS Conway 882 ARKANSAS Craighead 4,767 ARKANSAS Crawford 2,095 ARKANSAS Crittenden 2,870 ARKANSAS Cross 838 ARKANSAS Dallas 168 ARKANSAS Desha 507 ARKANSAS Drew 1,041 ARKANSAS Faulkner 3,497 ARKANSAS Franklin 531 ARKANSAS Fulton 546 ARKANSAS Garland 7,194 ARKANSAS Grant 815 ARKANSAS Greene 1,945 ARKANSAS Hempstead 902 ARKANSAS Hot Spring 1,557 ARKANSAS Howard 593 ARKANSAS Independence 1,747 ARKANSAS Izard 598 ARKANSAS Jackson 1,107 ARKANSAS Jefferson 3,324 ARKANSAS Johnson 838 ARKANSAS Lafayette 399 ARKANSAS Lawrence 764 ARKANSAS Lee 484 ARKANSAS Lincoln 551 ARKANSAS Little River 854 ARKANSAS Logan 1,031 STATE/TERRITORY COUNTY/EQUIVALENT CLAIM COUNT ARKANSAS Lonoke 2,738 ARKANSAS Madison 545 ARKANSAS Marion 746 ARKANSAS Miller 2,026 ARKANSAS Mississippi 1,913 ARKANSAS Monroe 380 ARKANSAS Montgomery 420 ARKANSAS Nevada 518 ARKANSAS Newton 241 ARKANSAS Ouachita 1,250 ARKANSAS Perry 288 ARKANSAS Phillips 862 ARKANSAS Pike 628 ARKANSAS Poinsett 1,685 ARKANSAS Polk 993 ARKANSAS Pope 1,796 ARKANSAS Prairie 541 ARKANSAS Pulaski 15,983 ARKANSAS Randolph 883 ARKANSAS Saline 4,403 ARKANSAS Scott 247 ARKANSAS Searcy 415 ARKANSAS Sebastian 3,988 ARKANSAS Sevier 509 ARKANSAS Sharp 1,032 ARKANSAS St. Francis 1,015 ARKANSAS Stone 549 ARKANSAS Union 1,692 ARKANSAS Van Buren 784 ARKANSAS Washington 6,020 ARKANSAS White 3,774 ARKANSAS Woodruff 558 ARKANSAS Yell 866 CALIFORNIA Alameda 34,842 CALIFORNIA Alpine 32 CALIFORNIA Amador 1,661 CALIFORNIA Butte 13,921 CALIFORNIA Calaveras 1,861 STATE/TERRITORY COUNTY/EQUIVALENT CLAIM COUNT CALIFORNIA Colusa 432 CALIFORNIA Contra Costa 21,944 CALIFORNIA Del Norte 1,780 CALIFORNIA El Dorado 4,490 CALIFORNIA Fresno 32,125 CALIFORNIA Glenn 1,127 CALIFORNIA Humboldt 6,349 CALIFORNIA Imperial 4,821 CALIFORNIA Inyo 934 CALIFORNIA Kern 20,221 CALIFORNIA Kings 4,329 CALIFORNIA Lake 3,629 CALIFORNIA Lassen 958 CALIFORNIA Los Angeles 163,033 CALIFORNIA Madera 3,352 CALIFORNIA Marin 5,250 CALIFORNIA Mariposa 920 CALIFORNIA Mendocino 3,211 CALIFORNIA Merced 9,359 CALIFORNIA Modoc 427 CALIFORNIA Mono 258 CALIFORNIA Monterey 9,394 CALIFORNIA Napa 4,068 CALIFORNIA Nevada 4,272 CALIFORNIA Orange 45,761 CALIFORNIA Placer 9,040 CALIFORNIA Plumas 1,175 CALIFORNIA Riverside 33,371 CALIFORNIA Sacramento 38,318 CALIFORNIA San Benito 1,000 CALIFORNIA San Bernardino 29,931 CALIFORNIA San Diego 62,633 CALIFORNIA San Francisco 23,629 CALIFORNIA San Joaquin 18,929 CALIFORNIA San Luis Obispo 8,236 CALIFORNIA San Mateo 9,990 CALIFORNIA Santa Barbara 11,724 CALIFORNIA Santa Clara 26,752 STATE/TERRITORY COUNTY/EQUIVALENT CLAIM COUNT CALIFORNIA Santa Cruz 6,678 CALIFORNIA Shasta 11,309 CALIFORNIA Sierra 149 CALIFORNIA Siskiyou 2,138 CALIFORNIA Solano 10,643 CALIFORNIA Sonoma 12,011 CALIFORNIA Stanislaus 15,312 CALIFORNIA Sutter 5,379 CALIFORNIA Tehama 3,699 CALIFORNIA Trinity 458 CALIFORNIA Tulare 13,353 CALIFORNIA Tuolumne 2,948 CALIFORNIA Ventura 17,073 CALIFORNIA Yolo 4,334 CALIFORNIA Yuba 3,377 COLORADO Adams 5,391 COLORADO Alamosa 866 COLORADO Arapahoe 9,824 COLORADO Archuleta 411 COLORADO Baca 141 COLORADO Bent 207 COLORADO Boulder 4,855 COLORADO Broomfield 734 COLORADO Chaffee 484 COLORADO Cheyenne 14 COLORADO Clear Creek 170 COLORADO Conejos 251 COLORADO Costilla 94 COLORADO Crowley 166 COLORADO