2,996 lives were lost during 9/11, including the 19 terrorist hijackers and more than 6,000 others were injured. The market fell by 7.1% during the first day of trading after the attacks. New York City’s economy lost 143,000 jobs a month and $2.8 billion wages in the first three months. 60% of the lost jobs were in finance and air transportation. The damage cost of the World Trade Center is about 6 billion dollars. The cost to clean up at Ground Zero is about 750 million dollars. On December 18, 2001, Congress approved naming September 11 Patriot Day to commemorate the anniversary of the 9/11 attacks. In 2009, Congress named September 11 a National Day of Service and Remembrance. According to figures compiled by the FBI the number of anti-Muslim hate crime incidents jumped in 2001, from 28 to 481 incidents. The number dropped in the following years, but has never returned to levels reported before the 9/11 attacks. Anti-Muslim hate crimes used to be the second-least reported, but in 2001, they became the second-highest reported among religious-bias incidents, after anti-Jewish hate crimes.