About 22 percent of the students qualify for the free lunch program.
More than 80 percent of their students qualify for free lunch.
Nationally, about 33 percent of students qualify for the programs.
Because more than 70 percent of the city's students qualify for economic assistance, she said, few families currently can afford to do that.
Nearly 75 percent live in poverty, and qualify for free lunches.
Only about 40 percent of unemployed workers now qualify for unemployment insurance.
The remaining 20 percent would qualify to be kept secret.
Another 7.1 million children, or 10 percent, would qualify only for a partial credit.
The 577 students come from the surrounding community, and almost 90 percent of them qualify for free lunches.
Of the 1.4 million applicants, more than 90 percent qualify for amnesty.