Custer 110 COLORADO Delta 1,233 COLORADO Denver 11,286 COLORADO Dolores 41 COLORADO Douglas 3,123 COLORADO Eagle 697 COLORADO El Paso 14,256 COLORADO Elbert 223 COLORADO Fremont 1,454 STATE/TERRITORY COUNTY/EQUIVALENT CLAIM COUNT COLORADO Garfield 1,242 COLORADO Gilpin 138 COLORADO Grand 404 COLORADO Gunnison 408 COLORADO Hinsdale 38 COLORADO Huerfano 299 COLORADO Jackson 65 COLORADO Jefferson 8,433 COLORADO Kiowa 69 COLORADO Kit Carson 272 COLORADO La Plata 1,280 COLORADO Lake 135 COLORADO Larimer 9,010 COLORADO Las Animas 514 COLORADO Lincoln 260 COLORADO Logan 322 COLORADO Mesa 5,072 COLORADO Mineral 52 COLORADO Moffat 398 COLORADO Montezuma 1,169 COLORADO Montrose 1,491 COLORADO Morgan 1,129 COLORADO Otero 1,139 COLORADO Ouray 92 COLORADO Park 174 COLORADO Phillips 182 COLORADO Pitkin 312 COLORADO Prowers 633 COLORADO Pueblo 6,416 COLORADO Rio Blanco 150 COLORADO Rio Grande 595 COLORADO Routt 362 COLORADO Saguache 159 COLORADO San Juan 14 COLORADO San Miguel 113 COLORADO Sedgwick 42 COLORADO Summit 508 COLORADO Teller 614 STATE/TERRITORY COUNTY/EQUIVALENT CLAIM COUNT COLORADO Washington 134 COLORADO Weld 5,401 COLORADO Yuma 346 CONNECTICUT Fairfield 32,125 CONNECTICUT Hartford 39,877 CONNECTICUT Litchfield 8,406 CONNECTICUT Middlesex 7,960 CONNECTICUT New Haven 41,556 CONNECTICUT New London 13,238 CONNECTICUT Tolland 4,646 CONNECTICUT Windham 5,023 DELAWARE Kent 8,137 DELAWARE New Castle 25,155 DELAWARE Sussex 13,947 DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA District of Columbia 25,593 FLORIDA Alachua 9,841 FLORIDA Baker 819 FLORIDA Bay 7,792 FLORIDA Bradford 1,760 FLORIDA Brevard 19,901 FLORIDA Broward 36,726 FLORIDA Calhoun 988 FLORIDA Charlotte 10,514 FLORIDA Citrus 7,742 FLORIDA Clay 6,319 FLORIDA Collier 14,818 FLORIDA Columbia 4,147 FLORIDA DeSoto 1,125 FLORIDA Dixie 799 FLORIDA Duval 29,830 FLORIDA Escambia 13,566 FLORIDA Flagler 62 FLORIDA Franklin 470 FLORIDA Gadsden 992 FLORIDA Gilchrist 918 FLORIDA Glades 206 FLORIDA Gulf 923 FLORIDA Hamilton 508 STATE/TERRITORY COUNTY/EQUIVALENT CLAIM COUNT FLORIDA Hardee 644 FLORIDA Hendry 1,087 FLORIDA Hernando 7,096 FLORIDA Highlands 6,231 FLORIDA Hillsborough 32,423 FLORIDA Holmes 952 FLORIDA Indian River 9,336 FLORIDA Jackson 2,001 FLORIDA Jefferson 439 FLORIDA Lafayette 218 FLORIDA Lake 16,221 FLORIDA Lee 28,845 FLORIDA Leon 6,400 FLORIDA Levy 1,657 FLORIDA Liberty 186 FLORIDA Madison 934 FLORIDA Manatee 13,242 FLORIDA Marion 14,546 FLORIDA Martin 10,055 FLORIDA Miami-Dade 44,845 FLORIDA Monroe 3,346 FLORIDA Nassau 2,695 FLORIDA Okaloosa 7,284 FLORIDA Okeechobee 1,620 FLORIDA Orange 26,870 FLORIDA Osceola 6,366 FLORIDA Palm Beach 50,741 FLORIDA Pasco 14,818 FLORIDA Pinellas 44,745 FLORIDA Polk 19,799 FLORIDA Putnam 3,661 FLORIDA Santa Rosa 5,533 FLORIDA Sarasota 23,210 FLORIDA Seminole 10,245 FLORIDA St.
Recommended publications
  • State:Alabama ---Incomelimit S
