NC BL 07/00/2007 Table: Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL, Bulletin 3135-77, September 2006 Table 1. Summary: Mean hourly earnings(1) and weekly hours for selected worker and establishment characteristics, Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL, September 2006 Civilian Private industry State and local government workers workers workers Hourly earnings Hourly earnings Hourly earnings Worker and establishment characteristics Mean Mean Mean weekly weekly weekly Relative hours(- Relative hours(- Relative hours(- Mean error(2) 3) Mean error(2) 3) Mean error(2) 3) (percen- (percen- (percen- t) t) t) All workers........................................................... $16.59 3.1 37.0 $15.93 3.6 36.8 $22.06 1.3 38.5 Worker characteristics(4)(5) Management, professional, and related............................... 27.30 3.1 38.6 27.24 4.2 38.8 27.47 1.2 38.0 Management, business, and financial............................... 29.85 3.4 41.0 29.81 4.2 41.3 30.01 3.5 39.6 Professional and related.......................................... 26.21 4.0 37.7 26.03 5.7 37.7 26.65 1.7 37.6 Service............................................................. 10.38 4.5 33.8 9.28 4.5 33.1 17.87 7.0 39.0 Sales and office.................................................... 14.61 3.5 36.2 14.62 3.7 36.1 14.38 3.1 39.1 Sales and related................................................. 14.12 6.3 33.5 14.11 6.4 33.5 – – – Office and administrative support................................. 14.94 4.5 38.3 15.00 4.9 38.2 14.33 3.0 39.4 Natural resources, construction, and maintenance.................... 17.67 6.0 40.0 17.78 6.5 40.0 16.38 6.2 39.6 Construction and extraction...................................... 17.32 5.1 39.8 17.37 5.5 39.9 16.62 8.3 39.4 Installation, maintenance, and repair............................. 18.28 7.8 40.3 18.51 8.5 40.3 16.13 3.9 39.8 Production, transportation, and material moving..................... 12.75 6.0 38.9 12.72 6.2 39.0 14.21 20.0 36.6 Production........................................................ 13.34 4.3 39.7 13.23 4.4 39.7 – – – Transportation and material moving................................ 12.51 9.0 38.7 12.51 9.2 38.7 12.34 1.9 35.9 Full time........................................................... 17.33 3.0 39.7 16.70 3.6 39.8 22.22 1.1 39.2 Part time........................................................... 9.58 8.0 22.6 9.40 8.3 22.6 15.74 13.9 22.8 Union............................................................... 20.71 2.4 38.5 18.57 7.2 38.5 21.57 1.2 38.4 Nonunion............................................................ 16.21 3.5 36.9 15.86 3.8 36.8 22.67 1.8 38.6 Time................................................................ 16.11 3.8 36.8 15.34 4.6 36.6 22.06 1.3 38.5 Incentive........................................................... 22.81 6.9 40.3 22.81 6.9 40.3 – – – Establishment characteristics Goods producing..................................................... (6) (6) (6) - - - (6) (6) (6) Service providing................................................... (6) (6) (6) - - - (6) (6) (6) 1-99 workers........................................................ 15.53 5.7 36.0 15.53 5.7 36.0 – – – 100-499 workers..................................................... 16.24 7.3 38.1 16.10 7.6 38.1 20.33 7.5 38.8 500 workers or more................................................. 18.34 1.9 37.8 16.58 2.3 37.5 22.20 1.4 38.5 1 Earnings are the straight-time hourly wages or salaries paid to employees. They include incentive pay, cost-of-living adjustments, and hazard pay. Excluded are premium pay for overtime, vacations, holidays, nonproduction bonuses, and tips. The mean is computed by totaling the pay of all workers and dividing by the number of workers, weighted by hours. See appendix A for more information. 2 The relative standard error (RSE) is the standard error expressed as a percent of the estimate. It can be used to calculate a "confidence interval" around a sample estimate. For more information about RSEs, see appendix A. 3 Mean weekly hours are the hours an employee is scheduled to work in a week, exclusive of overtime. 4 Employees are classified as working either a full-time or a part-time schedule based on the definition used by each establishment. Union workers are those whose wages are determined through collective bargaining. Wages of time workers are based solely on hourly rate or salary; incentive workers are those whose wages are at least partially based on productivity payments such as piece rates, commissions, and production bonuses. 5 Workers are classified by occupation using the 2000 Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) system. See appendix B for more information. 6 Classification of establishments into goods-producing and service-providing industries applies to private industry only. Industries are determined by the 2002 North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria. SOURCE: Bureau of Labor Statistics, National Compensation Survey. Table 2. Civilian workers: Mean hourly earnings(1) for full-time and part-time workers(2) by work levels(3), Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL, September 2006 Total Full-time workers Part-time workers Occupation(4) and level Relative Relative Relative Mean error(5) Mean error(5) Mean error(5) (percent) (percent) (percent) All workers........................................................... $16.59 3.1 $17.33 3.0 $9.58 8.0 Management occupations.............................................. 33.14 4.0 33.17 4.0 – – Level 7 .................................................. 26.06 4.3 26.06 4.3 – – Level 8 .................................................. 25.80 3.7 25.80 3.7 – – Level 9 .................................................. 33.31 9.8 33.31 9.8 – – Level 10.................................................. 36.54 11.1 36.54 11.1 – – Level 11.................................................. 34.60 12.2 34.60 12.2 – – Level 12.................................................. 46.28 6.9 46.28 6.9 – – Not able to be leveled.................................... 29.57 11.4 29.62 11.7 – – General and operations managers................................... 38.66 7.5 38.66 7.5 – – Education administrators.......................................... 33.71 11.2 33.71 11.2 – – Education administrators, elementary and secondary school....... 35.03 15.7 35.03 15.7 – – Medical and health services managers.............................. 28.33 8.6 28.33 8.6 – – Business and financial operations occupations....................... 22.78 3.9 22.78 3.9 – – Level 7 .................................................. 22.99 4.8 22.99 4.8 – – Level 8 .................................................. 22.22 9.8 22.22 9.8 – – Level 9 .................................................. 28.08 4.5 28.08 4.5 – – Accountants and auditors.......................................... 23.23 7.5 23.23 7.5 – – Level 7 .................................................. 23.59 9.9 23.59 9.9 – – Computer and mathematical science occupations....................... 26.45 7.8 26.48 7.9 – – Level 7 .................................................. 21.97 6.4 21.97 6.4 – – Level 9 .................................................. 27.86 8.6 27.86 8.6 – – Level 11.................................................. 36.76 8.1 36.76 8.1 – – Computer programmers.............................................. 27.12 4.9 27.12 4.9 – – Computer software engineers....................................... 34.10 6.4 34.10 6.4 – – Level 11.................................................. 36.76 10.6 36.76 10.6 – – Computer software engineers, applications....................... 31.49 5.5 31.49 5.5 – – Computer software engineers, systems software................... 38.10 6.4 38.10 6.4 – – Computer support specialists...................................... 17.48 8.2 17.48 8.2 – – Computer systems analysts......................................... 34.56 5.6 34.56 5.6 – – Architecture and engineering occupations............................ 28.42 14.0 28.42 14.0 – – Engineers......................................................... 27.81 19.8 27.81 19.8 – – Engineering technicians, except drafters.......................... 21.76 2.2 21.76 2.2 – – Electrical and electronic engineering technicians............... 21.17 2.5 21.17 2.5 – – Life, physical, and social science occupations...................... 29.49 11.1 29.49 11.1 – – Community and social services occupations........................... 16.46 10.0 16.36 10.3 – – Social workers.................................................... 15.37 8.2 15.37 8.2 – – Legal occupations................................................... 40.58 31.7 – – – – Education, training, and library occupations........................ $26.29 5.9 $27.20 3.5 – – Level 7 .................................................. 29.30 2.1 29.30 2.1 – – Level 8 .................................................. 27.60 .3 27.58 .3 – – Level 9 .................................................. 29.54 4.2 – – – – Level 10.................................................. 39.10 9.8 39.08 9.8 – – Postsecondary teachers............................................ 37.85 20.9 37.63 21.8 $42.85 0.2 Level 9 .................................................. 35.94 6.6 – – – – Miscellaneous postsecondary teachers............................ 35.80 27.7 35.78 27.8 – – Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers......... 26.51 7.0 27.31 4.5 – – Level 7 .................................................. 29.30 2.1 29.30 2.1 – – Level 8 .................................................. 27.02 .5 27.02 .5 – – Elementary and middle school teachers........................... 28.25 2.1 28.25 2.1 – – Middle school teachers, except special and vocational education.................................................... 27.84 3.1 27.84 3.1 – – Other teachers and instructors.................................... 27.64 5.9 – – – – Teacher assistants................................................ 10.56 10.7 – – – – Arts, design, entertainment, sports, and media occupations.......... 22.88 7.6 22.88 7.6 – – Healthcare practitioner and technical occupations................... 22.96 7.3 22.26 6.3 27.87 11.2 Level 4 .................................................. 13.39 5.1 13.40 5.5 – – Level 5 .................................................. 16.17 1.2 – – – – Level 6 .................................................. 20.01 1.7 20.01 1.7 – – Level 7 .................................................. 21.07 10.2 21.08 10.3 – – Level 8 .................................................. 23.58 1.8 23.39 3.6 – – Level 9 .................................................. 26.68 3.2 26.67 4.0 26.73 .1 Level 11.................................................. 