    STATE:ALABAMA ---------------------------INCOMELIMITS---------------------------- PROGRAM 1 PERSON 2 PERSON 3 PERSON 4 PERSON 5 PERSON 6 PERSON 7 PERSON 8 PERSON Anniston-Oxford, AL MSA FY 2013 MFI: 53100 30% OF MEDIAN 11200 12800 14400 15950 17250 18550 19800 21100 VERY LOW INCOME 18600 21250 23900 26550 28700 30800 32950 35050 LOW-INCOME 29750 34000 38250 42500 45900 49300 52700 56100 Auburn-Opelika, AL MSA FY 2013 MFI: 63000 30% OF MEDIAN 13250 15150 17050 18900 20450 21950 23450 24950 VERY LOW INCOME 22050 25200 28350 31500 34050 36550 39100 41600 LOW-INCOME 35300 40350 45400 50400 54450 58500 62500 66550 Birmingham-Hoover, AL MSA Birmingham-Hoover, AL HMFA FY 2013 MFI: 57100 30% OF MEDIAN 12550 14350 16150 17900 19350 20800 22200 23650 VERY LOW INCOME 20900 23900 26900 29850 32250 34650 37050 39450 LOW-INCOME 33450 38200 43000 47750 51600 55400 59250 63050 Chilton County, AL HMFA FY 2013 MFI: 52000 30% OF MEDIAN 10950 12500 14050 15600 16850 18100 19350 20600 VERY LOW INCOME 18200 20800 23400 26000 28100 30200 32250 34350 LOW-INCOME 29150 33300 37450 41600 44950 48300 51600 54950 Walker County, AL HMFA FY 2013 MFI: 41400 30% OF MEDIAN 9750 11150 12550 13900 15050 16150 17250 18350 VERY LOW INCOME 16250 18550 20850 23150 25050 26900 28750 30600 LOW-INCOME 25950 29650 33350 37050 40050 43000 45950 48950 Columbus, GA-AL MSA FY 2013 MFI: 48200 30% OF MEDIAN 10450 11950 13450 14900 16100 17300 18500 19700 VERY LOW INCOME 17400 19900 22400 24850 26850 28850 30850 32850 LOW-INCOME 27900 31850 35850 39800 43000 46200 49400 52550 Decatur,
    [Show full text]
  • Immigrant Detention in Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama, and the COVID-19 Pandemic
    WEBINAR Immigrant Detention in Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama, and the COVID-19 Pandemic May 6, 2020 2:30pm – 4pm EDT 1:30pm – 3pm CDT Featured Speakers DONALD KERWIN Executive Director Center for Migration Studies HIROKO KUSUDA Clinic Professor and Director of the Immigration Law Section Loyola University New Orleans College of Law AMELIA S. MCGOWAN Immigration Campaign Director Mississippi Center for Justice Adjunct Professor Mississippi College School of Law Immigration Clinic MARK DOW Author of American Gulag: Inside US Immigration Prisons US Immigrant Detention System ● Genesis of Webinar: A Whole of Community Response to Challenges Facing Immigrants, their Families, and Communities in Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama ● The US Immigrant Detention System: Size, Growth, “Civil” Detention Population, Privatization, and Diversity of Institutional Actors ● Immigrant detainees v. persons serving time. ● Louisiana has always been one of the states with the most immigrant detainees. ICE Detention Facility Locator: https://www.ice.gov/detention-facilities COVID-19 and US Immigrant Detention System ● “Confirmed” COVID-19 Cases: (1) March 27 (no “confirmed” cases among detainees), (2) April 20 (124 confirmed cases), (3) May 4 (606 confirmed cases in 37 facilities, and 39 cases among ICE detention staff). Source: https://www.ice.gov/coronavirus ● These figures do not count: (1) former detainees who have been deported, (2) ICE contractors (private, state and local, and others); and (3) non-ICE prisoners/detainees held with ICE detainees. ● ICE detention population: March 21 (38,058), April 25 (29,675). ● Social distancing is “nearly impossible in immigration detention.” As a result, ICE should “implement community-based alternatives to detention to alleviate the mass overcrowding in detention facilities.” Open letter to ICE Acting Director Matthew T.
    [Show full text]
  • 2017 Crop Year Secretarial Disaster Designations
    Secretarial Disaster Designations - 2017 Crop Year All Drought - Total Counties by State (updated 5/23/2018) Primary Contiguous Primary Contiguous State/Territory Counties Counties State/Territory Counties Counties Alabama 67 0 Nebraska 0 10 Alaska 0 0 Nevada 2 6 Arizona 5 6 New Hampshire 0 0 Arkansas 22 21 New Jersey 0 0 California 35 9 New Mexico 0 2 Colorado 4 18 New York 0 0 Connecticut 0 3 North Carolina 9 12 Delaware 0 0 North Dakota 47 6 Florida 35 17 Ohio 0 0 Georgia 122 25 Oklahoma 51 16 Hawaii 3 1 Oregon 0 0 Idaho 3 4 Pennsylvania 0 0 Illinois 0 0 Puerto Rico 0 0 Indiana 0 0 Rhode Island 0 0 Iowa 19 14 South Carolina 16 6 Kansas 15 24 South Dakota 37 13 Kentucky 0 12 Tennessee 66 14 Louisiana 0 9 Texas 18 30 Maine 0 0 Utah 2 7 Maryland 0 0 Vermont 0 0 Massachusetts 1 3 Virgin Islands of the U.S. 0 0 Michigan 0 0 Virginia 1 6 Minnesota 0 7 Washington 0 2 Mississippi 69 10 West Virginia 0 1 Missouri 0 11 Wisconsin 0 0 Montana 42 11 Wyoming 2 6 Total 693 342 1 2017 All Drought - Primary and Contiguous Counties (updated 5/23/2018) State/Territory Primary County St/Co FIPS Code Alabama Autauga 01001 Alabama Baldwin 01003 Alabama Barbour 01005 Alabama Bibb 01007 Alabama Blount 01009 Alabama Bullock 01011 Alabama Butler 01013 Alabama Calhoun 01015 Alabama Chambers 01017 Alabama Cherokee 01019 Alabama Chilton 01021 Alabama Choctaw 01023 Alabama Clarke 01025 Alabama Clay 01027 Alabama Cleburne 01029 Alabama Coffee 01031 Alabama Colbert 01033 Alabama Conecuh 01035 Alabama Coosa 01037 Alabama Covington 01039 Alabama Crenshaw 01041 Alabama
    [Show full text]
  • SMEX03 ENVISAT ASAR Data, Alabama, Georgia, Oklahoma, Version 1 USER GUIDE
    SMEX03 ENVISAT ASAR Data, Alabama, Georgia, Oklahoma, Version 1 USER GUIDE How to Cite These Data As a condition of using these data, you must include a citation: Jackson, T., R. Bindlish, and R. Van der Velde. 2009. SMEX03 ENVISAT ASAR Data, Alabama, Version 1. [Indicate subset used]. Boulder, Colorado USA. NASA National Snow and Ice Data Center Distributed Active Archive Center. doi: https://doi.org/10.5067/7ZGTHVZFAIDT. [Date Accessed]. Jackson, T., R. Bindlish, and R. Van der Velde. 2013. SMEX03 ENVISAT ASAR Data, Georgia, Version 1. [Indicate subset used]. Boulder, Colorado USA. NASA National Snow and Ice Data Center Distributed Active Archive Center. doi: https://doi.org/10.5067/M28ZA9EYPHQ5. [Date Accessed]. Jackson, T., R. Bindlish, and R. Van der Velde. 2013. SMEX03 ENVISAT ASAR Data, Oklahoma, Version 1. [Indicate subset used]. Boulder, Colorado USA. NASA National Snow and Ice Data Center Distributed Active Archive Center. doi: https://doi.org/10.5067/YXYV5M9B6I1J. [Date Accessed]. FOR QUESTIONS ABOUT THESE DATA, CONTACT [email protected] FOR CURRENT INFORMATION, VISIT https://nsidc.org/data/NSIDC-0357, https://nsidc.org/data/NSIDC-0576, https://nsidc.org/data/NSIDC-0577 USER GUIDE: SMEX03 ENVISAT ASAR Data, Alabama, Georgia, Oklahoma, Version 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS 1 DETAILED DATA DESCRIPTION ............................................................................................... 2 1.1 Format ..................................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • List of Surrounding States *For Those Chapters That Are Made up of More Than One State We Will Submit Education to the States and Surround States of the Chapter