43.60 6.0 42.44 5.7 – – Not able to be leveled.................................... 20.52 11.7 – – – – Pharmacists....................................................... 46.13 3.1 – – – – Level 11.................................................. 46.79 3.9 – – – – Registered nurses................................................. 26.86 2.4 26.23 1.5 29.41 7.7 Level 7 .................................................. 23.95 2.8 23.95 2.8 – – Level 8 .................................................. 25.22 3.3 25.17 3.6 – – Level 9 .................................................. 26.70 1.0 26.69 1.4 26.73 .1 Therapists........................................................ 24.78 10.1 24.52 10.5 – – Respiratory therapists.......................................... 22.05 1.2 22.05 1.2 – – Clinical laboratory technologists and technicians................. 18.37 5.6 18.29 5.7 – – Level 8 .................................................. 21.91 1.1 21.84 1.1 – – Medical and clinical laboratory technologists................... 22.43 5.3 22.45 5.5 – – Level 8 .................................................. 21.91 1.1 21.84 1.1 – – Medical and clinical laboratory technicians..................... 15.21 9.8 15.21 9.8 – – Diagnostic related technologists and technicians.................. 17.74 6.1 – – – – Health diagnosing and treating practitioner support technicians... 16.34 11.8 16.42 12.0 – – Licensed practical and licensed vocational nurses................. 16.56 3.1 16.45 2.7 – – Healthcare support occupations...................................... $10.15 4.3 $10.35 4.4 $8.94 6.5 Level 2 .................................................. 9.64 1.5 9.93 3.4 – – Level 3 .................................................. 9.83 4.0 10.12 4.0 9.19 6.4 Level 4 .................................................. 11.07 5.9 11.07 5.9 – – Nursing, psychiatric, and home health aides....................... 9.89 1.6 9.99 2.0 9.10 10.6 Level 2 .................................................. 9.68 2.2 – – – – Level 3 .................................................. 10.15 4.7 10.12 4.0 – – Nursing aides, orderlies, and attendants........................ 10.05 3.1 10.01 2.9 10.36 5.6 Level 3 .................................................. 10.11 5.1 10.07 4.4 – – Miscellaneous healthcare support occupations...................... 11.05 14.5 11.79 17.0 – – Level 4 .................................................. 14.59 4.3 14.59 4.3 – – Protective service occupations...................................... 13.70 7.4 13.80 7.6 8.58 2.0 Level 2 .................................................. 10.74 10.7 – – – – Level 7 .................................................. 22.53 1.5 22.53 1.5 – – Fire fighters..................................................... 19.93 12.1 19.93 12.1 – – Police officers................................................... 22.89 2.3 22.89 2.3 – – Level 7 .................................................. 22.86 2.4 22.86 2.4 – – Police and sheriff's patrol officers............................ 22.89 2.3 22.89 2.3 – – Level 7 .................................................. 22.86 2.4 22.86 2.4 – – Security guards and gaming surveillance officers.................. 10.35 1.0 10.37 1.1 – – Security guards................................................. 10.35 1.0 10.37 1.1 – – Food preparation and serving related occupations.................... 7.16 1.2 8.15 4.3 5.69 10.3 Level 1 .................................................. 6.50 3.2 7.28 5.1 5.71 2.8 Level 2 .................................................. 6.09 14.5 6.98 9.4 5.31 24.0 Level 3 .................................................. 6.65 15.2 6.61 15.3 6.78 21.4 Level 4 .................................................. 11.12 7.8 11.29 6.5 – – Cooks............................................................. 9.36 4.7 9.63 5.8 – – Level 2 .................................................. 8.44 6.7 – – – – Level 4 .................................................. 10.89 9.2 11.12 8.0 – – Cooks, restaurant............................................... 9.66 4.7 9.74 6.0 – – Food preparation workers.......................................... 8.80 3.7 9.19 2.7 8.11 6.0 Level 2 .................................................. 8.60 4.0 – – – – Food service, tipped.............................................. 3.95 13.6 4.47 13.1 3.39 7.7 Level 1 .................................................. 4.18 8.0 – – 3.56 12.1 Level 2 .................................................. 3.60 21.0 – – – – Level 3 .................................................. 4.09 8.4 – – – – Waiters and waitresses.......................................... 3.42 3.1 3.75 7.1 3.14 6.7 Level 1 .................................................. 3.11 13.8 – – 3.02 11.5 Level 2 .................................................. 3.60 21.0 – – – – Fast food and counter workers..................................... 7.43 3.1 – – 7.14 2.1 Combined food preparation and serving workers, including fast food........................................................... 7.51 3.7 – – – – Building and grounds cleaning and maintenance occupations........... $10.02 5.1 $10.10 5.3 – – Level 1 .................................................. 9.51 8.9 9.62 9.5 – – Level 3 .................................................. 10.37 3.0 10.37 3.0 – – Level 4 .................................................. 10.35 3.4 10.35 3.4 – – Building cleaning workers......................................... 9.74 5.9 9.81 6.2 – – Level 1 .................................................. 9.51 8.9 9.62 9.5 – – Level 3 .................................................. 10.42 3.5 10.42 3.5 – – Janitors and cleaners, except maids and housekeeping cleaners... 10.28 6.6 10.43 6.9 – – Level 1 .................................................. 10.22 12.0 10.49 13.1 – – Personal care and service occupations............................... 12.00 17.4 10.64 3.0 $13.57 29.1 Level 1 .................................................. 6.80 3.8 – – – – Level 6 .................................................. 16.10 14.6 – – – – Sales and related occupations....................................... 14.12 6.3 15.98 6.2 8.40 7.4 Level 1 .................................................. 7.54 3.0 8.03 2.4 7.30 5.5 Level 2 .................................................. 8.11 2.7 8.89 4.6 7.53 .6 Level 3 .................................................. 9.69 4.0 10.23 3.8 8.58 1.2 Level 4 .................................................. 14.82 7.3 15.00 7.5 13.67 23.3 Level 5 .................................................. 20.33 8.7 20.33 8.7 – – Level 6 .................................................. 24.42 12.9 24.42 12.9 – – Level 7 .................................................. 21.38 17.6 21.38 17.6 – – Not able to be leveled.................................... 13.50 1.2 13.66 .4 – – First-line supervisors/managers, sales workers.................... 17.36 9.5 17.62 10.2 – – First-line supervisors/managers of retail sales workers......... 16.00 7.8 16.23 8.9 – – Retail sales workers.............................................. 10.27 3.5 11.54 4.6 8.40 7.6 Level 1 .................................................. 7.35 3.2 – – 7.25 5.5 Level 2 .................................................. 7.99 2.9 8.69 5.4 7.54 .6 Level 3 .................................................. 9.16 5.4 – – 8.58 1.2 Level 4 .................................................. 14.41 8.8 14.14 8.4 15.58 22.1 Cashiers, all workers........................................... 8.54 4.9 9.44 6.1 7.70 .9 Level 2 .................................................. 7.49 1.1 – – 7.55 .9 Level 3 .................................................. 9.45 7.1 – – 8.68 3.7 Cashiers...................................................... 8.54 4.9 9.44 6.1 7.70 .9 Level 2 .................................................. 7.49 1.1 – – 7.55 .9 Level 3 .................................................. 9.45 7.1 – – 8.68 3.7 Retail salespersons............................................. 10.60 5.3 11.66 8.3 8.89 12.9 Level 1 .................................................. 7.24 4.9 – – – – Level 2 .................................................. 8.41 4.4 – – – – Level 4 .................................................. 14.25 8.6 13.93 7.7 15.58 22.1 Sales representatives, wholesale and manufacturing................ 28.47 8.0 28.47 8.0 – – Sales representatives, wholesale and manufacturing, except technical and scientific products.............................. 29.09 7.5 29.09 7.5 – – Telemarketers..................................................... 16.99 9.0 17.10 9.1 – – Level 4 .................................................. 18.41 13.9 – – – – Miscellaneous sales and related workers........................... $11.46 6.5 – – – – Office and administrative support occupations....................... 14.94 4.5 $15.15 4.6 $10.80 7.2 Level 1 .................................................. 8.94 3.4 – – 8.34 3.5 Level 2 .................................................. 11.05 2.6 11.25 3.2 8.86 9.9 Level 3 .................................................. 12.08 3.4 12.07 3.6 12.12 9.0 Level 4 .................................................. 14.67 2.4 14.67 2.4 – – Level 5 .................................................. 19.63 12.6 19.77 12.8 – – Level 6 .................................................. 17.19 4.8 17.16 4.9 – – Level 7 .................................................. 18.43 13.8 18.43 13.8 – – Not able to be leveled.................................... 15.10 15.4 15.57 15.5 – – First-line supervisors/managers of office and administrative support workers.................................................. 17.75 6.2 17.75 6.2 – – Level 5 .................................................. 17.23 2.5 17.23 2.5 – – Financial clerks.................................................. 15.22 5.2 15.59 5.5 – – Level 3 .................................................. 13.55 5.4 13.89 5.6 – – Level 4 .................................................. 14.30 2.6 14.30 2.6 – – Level 5 .................................................. 15.91 3.5 15.91 3.5 – – Bookkeeping, accounting, and auditing clerks.................... 16.60 6.8 16.79 6.8 – – Level 4 .................................................. 14.68 3.9 14.68 3.9 – – Level 5 .................................................. 15.55 3.5 15.55 3.5 – – Customer service representatives.................................. 15.44 6.2 15.43 6.4 – – Level 3 .................................................. 11.25 4.7 11.25 4.7 – – Level 4 .................................................. 15.58 7.8 15.57 8.4 – – Interviewers, except eligibility and loan......................... 11.78 5.5 11.83 5.6 – – Receptionists and information clerks.............................. 11.04 7.0 11.48 6.8 – – Level 2 .................................................. 11.75 7.6 11.92 7.7 – – Stock clerks and order fillers.................................... 9.69 4.0 10.15 3.7 – – Secretaries and administrative assistants......................... 13.79 8.3 13.75 8.5 – – Level 4 .................................................. 15.00 5.6 15.00 5.6 – – Level 5 .................................................. 16.77 6.4 16.89 6.7 – – Level 6 .................................................. 14.90 3.2 14.90 3.2 – – Executive secretaries and administrative assistants............. 18.21 11.0 18.21 11.0 – – Medical secretaries............................................. 12.30 9.5 12.04 12.8 – – Secretaries, except legal, medical, and executive............... 12.95 13.6 12.95 13.6 – – Data entry and information processing workers..................... 11.25 7.5 11.25 7.5 – – Data entry keyers............................................... 11.25 7.5 11.25 7.5 – – Insurance claims and policy processing clerks..................... 15.56 6.6 15.53 5.7 – – Level 4 .................................................. 14.01 1.6 14.01 1.6 – – Office clerks, general............................................ 13.70 7.7 13.99 7.1 – – Level 3 .................................................. 12.62 1.7 12.66 1.8 – – Level 4 .................................................. 15.90 6.1 15.89 6.1 – – Construction and extraction occupations............................. 17.32 5.1 17.32 5.1 – – Level 1 .................................................. 9.98 9.4 9.98 9.4 – – Level 5 .................................................. 17.73 10.2 17.73 10.2 – – Carpenters........................................................ $22.47 31.2 $22.47 31.2 – – Construction equipment operators.................................. 13.57 7.9 13.57 7.9 – – Electricians...................................................... 17.18 2.6 17.18 2.6 – – Miscellaneous construction and related workers.................... 13.41 14.4 13.41 14.4 – – Installation, maintenance, and repair occupations................... 18.28 7.8 18.28 7.8 – – Level 3 .................................................. 13.49 1.7 13.49 1.7 – – Level 5 .................................................. 17.72 6.9 17.72 6.9 – – Level 7 .................................................. 20.11 6.3 20.11 6.3 – – First-line supervisors/managers of mechanics, installers, and repairers........................................................ 28.30 18.3 28.30 18.3 – – Automotive technicians and repairers.............................. 14.94 4.5 14.94 4.5 – – Industrial machinery installation, repair, and maintenance workers 16.78 5.8 16.78 5.8 – – Level 3 .................................................. 14.10 2.4 14.10 2.4 – – Maintenance and repair workers, general......................... 13.51 2.8 13.51 2.8 – – Production occupations.............................................. 13.34 4.3 13.41 4.4 $9.20 0.7 Level 1 .................................................. 9.02 6.0 – – – – Level 2 .................................................. 10.21 3.5 10.22 3.5 – – Level 3 .................................................. 11.11 3.0 11.31 1.3 – – Level 4 .................................................. 12.66 3.2 12.66 3.2 – – Level 5 .................................................. 15.41 5.3 15.41 5.3 – – Butchers and other meat, poultry, and fish processing workers..... 13.56 4.0 – – – – Miscellaneous production workers.................................. 13.07 8.9 13.15 8.9 – – Transportation and material moving occupations...................... 12.51 9.0 12.89 9.1 7.21 .9 Level 1 .................................................. 8.07 2.7 8.32 3.1 7.10 1.0 Level 2 .................................................. 11.75 8.3 11.79 8.2 – – Level 3 .................................................. 12.81 3.9 12.81 3.9 – – Level 4 .................................................. 14.20 7.6 14.20 7.6 – – Driver/sales workers and truck drivers............................ 13.85 17.0 14.20 17.2 – – Truck drivers, light or delivery services....................... 10.96 11.9 11.02 11.9 – – Industrial truck and tractor operators............................ 16.12 14.4 16.12 14.4 – – Laborers and material movers, hand................................ 8.58 3.0 8.83 3.3 7.27 .8 Level 1 .................................................. 8.15 2.9 8.39 3.6 7.27 .8 Cleaners of vehicles and equipment.............................. 7.29 .9 – – – – Level 1 .................................................. 6.93 3.4 – – – – Laborers and freight, stock, and material movers, hand.......... 9.36 3.2 9.46 3.1 – – Level 1 .................................................. 9.01 3.3 9.11 3.2 – – Packers and packagers, hand..................................... 8.39 5.8 – – – – Level 1 .................................................. 8.39 5.8 – – – – 1 Earnings are the straight-time hourly wages or salaries paid to employees. They include incentive pay, cost-of-living adjustments, and hazard pay. Excluded are premium pay for overtime, vacations, holidays, nonproduction bonuses, and tips. The mean is computed by totaling the pay of all workers and dividing by the number of workers, weighted by hours. See appendix A for more information. 2 Employees are classified as working either a full-time or a part-time schedule based on the definition used by each establishment. Therefore, a worker with a 35-hour-per-week schedule might be considered a full-time employee in one establishment, but classified as part-time in another firm, where a 40-hour week is the minimum full-time schedule. 3 Each occupation for which data are collected in an establishment is evaluated based on four factors, including knowledge, job controls and complexity, contacts, and physical environment. The knowledge factor is tailored to 24 families of closely related jobs. Points are assigned based on the occupation's rank within each factor. The points are summed to determine the overall level of the occupation. See appendix A for more information. 4 Workers are classified by occupation using the 2000 Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) system. See appendix B for more information. 5 The relative standard error (RSE) is the standard error expressed as a percent of the estimate. It can be used to calculate a "confidence interval" around a sample estimate. For more information about RSEs, see appendix A. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria. Overall occupational groups may include data for categories not shown separately Table 3. Private industry workers: Mean hourly earnings(1) for full-time and part-time workers(2) by work levels(3), Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL, September 2006 Total Full-time workers Part-time workers Occupation(4) and level Relative Relative Relative Mean error(5) Mean error(5) Mean error(5) (percent) (percent) (percent) All workers........................................................... $15.93 3.6 $16.70 3.6 $9.40 8.3 Management occupations.............................................. 33.49 4.6 33.53 4.7 – – Level 7 .................................................. 26.62 2.6 26.62 2.6 – – Level 8 .................................................. 25.26 3.0 25.26 3.0 – – Level 9 .................................................. 33.87 9.9 33.87 9.9 – – Level 12.................................................. 43.97 6.9 43.97 6.9 – – Not able to be leveled.................................... 31.77 18.6 31.91 19.4 – – General and operations managers................................... 39.69 8.3 39.69 8.3 – – Business and financial operations occupations....................... 22.37 4.5 22.37 4.5 – – Level 7 .................................................. 23.19 5.3 23.19 5.3 – – Level 8 .................................................. 22.10 10.6 22.10 10.6 – – Level 9 .................................................. 27.13 4.1 27.13 4.1 – – Accountants and auditors.......................................... 22.82 8.0 22.82 8.0 – – Computer and mathematical science occupations....................... 26.69 8.7 26.69 8.7 – – Level 7 .................................................. 22.06 6.8 22.06 6.8 – – Level 9 .................................................. 27.98 9.0 27.98 9.0 – – Level 11.................................................. 37.64 8.9 37.64 8.9 – – Computer programmers.............................................. 28.57 4.9 28.57 4.9 – – Computer software engineers....................................... 34.31 6.6 34.31 6.6 – – Computer software engineers, applications....................... 31.71 6.0 31.71 6.0 – – Computer software engineers, systems software................... 38.10 6.4 38.10 6.4 – – Computer support specialists...................................... 17.48 8.2 17.48 8.2 – – Computer systems analysts......................................... 34.96 5.8 34.96 5.8 – – Architecture and engineering occupations............................ 27.99 15.9 27.99 15.9 – – Engineers......................................................... 26.15 23.3 26.15 23.3 – – Engineering technicians, except drafters.......................... 21.76 2.2 21.76 2.2 – – Electrical and electronic engineering technicians............... 21.17 2.5 21.17 2.5 – – Community and social services occupations........................... 14.74 7.0 14.48 6.8 – – Legal occupations................................................... 40.58 31.7 – – – – Education, training, and library occupations........................ 18.57 20.9 21.20 14.7 – – Postsecondary teachers............................................ 25.82 38.4 25.77 38.5 – – Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers......... 16.86 29.9 18.67 27.4 – – Arts, design, entertainment, sports, and media occupations.......... 23.13 8.3 23.13 8.3 – – Healthcare practitioner and technical occupations................... 23.24 7.8 22.47 6.7 28.90 11.8 Level 4 .................................................. 13.58 5.2 13.67 5.4 – – Level 5 .................................................. 16.17 1.2 – – – – Level 7 .................................................. 21.13 10.9 21.14 11.0 – – Level 8 .................................................. $23.34 2.3 $23.14 4.5 – – Level 9 .................................................. 27.29 2.2 27.44 2.7 $26.73 0.1 Level 11.................................................. 43.68 5.9 42.52 5.7 – – Not able to be leveled.................................... 21.04 14.8 – – – – Pharmacists....................................................... 46.13 3.1 – – – – Level 11.................................................. 46.79 3.9 – – – – Registered nurses................................................. 26.80 2.5 26.08 1.6 29.68 8.0 Level 7 .................................................. 