    List of Surrounding States *For those Chapters that are made up of more than one state we will submit education to the states and surround states of the Chapter. Hawaii accepts credit for education if approved in state in which class is being held Accepts credit for education if approved in state in which class is being held Virginia will accept Continuing Education hours without prior approval. All Qualifying Education must be approved by them. Offering In Will submit to Alaska Alabama Florida Georgia Mississippi South Carolina Texas Arkansas Kansas Louisiana Missouri Mississippi Oklahoma Tennessee Texas Arizona California Colorado New Mexico Nevada Utah California Arizona Nevada Oregon Colorado Arizona Kansas Nebraska New Mexico Oklahoma Texas Utah Wyoming Connecticut Massachusetts New Jersey New York Rhode Island District of Columbia Delaware Maryland Pennsylvania Virginia West Virginia Delaware District of Columbia Maryland New Jersey Pennsylvania Florida Alabama Georgia Georgia Alabama Florida North Carolina South Carolina Tennessee Hawaii Iowa Illinois Missouri Minnesota Nebraska South Dakota Wisconsin Idaho Montana Nevada Oregon Utah Washington Wyoming Illinois Illinois Indiana Kentucky Michigan Missouri Tennessee Wisconsin Indiana Illinois Kentucky Michigan Ohio Wisconsin Kansas Colorado Missouri Nebraska Oklahoma Kentucky Illinois Indiana Missouri Ohio Tennessee Virginia West Virginia Louisiana Arkansas Mississippi Texas Massachusetts Connecticut Maine New Hampshire New York Rhode Island Vermont Maryland Delaware District of Columbia
    [Show full text]
  • Take the Lead, Alabama
    Take the Lead, Alabama Our children deserve the Too many high school graduates in Alabama best schools possible. are not prepared for college. That’s not happening today. Alabama is at the bottom of just about every education ranking being • Alabama students ranked No. 45 in College Readiness (U.S. News). published today, and that is hobbling our young people in a time when jobs require more education and • Only 18 percent of Alabama high school seniors are ready in all four ACT core subjects (PARCA). skill than ever before. • Nearly 30 percent of college freshmen in Alabama need remedial classes (PARCA). Ranking after ranking shows that Alabama is failing its school children. The leadership structure for Alabama schools just isn’t getting the job done for our schoolchildren. U.S. News & World Report (2019) • Alabama ranked No. 50 – dead last – in the publication’s latest education rankings. • Alabama is one of only six states with an elected school board that appoints a superintendent. • In Pre-K-12, Alabama ranked No. 49, ahead of only New Mexico. • States such as Florida and Virginia that earn top education rankings in study after study all have • Alabama students ranked next to last for math scores. Governor-appointed school boards. • All neighboring states have Governor-appointed boards. Education Week’s “Quality Counts” analysis (2018) • Alabama ranked 43rd among the states, with a C-minus grade. Here’s how the ‘Take the Lead’ initiative will improve • In the “Chance for Success” index, Alabama ranked No. 41 with a C-plus grade. • In the “K-12 Achievement” Index, Alabama ranked 43rd, with a D grade.