23.95 2.8 23.95 2.8 – – Level 8 .................................................. 24.86 4.4 24.86 4.4 – – Level 9 .................................................. 26.55 .9 26.49 1.3 26.73 .1 Therapists........................................................ 24.78 10.1 24.52 10.5 – – Respiratory therapists.......................................... 22.05 1.2 22.05 1.2 – – Clinical laboratory technologists and technicians................. 18.89 3.6 18.89 3.6 – – Medical and clinical laboratory technologists................... 22.45 5.8 22.48 5.8 – – Medical and clinical laboratory technicians..................... 15.90 8.2 15.90 8.2 – – Diagnostic related technologists and technicians.................. 17.74 6.1 – – – – Health diagnosing and treating practitioner support technicians... 15.54 12.8 15.63 12.9 – – Licensed practical and licensed vocational nurses................. 16.53 3.2 16.46 2.7 – – Healthcare support occupations...................................... 10.13 4.5 10.34 4.6 8.76 6.8 Level 2 .................................................. 9.65 1.7 9.97 3.5 – – Level 3 .................................................. 9.78 4.0 10.12 4.0 9.01 6.4 Level 4 .................................................. 11.04 6.4 11.04 6.4 – – Nursing, psychiatric, and home health aides....................... 9.88 1.6 10.00 2.0 – – Level 2 .................................................. 9.70 2.5 – – – – Level 3 .................................................. 10.10 4.7 10.12 4.0 – – Nursing aides, orderlies, and attendants........................ 10.05 3.2 10.03 3.0 – – Level 3 .................................................. 10.06 5.1 10.07 4.4 – – Miscellaneous healthcare support occupations...................... 11.04 15.7 11.84 18.8 – – Protective service occupations...................................... 10.66 5.2 10.71 5.5 – – Level 2 .................................................. 10.75 10.8 – – – – Security guards and gaming surveillance officers.................. 10.22 .5 10.25 .4 – – Security guards................................................. 10.22 .5 10.25 .4 – – Food preparation and serving related occupations.................... 7.12 1.1 8.14 4.5 5.59 10.0 Level 1 .................................................. 6.43 3.6 7.19 6.1 5.71 2.8 Level 2 .................................................. 6.09 14.5 6.98 9.4 5.31 24.0 Level 3 .................................................. 6.43 16.6 6.61 15.3 – – Level 4 .................................................. 11.12 7.8 11.29 6.5 – – Cooks............................................................. 9.36 4.7 9.63 5.8 – – Level 2 .................................................. 8.44 6.7 – – – – Level 4 .................................................. 10.89 9.2 11.12 8.0 – – Cooks, restaurant............................................... 9.66 4.7 9.74 6.0 – – Food preparation workers.......................................... 8.71 4.2 9.19 2.7 7.56 1.8 Level 2 .................................................. 8.60 4.0 – – – – Food service, tipped.............................................. $3.95 13.6 $4.47 13.1 $3.39 7.7 Level 1 .................................................. 4.18 8.0 – – 3.56 12.1 Level 2 .................................................. 3.60 21.0 – – – – Level 3 .................................................. 4.09 8.4 – – – – Waiters and waitresses.......................................... 3.42 3.1 3.75 7.1 3.14 6.7 Level 1 .................................................. 3.11 13.8 – – 3.02 11.5 Level 2 .................................................. 3.60 21.0 – – – – Fast food and counter workers..................................... 7.43 3.1 – – 7.14 2.1 Combined food preparation and serving workers, including fast food........................................................... 7.51 3.7 – – – – Building and grounds cleaning and maintenance occupations........... 9.72 6.8 9.81 7.1 – – Level 1 .................................................. 9.50 10.0 9.61 10.7 – – Building cleaning workers......................................... 9.70 7.7 9.79 8.1 – – Level 1 .................................................. 9.50 10.0 9.61 10.7 – – Janitors and cleaners, except maids and housekeeping cleaners... 10.36 8.0 10.55 8.5 – – Level 1 .................................................. 10.22 12.0 10.49 13.1 – – Personal care and service occupations............................... 11.98 17.7 10.56 2.8 13.62 29.4 Level 1 .................................................. 6.80 3.8 – – – – Level 6 .................................................. 16.10 14.6 – – – – Sales and related occupations....................................... 14.11 6.4 15.97 6.2 8.39 7.5 Level 1 .................................................. 7.54 3.0 8.03 2.4 7.30 5.5 Level 2 .................................................. 8.11 2.7 8.89 4.6 7.53 .6 Level 3 .................................................. 9.68 4.0 10.23 3.8 8.53 .7 Level 4 .................................................. 14.82 7.3 15.00 7.5 13.67 23.3 Level 5 .................................................. 20.37 8.8 20.37 8.8 – – Level 6 .................................................. 24.42 12.9 24.42 12.9 – – Level 7 .................................................. 21.38 17.6 21.38 17.6 – – Not able to be leveled.................................... 13.50 1.2 13.66 .4 – – First-line supervisors/managers, sales workers.................... 17.36 9.5 17.62 10.2 – – First-line supervisors/managers of retail sales workers......... 16.00 7.8 16.23 8.9 – – Retail sales workers.............................................. 10.26 3.5 11.54 4.6 8.38 7.7 Level 1 .................................................. 7.35 3.2 – – 7.25 5.5 Level 2 .................................................. 7.99 2.9 8.69 5.4 7.54 .6 Level 3 .................................................. 9.15 5.5 – – 8.53 .7 Level 4 .................................................. 14.41 8.8 14.14 8.4 15.58 22.1 Cashiers, all workers........................................... 8.53 4.9 9.44 6.1 7.66 .7 Level 2 .................................................. 7.49 1.1 – – 7.55 .9 Level 3 .................................................. 9.42 7.3 – – 8.47 3.0 Cashiers...................................................... 8.53 4.9 9.44 6.1 7.66 .7 Level 2 .................................................. 7.49 1.1 – – 7.55 .9 Level 3 .................................................. 9.42 7.3 – – 8.47 3.0 Retail salespersons............................................. 10.60 5.3 11.66 8.3 8.89 12.9 Level 1 .................................................. 7.24 4.9 – – – – Level 2 .................................................. $8.41 4.4 – – – – Level 4 .................................................. 14.25 8.6 $13.93 7.7 $15.58 22.1 Sales representatives, wholesale and manufacturing................ 28.47 8.0 28.47 8.0 – – Sales representatives, wholesale and manufacturing, except technical and scientific products.............................. 29.09 7.5 29.09 7.5 – – Telemarketers..................................................... 16.99 9.0 17.10 9.1 – – Level 4 .................................................. 18.41 13.9 – – – – Miscellaneous sales and related workers........................... 11.13 6.8 – – – – Office and administrative support occupations....................... 15.00 4.9 15.22 5.0 10.86 7.2 Level 1 .................................................. 8.94 3.4 – – 8.34 3.5 Level 2 .................................................. 11.08 2.6 11.28 3.2 8.95 10.2 Level 3 .................................................. 12.09 3.7 12.08 3.8 12.25 9.0 Level 4 .................................................. 14.77 2.5 14.76 2.6 – – Level 5 .................................................. 20.09 13.5 20.25 13.7 – – Level 6 .................................................. 17.90 6.6 17.89 6.9 – – Level 7 .................................................. 18.32 16.3 18.32 16.3 – – Not able to be leveled.................................... 15.10 15.4 15.57 15.5 – – First-line supervisors/managers of office and administrative support workers.................................................. 17.75 6.2 17.75 6.2 – – Level 5 .................................................. 17.23 2.5 17.23 2.5 – – Financial clerks.................................................. 15.17 5.4 15.55 5.7 – – Level 3 .................................................. 13.55 5.4 13.89 5.6 – – Level 4 .................................................. 14.30 2.7 14.30 2.7 – – Level 5 .................................................. 15.91 3.5 15.91 3.5 – – Bookkeeping, accounting, and auditing clerks.................... 16.60 7.2 16.80 7.2 – – Level 4 .................................................. 14.70 4.1 14.70 4.1 – – Level 5 .................................................. 15.55 3.5 15.55 3.5 – – Customer service representatives.................................. 15.46 6.3 15.45 6.5 – – Level 3 .................................................. 11.25 4.7 11.25 4.7 – – Level 4 .................................................. 15.58 7.8 15.57 8.4 – – Interviewers, except eligibility and loan......................... 11.78 5.5 11.83 5.6 – – Receptionists and information clerks.............................. 11.12 7.1 11.52 7.1 – – Level 2 .................................................. 11.84 7.4 11.92 7.7 – – Stock clerks and order fillers.................................... 9.42 2.4 9.80 1.6 – – Secretaries and administrative assistants......................... 13.54 9.7 13.50 9.9 – – Level 4 .................................................. 15.00 6.1 15.00 6.1 – – Level 5 .................................................. 16.73 8.4 – – – – Executive secretaries and administrative assistants............. 18.09 12.7 18.09 12.7 – – Medical secretaries............................................. 12.30 9.5 12.04 12.8 – – Data entry and information processing workers..................... 11.25 7.5 11.25 7.5 – – Data entry keyers............................................... 11.25 7.5 11.25 7.5 – – Insurance claims and policy processing clerks..................... 15.25 7.4 15.20 6.4 – – Level 4 .................................................. 14.01 1.6 14.01 1.6 – – Office clerks, general............................................ 13.90 8.9 14.26 8.2 – – Level 4 .................................................. 16.53 5.3 16.54 5.4 – – Construction and extraction occupations............................. $17.37 5.5 $17.37 5.5 – – Level 5 .................................................. 17.88 11.2 17.88 11.2 – – Electricians...................................................... 17.12 2.8 17.12 2.8 – – Installation, maintenance, and repair occupations................... 18.51 8.5 18.51 8.5 – – Level 3 .................................................. 13.47 2.2 13.47 2.2 – – Level 5 .................................................. 17.87 7.5 17.87 7.5 – – Level 7 .................................................. 20.20 7.2 20.20 7.2 – – Industrial machinery installation, repair, and maintenance workers 17.62 6.1 17.62 6.1 – – Production occupations.............................................. 13.23 4.4 13.31 4.4 $9.20 0.7 Level 1 .................................................. 9.02 6.0 – – – – Level 2 .................................................. 10.21 3.5 10.22 3.5 – – Level 3 .................................................. 11.11 3.0 11.31 1.3 – – Level 4 .................................................. 12.66 3.2 12.66 3.2 – – Level 5 .................................................. 15.41 5.3 15.41 5.3 – – Butchers and other meat, poultry, and fish processing workers..... 13.56 4.0 – – – – Miscellaneous production workers.................................. 13.07 8.9 13.15 8.9 – – Transportation and material moving occupations...................... 12.51 9.2 12.90 9.3 7.21 .9 Level 1 .................................................. 8.07 2.7 8.32 3.1 7.10 1.0 Level 2 .................................................. 11.74 8.5 11.78 8.4 – – Level 3 .................................................. 12.94 4.0 12.94 4.0 – – Driver/sales workers and truck drivers............................ 13.85 17.0 14.20 17.2 – – Truck drivers, light or delivery services....................... 10.96 11.9 11.02 11.9 – – Industrial truck and tractor operators............................ 16.36 15.0 16.36 15.0 – – Laborers and material movers, hand................................ 8.57 3.1 8.82 3.4 7.27 .8 Level 1 .................................................. 8.15 2.9 8.39 3.6 7.27 .8 Cleaners of vehicles and equipment.............................. 7.29 .9 – – – – Level 1 .................................................. 6.93 3.4 – – – – Laborers and freight, stock, and material movers, hand.......... 9.34 3.2 9.45 3.2 – – Level 1 .................................................. 9.01 3.3 9.11 3.2 – – Packers and packagers, hand..................................... 8.39 5.8 – – – – Level 1 .................................................. 8.39 5.8 – – – – 1 Earnings are the straight-time hourly wages or salaries paid to employees. They include incentive pay, cost-of-living adjustments, and hazard pay. Excluded are premium pay for overtime, vacations, holidays, nonproduction bonuses, and tips. The mean is computed by totaling the pay of all workers and dividing by the number of workers, weighted by hours. See appendix A for more information. 2 Employees are classified as working either a full-time or a part-time schedule based on the definition used by each establishment. Therefore, a worker with a 35-hour-per-week schedule might be considered a full-time employee in one establishment, but classified as part-time in another firm, where a 40-hour week is the minimum full-time schedule. 3 Each occupation for which data are collected in an establishment is evaluated based on four factors, including knowledge, job controls and complexity, contacts, and physical environment. The knowledge factor is tailored to 24 families of closely related jobs. Points are assigned based on the occupation's rank within each factor. The points are summed to determine the overall level of the occupation. See appendix A for more information. 4 Workers are classified by occupation using the 2000 Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) system. See appendix B for more information. 5 The relative standard error (RSE) is the standard error expressed as a percent of the estimate. It can be used to calculate a "confidence interval" around a sample estimate. For more information about RSEs, see appendix A. Table 4. State and local government workers: Mean hourly earnings(1) for full-time and part-time workers(2) by work levels(3), Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL, September 2006 Total Full-time workers Part-time workers Occupation(4) and level Relative Relative Relative Mean error(5) Mean error(5) Mean error(5) (percent) (percent) (percent) All workers........................................................... $22.06 1.3 $22.22 1.1 $15.74 13.9 Management occupations.............................................. 31.92 5.8 31.92 5.8 – – Education administrators.......................................... 33.76 12.5 33.76 12.5 – – Business and financial operations occupations....................... 24.77 4.8 24.77 4.8 – – Computer and mathematical science occupations....................... 23.26 6.3 23.56 5.8 – – Life, physical, and social science occupations...................... 24.40 10.3 24.40 10.3 – – Community and social services occupations........................... 18.73 10.9 18.73 10.9 – – Education, training, and library occupations........................ 28.59 1.9 28.61 1.8 27.74 16.2 Level 8 .................................................. 27.76 .3 27.75 .3 – – Level 9 .................................................. 31.15 4.5 – – – – Postsecondary teachers............................................ 48.07 7.2 48.51 7.7 – – Level 9 .................................................. 35.94 6.6 – – – – Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers......... 29.03 .1 29.03 .1 – – Healthcare practitioner and technical occupations................... 19.54 10.2 19.32 12.0 – – Protective service occupations...................................... 21.76 2.4 21.97 2.1 – – Level 7 .................................................. 22.53 1.5 22.53 1.5 – – Fire fighters..................................................... 19.93 12.1 19.93 12.1 – – Police officers................................................... 22.89 2.3 22.89 2.3 – – Level 7 .................................................. 22.86 2.4 22.86 2.4 – – Police and sheriff's patrol officers............................ 22.89 2.3 22.89 2.3 – – Level 7 .................................................. 22.86 2.4 22.86 2.4 – – Building and grounds cleaning and maintenance occupations........... 11.06 7.6 11.06 7.6 – – Building cleaning workers......................................... 9.88 .3 9.88 .3 – – Office and administrative support occupations....................... 14.33 3.0 14.38 2.8 – – Level 3 .................................................. 11.86 6.6 11.95 7.3 – – Level 4 .................................................. 13.95 3.9 13.95 3.9 – – Level 5 .................................................. 15.39 1.8 15.39 1.8 – – Level 6 .................................................. 14.99 3.8 14.99 3.8 – – Secretaries and administrative assistants......................... 15.16 1.4 15.16 1.4 – – Secretaries, except legal, medical, and executive............... 14.93 6.7 14.93 6.7 – – Office clerks, general............................................ 12.68 8.4 12.68 8.4 – – Level 4 .................................................. 13.62 8.5 13.62 8.5 – – Construction and extraction occupations............................. 16.62 8.3 16.62 8.3 – – Installation, maintenance, and repair occupations................... 16.13 3.9 16.13 3.9 – – Transportation and material moving occupations...................... $12.34 1.9 $12.34 1.9 – – 1 Earnings are the straight-time hourly wages or salaries paid to employees. They include incentive pay, cost-of-living adjustments, and hazard pay. Excluded are premium pay for overtime, vacations, holidays, nonproduction bonuses, and tips. The mean is computed by totaling the pay of all workers and dividing by the number of workers, weighted by hours. See appendix A for more information. 2 Employees are classified as working either a full-time or a part-time schedule based on the definition used by each establishment. Therefore, a worker with a 35-hour-per-week schedule might be considered a full-time employee in one establishment, but classified as part-time in another firm, where a 40-hour week is the minimum full-time schedule. 3 Each occupation for which data are collected in an establishment is evaluated based on four factors, including knowledge, job controls and complexity, contacts, and physical environment. The knowledge factor is tailored to 24 families of closely related jobs. Points are assigned based on the occupation's rank within each factor. The points are summed to determine the overall level of the occupation. See appendix A for more information. 4 Workers are classified by occupation using the 2000 Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) system. See appendix B for more information. 5 The relative standard error (RSE) is the standard error expressed as a percent of the estimate. It can be used to calculate a "confidence interval" around a sample estimate. For more information about RSEs, see appendix A. Table 5. Combined work levels(1) for civilian workers: Mean hourly earnings(2) for full-time and part-time workers(3), Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL, September 2006 Total Full-time workers Part-time workers Occupation(4) and level Relative Relative Relative Mean error(5) Mean error(5) Mean error(5) (percent) (percent) (percent) All workers........................................................... $16.59 3.1 $17.33 3.0 $9.58 8.0 Management occupations.............................................. 33.14 4.0 33.17 4.0 – – Group II.................................................. 25.98 3.3 – – – – Group III................................................. 36.72 3.7 – – – – General and operations managers................................... 38.66 7.5 38.66 7.5 – – Education administrators.......................................... 33.71 11.2 33.71 11.2 – – Group III................................................. 40.11 4.1 – – – – Education administrators, elementary and secondary school....... 35.03 15.7 35.03 15.7 – – Medical and health services managers.............................. 28.33 8.6 28.33 8.6 – – Business and financial operations occupations....................... 22.78 3.9 22.78 3.9 – – Group II.................................................. 21.41 5.6 – – – – Group III................................................. 27.69 5.2 – – – – Accountants and auditors.......................................... 23.23 7.5 23.23 7.5 – – Group II.................................................. 22.39 8.1 22.39 8.1 – – Computer and mathematical science occupations....................... 26.45 7.8 26.48 7.9 – – Group II.................................................. 20.21 5.3 – – – – Group III................................................. 31.74 6.8 – – – – Computer programmers.............................................. 