    [Show full text]
  • Florida-Alabama Tpo Mobility Profile
    FLORIDA-ALABAMA TPO MOBILITY PROFILE produced by Florida Department of Transportation Forecasting and Trends Office published 2021 % Pedestrian Facility Average Coverage in Urban Areas Job Accessibility Forecasting Florida-Alabama by Automobile & Trends Office TPO Mobility Profile - 2019 Within 135.5 30 Minutes (thousands) Planning 1.73 Time 1.18 1.18 41.3% Index 94% 92% % Bicycle Average 94% Facility Coverage Job Accessibility by Transit On-Time Within Arrival 30 Minutes 3.0 (thousands) FREEWAYS NON-FREEWAY STRATEGIC 45.6% ( INTERSTATE) INTERMODAL SYSTEM Travel Time Reliability Daily Vehicle Percent Miles Daily Truck Miles Traveled Hours of Delay Heavily Congested Daily Vehicle Miles Traveled 4,500 NATIONAL HIGHWAY SYSTEM NATIONAL HIGHWAY SYSTEM 0.5M <1% 6.1M STATE HIGHWAY SYSTEM 9,000 STATE HIGHWAY SYSTEM 0.6M <1% 8.7M FREEWAYS 300 0.3M FREEWAYS <1% 2.4M NON-FREEWAYS 8,700 <1% 3.2M NON-FREEWAYS 6.2M NOTE: Please go to Page 3 for measure definitions. 1 FLORIDA-ALABAMA TPO MOBILITY TRENDS 2015-2019 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 Travel Time Reliability 1.73 1.19 1.20 1.23 1.18 1.56 1.19 1.20 1.23 1.18 Planning 1.16 1.34 1.40 1.45 1.16 Time Index On-Time Arrival 93% 92% 90% 89% 94% >99% 98% 96% 94% 92% 93% 92% 90% 89% 94% INTERSTATE NON-FREEWAY STRATEGIC INTERMODAL SYSTEM FREEWAYS Daily Vehicle Percent Miles Daily Truck Daily Vehicle Hours of Delay Heavily Congested Miles Traveled Miles Traveled NATIONAL HIGHWAY SYSTEM FREEWAYS NATIONAL <1% 549.2K 6.1M HIGHWAY SYSTEM 7% 511.7K 6.0M 4,500 300 4% 454.2K 5.6M 3,600 <100 2% 450.0K 5.6M 433.0K 5.5M
    [Show full text]
  • OECD Territorial Grids
    BETTER POLICIES FOR BETTER LIVES DES POLITIQUES MEILLEURES POUR UNE VIE MEILLEURE OECD Territorial grids August 2021 OECD Centre for Entrepreneurship, SMEs, Regions and Cities Contact: [email protected] 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction .................................................................................................................................................. 3 Territorial level classification ...................................................................................................................... 3 Map sources ................................................................................................................................................. 3 Map symbols ................................................................................................................................................ 4 Disclaimers .................................................................................................................................................. 4 Australia / Australie ..................................................................................................................................... 6 Austria / Autriche ......................................................................................................................................... 7 Belgium / Belgique ...................................................................................................................................... 9 Canada ......................................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • A BRIEF HISTORY of DISCOVERY in the GULF of CALIFORNIA © Richard C
    A BRIEF HISTORY OF DISCOVERY IN THE GULF OF CALIFORNIA © Richard C. Brusca Vers. 12 June 2021 (All photos by the author, unless otherwise indicated) value of their visits. And there is good FIRST DISCOVERIES evidence that the Seri People (Comcaac) of San Esteban Island, and native people of Archaeological evidence tells us that Native the Baja California peninsula, ate sea lions. Americans were present in northwest Mexico at least 13,000 years ago. Although these hunter-gatherers probably began visiting the shores of the Northern Gulf of California around that time, any early evidence has been lost as sea level has risen with the end of the last ice age. Sea level stabilized ~6000 years ago (ybp), and the earliest evidence of humans along the shores of Sonora and Baja California (otoliths, or fish ear bones from shell middens) is around that age. Excavations of shell middens from the Bahía Adair and Puerto Peñasco region of the Upper Gulf show more-or-less continuous use of the coastal area over the past 6000 years (Middle Archaic Period; based on Salina Grande, on the upper Sonoran coast; radiocarbon dates of charcoal and fish a huge salt flat in which are found artesian otoliths to ~4270 BC). The subsistence springs (pozos) pattern of these midden sites suggests a The famous Covacha Babisuri lifestyle basically identical to that of the archaeological site on Isla Espíritu Santo, in earliest Sand Papago (Areneños, or Hia ced the Southern Gulf, has yielded evidence of O’odham) (see Mitchell et al. 2020). indigenous use that included harvesting and In the coastal shallows, Native working pearls as much as 8,500 years ago.