27.12 4.9 27.12 4.9 – – Group II.................................................. 21.00 4.4 21.00 4.4 – – Group III................................................. 30.36 4.7 30.36 4.7 – – Computer software engineers....................................... 34.10 6.4 34.10 6.4 – – Group III................................................. 35.93 6.1 – – – – Computer software engineers, applications....................... 31.49 5.5 31.49 5.5 – – Computer software engineers, systems software................... 38.10 6.4 38.10 6.4 – – Computer support specialists...................................... 17.48 8.2 17.48 8.2 – – Group II.................................................. 16.92 10.4 16.92 10.4 – – Computer systems analysts......................................... 34.56 5.6 34.56 5.6 – – Architecture and engineering occupations............................ 28.42 14.0 28.42 14.0 – – Group II.................................................. 19.97 3.8 – – – – Group III................................................. 39.76 4.3 – – – – Engineers......................................................... 27.81 19.8 27.81 19.8 – – Group III................................................. 33.87 7.1 – – – – Engineering technicians, except drafters.......................... 21.76 2.2 21.76 2.2 – – Group II.................................................. 21.76 2.2 – – – – Electrical and electronic engineering technicians............... 21.17 2.5 21.17 2.5 – – Group II.................................................. 21.17 2.5 21.17 2.5 – – Life, physical, and social science occupations...................... 29.49 11.1 29.49 11.1 – – Group II.................................................. 21.77 10.9 – – – – Community and social services occupations........................... 16.46 10.0 16.36 10.3 – – Group II.................................................. 14.34 5.9 – – – – Group III................................................. $20.29 6.3 – – – – Social workers.................................................... 15.37 8.2 $15.37 8.2 – – Group II.................................................. 14.56 8.9 – – – – Legal occupations................................................... 40.58 31.7 – – – – Education, training, and library occupations........................ 26.29 5.9 27.20 3.5 – – Group I................................................... 9.71 5.8 – – – – Group II.................................................. 25.85 5.0 – – – – Group III................................................. 35.66 4.9 – – – – Postsecondary teachers............................................ 37.85 20.9 37.63 21.8 $42.85 0.2 Group III................................................. 41.45 3.3 – – – – Miscellaneous postsecondary teachers............................ 35.80 27.7 35.78 27.8 – – Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers......... 26.51 7.0 27.31 4.5 – – Group II.................................................. 26.55 7.2 – – – – Elementary and middle school teachers........................... 28.25 2.1 28.25 2.1 – – Group II.................................................. 28.25 2.1 – – – – Middle school teachers, except special and vocational education.................................................... 27.84 3.1 27.84 3.1 – – Group II.................................................. 27.84 3.1 27.84 3.1 – – Other teachers and instructors.................................... 27.64 5.9 – – – – Teacher assistants................................................ 10.56 10.7 – – – – Arts, design, entertainment, sports, and media occupations.......... 22.88 7.6 22.88 7.6 – – Group II.................................................. 22.27 6.9 – – – – Healthcare practitioner and technical occupations................... 22.96 7.3 22.26 6.3 27.87 11.2 Group I................................................... 13.42 4.4 – – – – Group II.................................................. 19.93 2.2 – – – – Group III................................................. 32.36 8.8 – – – – Pharmacists....................................................... 46.13 3.1 – – – – Group III................................................. 46.13 3.1 – – – – Registered nurses................................................. 26.86 2.4 26.23 1.5 29.41 7.7 Group II.................................................. 24.87 2.7 24.81 2.9 – – Group III................................................. 27.76 2.8 27.02 .8 29.68 8.0 Therapists........................................................ 24.78 10.1 24.52 10.5 – – Group II.................................................. 22.12 1.7 – – – – Group III................................................. 26.27 16.8 – – – – Respiratory therapists.......................................... 22.05 1.2 22.05 1.2 – – Clinical laboratory technologists and technicians................. 18.37 5.6 18.29 5.7 – – Group II.................................................. 21.57 3.2 – – – – Medical and clinical laboratory technologists................... 22.43 5.3 22.45 5.5 – – Group II.................................................. 22.21 5.9 22.22 6.2 – – Medical and clinical laboratory technicians..................... 15.21 9.8 15.21 9.8 – – Diagnostic related technologists and technicians.................. 17.74 6.1 – – – – Health diagnosing and treating practitioner support technicians... 16.34 11.8 16.42 12.0 – – Licensed practical and licensed vocational nurses................. $16.56 3.1 $16.45 2.7 – – Group II.................................................. 17.04 2.2 – – – – Healthcare support occupations...................................... 10.15 4.3 10.35 4.4 $8.94 6.5 Group I................................................... 10.13 4.4 – – – – Nursing, psychiatric, and home health aides....................... 9.89 1.6 9.99 2.0 9.10 10.6 Group I................................................... 9.89 1.6 – – – – Nursing aides, orderlies, and attendants........................ 10.05 3.1 10.01 2.9 10.36 5.6 Group I................................................... 10.05 3.1 10.01 3.0 10.36 5.6 Miscellaneous healthcare support occupations...................... 11.05 14.5 11.79 17.0 – – Group I................................................... 11.05 15.3 – – – – Protective service occupations...................................... 13.70 7.4 13.80 7.6 8.58 2.0 Group I................................................... 10.88 7.9 – – – – Group II.................................................. 17.78 16.0 – – – – Group III................................................. 24.72 12.7 – – – – Fire fighters..................................................... 19.93 12.1 19.93 12.1 – – Group II.................................................. 19.93 12.1 19.93 12.1 – – Police officers................................................... 22.89 2.3 22.89 2.3 – – Group II.................................................. 22.86 2.4 – – – – Police and sheriff's patrol officers............................ 22.89 2.3 22.89 2.3 – – Group II.................................................. 22.86 2.4 22.86 2.4 – – Security guards and gaming surveillance officers.................. 10.35 1.0 10.37 1.1 – – Group I................................................... 10.39 2.2 – – – – Security guards................................................. 10.35 1.0 10.37 1.1 – – Group I................................................... 10.39 2.2 10.42 2.6 – – Food preparation and serving related occupations.................... 7.16 1.2 8.15 4.3 5.69 10.3 Group I................................................... 6.94 1.7 – – – – Cooks............................................................. 9.36 4.7 9.63 5.8 – – Group I................................................... 9.24 4.4 – – – – Cooks, restaurant............................................... 9.66 4.7 9.74 6.0 – – Group I................................................... 9.66 4.7 9.74 6.0 – – Food preparation workers.......................................... 8.80 3.7 9.19 2.7 8.11 6.0 Group I................................................... 8.80 3.7 9.19 2.7 8.11 6.0 Food service, tipped.............................................. 3.95 13.6 4.47 13.1 3.39 7.7 Group I................................................... 3.95 13.6 – – – – Waiters and waitresses.......................................... 3.42 3.1 3.75 7.1 3.14 6.7 Group I................................................... 3.42 3.1 3.75 7.1 3.14 6.7 Fast food and counter workers..................................... 7.43 3.1 – – 7.14 2.1 Group I................................................... 7.47 3.4 – – – – Combined food preparation and serving workers, including fast food........................................................... 7.51 3.7 – – – – Group I................................................... 7.51 3.7 – – – – Building and grounds cleaning and maintenance occupations........... 10.02 5.1 10.10 5.3 – – Group I................................................... $9.81 5.2 – – – – Building cleaning workers......................................... 9.74 5.9 $9.81 6.2 – – Group I................................................... 9.79 5.8 – – – – Janitors and cleaners, except maids and housekeeping cleaners... 10.28 6.6 10.43 6.9 – – Group I................................................... 10.29 6.6 10.44 7.0 – – Personal care and service occupations............................... 12.00 17.4 10.64 3.0 $13.57 29.1 Group I................................................... 8.08 6.4 – – – – Group II.................................................. 15.68 15.3 – – – – Sales and related occupations....................................... 14.12 6.3 15.98 6.2 8.40 7.4 Group I................................................... 10.71 4.1 – – – – Group II.................................................. 22.80 7.9 – – – – First-line supervisors/managers, sales workers.................... 17.36 9.5 17.62 10.2 – – Group II.................................................. 19.50 11.3 – – – – First-line supervisors/managers of retail sales workers......... 16.00 7.8 16.23 8.9 – – Group II.................................................. 17.35 6.9 17.35 6.9 – – Retail sales workers.............................................. 10.27 3.5 11.54 4.6 8.40 7.6 Group I................................................... 9.67 4.3 – – – – Cashiers, all workers........................................... 8.54 4.9 9.44 6.1 7.70 .9 Group I................................................... 8.43 5.6 – – – – Cashiers...................................................... 8.54 4.9 9.44 6.1 7.70 .9 Group I................................................... 8.43 5.6 9.39 7.8 7.70 .9 Retail salespersons............................................. 10.60 5.3 11.66 8.3 8.89 12.9 Group I................................................... 10.35 4.6 11.41 7.1 8.90 13.2 Sales representatives, wholesale and manufacturing................ 28.47 8.0 28.47 8.0 – – Group II.................................................. 29.07 7.3 – – – – Sales representatives, wholesale and manufacturing, except technical and scientific products.............................. 29.09 7.5 29.09 7.5 – – Group II.................................................. 29.09 7.5 29.09 7.5 – – Telemarketers..................................................... 16.99 9.0 17.10 9.1 – – Group I................................................... 17.26 12.2 17.42 12.4 – – Miscellaneous sales and related workers........................... 11.46 6.5 – – – – Group I................................................... 11.07 6.6 – – – – Office and administrative support occupations....................... 14.94 4.5 15.15 4.6 10.80 7.2 Group I................................................... 12.76 2.8 – – – – Group II.................................................. 19.05 9.4 – – – – First-line supervisors/managers of office and administrative support workers.................................................. 17.75 6.2 17.75 6.2 – – Group II.................................................. 17.38 5.3 17.38 5.3 – – Financial clerks.................................................. 15.22 5.2 15.59 5.5 – – Group I................................................... 13.75 3.2 – – – – Group II.................................................. 17.36 4.2 – – – – Bookkeeping, accounting, and auditing clerks.................... 16.60 6.8 16.79 6.8 – – Group I................................................... 14.20 3.5 14.45 3.2 – – Group II.................................................. $17.12 4.8 $17.12 4.8 – – Customer service representatives.................................. 15.44 6.2 15.43 6.4 – – Group I................................................... 13.51 9.0 13.44 9.3 – – Group II.................................................. 17.68 8.1 17.73 8.4 – – Interviewers, except eligibility and loan......................... 11.78 5.5 11.83 5.6 – – Group I................................................... 11.54 4.7 11.58 4.8 – – Receptionists and information clerks.............................. 11.04 7.0 11.48 6.8 – – Group I................................................... 11.04 7.0 11.48 6.8 – – Stock clerks and order fillers.................................... 9.69 4.0 10.15 3.7 – – Group I................................................... 9.69 4.0 10.15 3.7 – – Secretaries and administrative assistants......................... 13.79 8.3 13.75 8.5 – – Group I................................................... 12.12 9.4 – – – – Group II.................................................. 16.02 4.6 – – – – Executive secretaries and administrative assistants............. 18.21 11.0 18.21 11.0 – – Group II.................................................. 17.43 4.0 17.43 4.0 – – Medical secretaries............................................. 12.30 9.5 12.04 12.8 – – Secretaries, except legal, medical, and executive............... 12.95 13.6 12.95 13.6 – – Group II.................................................. 16.32 8.1 16.32 8.1 – – Data entry and information processing workers..................... 11.25 7.5 11.25 7.5 – – Group I................................................... 11.25 7.5 – – – – Data entry keyers............................................... 11.25 7.5 11.25 7.5 – – Group I................................................... 11.25 7.5 11.25 7.5 – – Insurance claims and policy processing clerks..................... 15.56 6.6 15.53 5.7 – – Group I................................................... 13.85 .4 14.01 1.6 – – Office clerks, general............................................ 13.70 7.7 13.99 7.1 – – Group I................................................... 14.28 7.0 14.68 6.4 – – Construction and extraction occupations............................. 17.32 5.1 17.32 5.1 – – Group I................................................... 12.57 8.1 – – – – Group II.................................................. 19.87 5.1 – – – – Carpenters........................................................ 22.47 31.2 22.47 31.2 – – Construction equipment operators.................................. 13.57 7.9 13.57 7.9 – – Electricians...................................................... 17.18 2.6 17.18 2.6 – – Group II.................................................. 17.45 4.0 17.45 4.0 – – Miscellaneous construction and related workers.................... 13.41 14.4 13.41 14.4 – – Installation, maintenance, and repair occupations................... 18.28 7.8 18.28 7.8 – – Group I................................................... 12.55 3.0 – – – – Group II.................................................. 21.04 8.5 – – – – First-line supervisors/managers of mechanics, installers, and repairers........................................................ 28.30 18.3 28.30 18.3 – – Automotive technicians and repairers.............................. 14.94 4.5 14.94 4.5 – – Group II.................................................. 15.40 8.1 – – – – Industrial machinery installation, repair, and maintenance workers 16.78 5.8 16.78 5.8 – – Group I................................................... 13.50 2.5 – – – – Maintenance and repair workers, general......................... 13.51 2.8 13.51 2.8 – – Group I................................................... $13.47 2.9 $13.47 2.9 – – Production occupations.............................................. 13.34 4.3 13.41 4.4 $9.20 0.7 Group I................................................... 10.91 1.7 – – – – Group II.................................................. 17.97 7.9 – – – – Butchers and other meat, poultry, and fish processing workers..... 13.56 4.0 – – – – Miscellaneous production workers.................................. 13.07 8.9 13.15 8.9 – – Group I................................................... 11.77 5.9 – – – – Transportation and material moving occupations...................... 12.51 9.0 12.89 9.1 7.21 .9 Group I................................................... 10.51 8.3 – – – – Group II.................................................. 21.74 8.5 – – – – Driver/sales workers and truck drivers............................ 13.85 17.0 14.20 17.2 – – Group I................................................... 11.08 12.4 – – – – Truck drivers, light or delivery services....................... 10.96 11.9 11.02 11.9 – – Group I................................................... 11.28 14.5 – – – – Industrial truck and tractor operators............................ 16.12 14.4 16.12 14.4 – – Group I................................................... 12.44 5.4 12.44 5.4 – – Laborers and material movers, hand................................ 8.58 3.0 8.83 3.3 7.27 .8 Group I................................................... 8.57 3.1 – – – – Cleaners of vehicles and equipment.............................. 7.29 .9 – – – – Group I................................................... 7.29 .9 – – – – Laborers and freight, stock, and material movers, hand.......... 9.36 3.2 9.46 3.1 – – Group I................................................... 9.36 3.3 9.46 3.2 – – Packers and packagers, hand..................................... 8.39 5.8 – – – – Group I................................................... 8.39 5.8 – – – – 1 Combined work levels simplify the presentation of work levels by combining levels 1 through 15 into four broad groups. Group I combines levels 1-4, group II combines levels 5-8, group III combines levels 9-12, and group IV combines levels 13-15. 2 Earnings are the straight-time hourly wages or salaries paid to employees. They include incentive pay, cost-of-living adjustments, and hazard pay. Excluded are premium pay for overtime, vacations, holidays, nonproduction bonuses, and tips. The mean is computed by totaling the pay of all workers and dividing by the number of workers, weighted by hours. See appendix A for more information. 3 Employees are classified as working either a full-time or a part-time schedule based on the definition used by each establishment. Therefore, a worker with a 35-hour-per-week schedule might be considered a full-time employee in one establishment, but classified as part-time in another firm, where a 40-hour week is the minimum full-time schedule. 4 Workers are classified by occupation using the 2000 Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) system. See appendix B for more information. 5 The relative standard error (RSE) is the standard error expressed as a percent of the estimate. It can be used to calculate a "confidence interval" around a sample estimate. For more information about RSEs, see appendix A. Table 6. Civilian workers: Hourly wage percentiles(1), Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL, September 2006 Occupation(2) 10 25 Median 75 90 50 All workers........................................................... $7.75 $10.00 $14.00 $20.12 $28.82 Management occupations.............................................. 21.04 23.93 30.11 37.71 47.50 General and operations managers................................... 31.71 33.97 33.97 43.27 48.17 Education administrators.......................................... 23.93 24.90 32.85 43.00 47.76 Education administrators, elementary and secondary school....... 23.93 28.70 32.85 43.62 48.82 Medical and health services managers.............................. 17.46 24.04 27.40 35.13 36.71 Business and financial operations occupations....................... 16.52 18.06 22.01 26.14 29.81 Accountants and auditors.......................................... 17.00 17.00 22.01 27.38 30.42 Computer and mathematical science occupations....................... 17.22 20.02 24.52 32.19 38.42 Computer programmers.............................................. 19.43 20.51 26.98 32.46 35.51 Computer software engineers....................................... 22.49 25.31 33.65 39.90 48.75 Computer software engineers, applications....................... 20.20 24.52 33.17 36.06 39.90 Computer software engineers, systems software................... 23.93 25.63 37.74 48.75 52.29 Computer support specialists...................................... 9.46 12.50 15.95 18.02 28.89 Computer systems analysts......................................... 23.56 28.37 34.62 39.95 44.22 Architecture and engineering occupations............................ 18.26 18.26 23.00 38.02 49.52 Engineers......................................................... 18.26 18.26 28.73 38.02 41.09 Engineering technicians, except drafters.......................... 18.60 20.50 21.65 21.65 25.18 Electrical and electronic engineering technicians............... 18.60 20.50 21.65 21.65 24.34 Life, physical, and social science occupations...................... 17.69 21.39 27.85 32.82 37.80 Community and social services occupations........................... 