    [Show full text]
  • The Frotoft Branch of the Orkney Traills
    GENEALOGICAL SKETCHES. k hmMiMdjaittXJLMrurN " 11. rrTrHT m rmyHTrMrtirn imiTiwnMi yn u W^Uv i M»\tfs ^yy^d^ww JUWtfUV/ Wv'AiJi. ^vy'JUJV. gR«*H8) V--, 1 '« v XwVy ;S\jv, ; - v iM?wy& W S*„W* W '^^'?WWrKrriraMTO i»^U A .Lift «a*a J " BBSWswa^«$^^v*pF 5?^f|^?*?f^?. .' < « i ': '. f - = : - : . = ;?f|}»3W»ffiy3v>3-I^^8aj V^^^*^^,,^; ^«**VM< ^vorkvW ^ , W V > %$ ^m*&s& feu ii^SmSg :;-'-.-: S.M. <L National Library of Scotland *B000326710* Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2012 with funding from National Library of Scotland http://www.archive.org/details/frotoftbranchofoOOtrai >W^ : Genealogical Sketches. THE Frotoft Branch OF The Orkney Traills Their Relations and Connections. WITH COPIOUS NOTES, GENEALOGICAL AND OTHERWISE. BY THOMAS W. TRAILL, Fleet Engineer, R.N. " H enters amatuj gou taking notes/ " Your Pedigree will ne'er be lost. Great Odin caused it to be writ. Tour Fathers were a hardy race. We'll ne'er disgrace the Orkney race. When it's God's will, you'll die like men. Yes, whispering softly one—Amen. {Ideas pirated from an Orcadian who has whispered his—Amen.') WRITTEN FOR PRIVATE USE ONLY. 1902. Printed for the Author, DEDICATED TO Colonel JAMES W. BALFOUR OF Balfour and Trenabie, Deputy Lieutenant, &c, for the County of Orkney. By his oldest boy friend, as a mark of esteem, and with a sincere wish that the friendship which has existed for over sixty years may ever be mutual. A 2 J CONTENTS. PAGES. Preface ••• ix., x. [General remarks more partieu- TRAILL ! larly with reference to the] 1-9 {_ Frotoft Branch Genealogy from about 1600,^ up to and including all the I 10-14 TRAILL Frotoft Branch dead or alive j up to 1902 ("Male representatives of the^l TRAILL 15 | Frotoft Branch alive in 1 902 ("General remarks up to and^l BALFOUR including the Balfours ofj- 16-21 Balfour and Trenabie BALFOUR MACKENZIE Genealogy from 1678 to 1902 22 TRAILL BAIKIE, &c {General remarks up to and^ BAIKIE including the Baikies of V 23-35 Tankerness J (Genealogy from about 1500 to] BAIKIE 56-40 1902 \ j TRAILL DOUGLAS Genealogy from about 1000 ..
    [Show full text]
  • Co. Leitrim & Mohill A3175 ABBOTT A2981 ABERNETHY Stewartstown
    North of Ireland Family History Society - List of Ancestor Charts SURNAME AREA MEM. NO. ABBOTT Shane (Meath), Co. Leitrim & Mohill A3175 ABBOTT A2981 ABERNETHY Stewartstown, Arboe & Coalisland A3175 ABRAHAM London A2531 ABRAHAM Pettigo, Co. Donegal & Paisley A2145 ACHESON County Fermanagh B1804 ADAIR Gransha (Co. Down) & Ontario A2675 ADAMS Ballymena & Cloughwater B2202 ADAMS Coleraine B1435 ADAMS Rathkeel, Ballynalaird, Carnstroan, Ballyligpatrick B1751 ADAMS Carnmoney A2979 ADAMSON Northumberland A2793 ADAMSON Montiaghs A3930 AIKEN A3187 AKENHEAD British Columbia, Canada & Northumberland A2693 ALDINGTEN Moreton Bagot A3314 ALEXANDER Co. Tyrone A2244 ALEXANDER Malta B2239 ALEXANDER County Donegal B2324 ALEXANDER A3888 ALFORD Dublin South & Drogheda B2258 ALLAN Greenock A1720 ALLAN Alexandria A3561 ALLANDER County Londonderry B2324 ALLEN Belfast A0684 ALLEN Co. Down A3162 ALLEN Ballymena B2192 ALLEN County Wicklow & Carlisle, England B0817 ALLEN Crevolea, Macosquin A0781 ALLEN Comber B2123 ALLISON A3135 ALLSOPP Abersychan & Monmouthshire, Wales A2558 ALLWOOD Birmingham B2281 ALTHOFER New South Wales & Denmark A3422 ANDERSON A3291 ANDERSON B0979 ANDERSON Greenock A1720 ANDERSON Sweden A3700 ANDERSON Greenock, Scotland A3999 ANGUS A2693 ANGUS A3476 ANGUS Ayrshire & Lanarkshire A3929 APPELBY Hull B1939 APPLEBY Cornwall B0412 ARBUCKLE A1459 ARCHER A0431 ARCHIBALD Northern Ireland & Canada A3876 ARD Armagh A1579 ARLOW Co. Tyrone & Co. Tipperary A2872 ARMOUR Co. Limerick A1747 ARMOUR Paisley, Scotland B2366 ARMSTRONG Belfast & Glasgow A0582 ARMSTRONG Omagh A0696 May 2016 HMRC Charity No. XR22524 www.nifhs.org North of Ireland Family History Society - List of Ancestor Charts ARMSTRONG Belfast A1081 ARMSTRONG New Kilpatrick A1396 ARMSTRONG Aghalurcher & Colmon Island B0104 ARMSTRONG B0552 ARMSTRONG B0714 ARMSTRONG Co. Monaghan A1586 ARMSTRONG B1473 ARMSTRONG Magheragall, Lisburn B2210 ARMSTRONG A3275 ARMSTRONG Cumbria A3535 ARNOLD New York & Ontario A3434 ARNOLD Yorkshire B1939 ARTHUR Kells, Co.
    [Show full text]
  • Archaeological and Documentary Insights Into the Native World of the Luna Expedition John E. Worth University of West Florida Ab
    Archaeological and Documentary Insights into the Native World of the Luna Expedition John E. Worth University of West Florida Abstract Excavations at the terrestrial settlement of Tristán de Luna y Arellano on Pensacola Bay suggest that the material culture of the colonists at the site between 1559 and 1561 included a significant amount of contemporaneous Native American ceramics evidently scavenged along with food from evacuated communities along the coast and interior. Combined with newly-discovered documentation detailing the establishment and use of a road between Pensacola and the temporary Spanish settlement at Nanipacana in central Alabama, and deteriorating Native- Spanish relations during this period, these new data offer important insights into the indigenous social geography of this region at a pivotal time. Paper presented at the 75th Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Augusta, Ga., November 16, 2018. 1 Between 1540 and 1568, three Spanish military expeditions pushed deep into the interior of southeastern North America, then known to the Spanish as La Florida. The first, led by Hernando de Soto, achieved a broad if imperfect understanding of the geography of the Southeast by establishing the first terrestrial route that traversed the Appalachian summit by way of a string of indigenous chiefdoms stretching from the Atlantic Coastal Plain to the Gulf Coastal Plain.1 Even though Soto’s army never actually reached the coast of the Atlantic or northern Gulf of Mexico, Indians in the provinces of Cofitachequi in central South Carolina and Tascalusa in central Alabama reported that their respective coasts were not far away, and thus the eventual survivors of the Soto expedition possessed a mental map of the interior Southeast that hinged on a terrestrial route that arced well north of the straight-line distance between the Atlantic and Gulf, crossing the Appalachian mountains and bringing them through a then-populous indigenous chiefdom known as Coça, or simply Coosa today.
    [Show full text]