12.25 12.51 14.52 18.65 23.24 Social workers.................................................... 11.52 12.51 14.60 18.07 19.47 Legal occupations................................................... 27.00 27.00 34.19 60.10 60.58 Education, training, and library occupations........................ 10.00 22.94 27.85 28.48 38.26 Postsecondary teachers............................................ 13.00 14.00 37.22 46.50 68.01 Miscellaneous postsecondary teachers............................ 13.00 13.00 37.22 45.94 68.01 Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers......... 11.00 24.28 27.22 28.82 38.80 Elementary and middle school teachers........................... 24.24 24.44 27.42 28.89 38.94 Middle school teachers, except special and vocational education.................................................... 22.94 25.25 27.85 27.85 33.80 Other teachers and instructors.................................... 26.90 28.16 28.16 28.16 34.30 Teacher assistants................................................ 8.00 9.50 9.56 11.26 15.40 Arts, design, entertainment, sports, and media occupations.......... 17.71 19.23 20.19 28.08 28.08 Healthcare practitioner and technical occupations................... 13.00 16.03 21.28 26.76 39.76 Pharmacists....................................................... 39.83 45.02 46.20 49.20 49.25 Registered nurses................................................. 22.52 24.23 26.57 28.77 30.28 Therapists........................................................ 14.47 19.57 23.22 31.50 32.97 Respiratory therapists.......................................... 19.57 19.57 21.70 22.85 26.78 Clinical laboratory technologists and technicians................. 12.29 13.00 19.60 22.76 24.59 Medical and clinical laboratory technologists................... 19.12 21.07 22.98 24.07 25.43 Medical and clinical laboratory technicians..................... 11.29 12.60 13.00 19.60 21.54 Diagnostic related technologists and technicians.................. $9.04 $11.25 $21.49 $23.14 $23.34 Health diagnosing and treating practitioner support technicians... 10.43 12.32 18.67 19.23 21.00 Licensed practical and licensed vocational nurses................. 14.14 16.03 16.03 17.03 20.00 Healthcare support occupations...................................... 8.18 8.92 10.05 10.74 12.67 Nursing, psychiatric, and home health aides....................... 8.50 9.27 10.05 10.74 11.04 Nursing aides, orderlies, and attendants........................ 8.50 9.01 10.05 10.74 11.50 Miscellaneous healthcare support occupations...................... 8.00 8.44 10.30 14.41 14.41 Protective service occupations...................................... 9.00 10.15 11.53 13.97 23.39 Fire fighters..................................................... 10.62 15.59 20.84 24.44 25.94 Police officers................................................... 17.43 18.77 21.90 27.95 28.68 Police and sheriff's patrol officers............................ 17.43 18.77 21.90 27.95 28.68 Security guards and gaming surveillance officers.................. 8.75 9.50 10.15 11.00 11.53 Security guards................................................. 8.75 9.50 10.15 11.00 11.53 Food preparation and serving related occupations.................... 3.13 3.65 7.00 9.07 11.27 Cooks............................................................. 6.41 6.96 9.00 11.50 12.70 Cooks, restaurant............................................... 6.41 6.41 9.50 12.00 12.75 Food preparation workers.......................................... 7.30 7.50 8.91 9.66 10.71 Food service, tipped.............................................. 2.39 3.13 3.38 3.65 6.81 Waiters and waitresses.......................................... 2.39 3.13 3.38 3.38 4.73 Fast food and counter workers..................................... 6.50 6.75 7.00 7.75 8.75 Combined food preparation and serving workers, including fast food........................................................... 6.50 6.75 7.00 7.80 9.00 Building and grounds cleaning and maintenance occupations........... 7.40 8.00 9.89 11.00 13.50 Building cleaning workers......................................... 7.25 8.00 9.50 11.00 13.03 Janitors and cleaners, except maids and housekeeping cleaners... 7.24 9.00 10.22 11.59 13.50 Personal care and service occupations............................... 6.67 7.35 11.26 14.38 20.00 Sales and related occupations....................................... 7.06 8.50 11.19 16.87 25.98 First-line supervisors/managers, sales workers.................... 10.20 13.29 14.82 19.71 21.91 First-line supervisors/managers of retail sales workers......... 10.20 13.29 14.82 19.23 21.91 Retail sales workers.............................................. 6.90 7.50 9.07 11.72 15.48 Cashiers, all workers........................................... 6.90 7.40 8.00 9.50 10.50 Cashiers...................................................... 6.90 7.40 8.00 9.50 10.50 Retail salespersons............................................. 6.40 7.50 9.00 12.12 18.66 Sales representatives, wholesale and manufacturing................ 21.40 22.41 31.45 32.22 32.22 Sales representatives, wholesale and manufacturing, except technical and scientific products.............................. 21.40 27.16 31.45 32.22 32.22 Telemarketers..................................................... 11.19 12.31 14.50 20.51 25.00 Miscellaneous sales and related workers........................... 7.50 9.14 11.00 13.64 15.68 Office and administrative support occupations....................... 10.00 11.30 13.86 17.13 20.98 First-line supervisors/managers of office and administrative support workers.................................................. 13.00 17.13 17.13 18.00 21.50 Financial clerks.................................................. 10.89 12.33 14.87 16.40 21.20 Bookkeeping, accounting, and auditing clerks.................... 11.57 13.65 15.50 18.25 25.00 Customer service representatives.................................. 11.10 12.06 13.65 17.90 22.97 Interviewers, except eligibility and loan......................... $10.00 $10.50 $11.98 $13.21 $14.13 Receptionists and information clerks.............................. 8.95 9.69 11.49 12.00 14.00 Stock clerks and order fillers.................................... 8.03 8.83 9.41 10.00 11.00 Secretaries and administrative assistants......................... 10.00 10.00 12.94 17.00 19.48 Executive secretaries and administrative assistants............. 12.90 16.00 17.55 19.97 24.30 Medical secretaries............................................. 9.50 10.26 12.94 13.14 14.75 Secretaries, except legal, medical, and executive............... 10.00 10.00 11.91 15.97 19.48 Data entry and information processing workers..................... 9.00 10.23 10.88 11.93 14.15 Data entry keyers............................................... 9.00 10.23 10.88 11.93 14.15 Insurance claims and policy processing clerks..................... 12.12 13.22 15.23 17.16 20.77 Office clerks, general............................................ 10.97 11.00 14.00 15.00 18.68 Construction and extraction occupations............................. 10.00 14.50 16.00 19.38 21.88 Carpenters........................................................ 9.63 15.00 15.01 15.01 53.58 Construction equipment operators.................................. 9.57 11.08 13.50 15.84 17.77 Electricians...................................................... 14.50 15.00 17.94 19.00 19.50 Miscellaneous construction and related workers.................... 6.87 11.16 16.00 16.00 16.00 Installation, maintenance, and repair occupations................... 11.55 13.23 17.05 21.52 25.33 First-line supervisors/managers of mechanics, installers, and repairers........................................................ 15.79 21.83 21.83 40.00 40.00 Automotive technicians and repairers.............................. 11.18 13.75 14.38 15.00 19.49 Industrial machinery installation, repair, and maintenance workers.......................................................... 11.82 13.53 17.14 18.72 19.86 Maintenance and repair workers, general......................... 11.12 11.51 12.82 14.74 17.05 Production occupations.............................................. 8.66 10.03 12.50 15.90 18.15 Butchers and other meat, poultry, and fish processing workers..... 9.00 11.25 13.50 15.00 18.15 Miscellaneous production workers.................................. 10.13 12.50 12.50 15.00 16.60 Transportation and material moving occupations...................... 7.10 8.50 10.94 15.12 21.10 Driver/sales workers and truck drivers............................ 7.75 9.00 10.00 18.46 21.99 Truck drivers, light or delivery services....................... 8.00 9.00 10.00 13.75 14.65 Industrial truck and tractor operators............................ 9.50 11.95 16.25 21.10 23.66 Laborers and material movers, hand................................ 6.40 7.25 8.00 9.50 11.33 Cleaners of vehicles and equipment.............................. 6.40 6.40 6.75 7.60 9.00 Laborers and freight, stock, and material movers, hand.......... 7.50 7.50 9.00 10.60 12.25 Packers and packagers, hand..................................... 6.88 7.75 7.75 9.75 10.94 1 Percentiles designate position in the earnings distribution and are calculated from individual-worker earnings and the hours they are scheduled to work. At the 50th percentile, the median, half of the hours are paid the same as or more than the rate shown, and half are paid the same as or less than the rate shown. At the 25th percentile, one-fourth of the hours are paid the same as or less than the rate shown. At the 75th percentile, one-fourth are paid the same as or more than the rate shown. The 10th and 90th percentiles follow the same logic. Hourly wages are the straight-time wages or salaries paid to employees. They include incentive pay, cost-of-living adjustments, and hazard pay. Excluded are premium pay for overtime, vacations, and holidays; nonproduction bonuses; and tips. 2 Workers are classified by occupation using the 2000 Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) system. See appendix B for more information. Table 7. Private industry workers: Hourly wage percentiles(1), Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL, September 2006 Occupation(2) 10 25 Median 75 90 50 All workers........................................................... $7.50 $10.00 $13.18 $19.23 $27.40 Management occupations.............................................. 21.04 24.49 30.11 37.71 47.50 General and operations managers................................... 33.97 33.97 37.69 44.25 48.17 Business and financial operations occupations....................... 16.25 17.51 22.01 25.54 29.46 Accountants and auditors.......................................... 17.00 17.00 22.01 27.31 30.42 Computer and mathematical science occupations....................... 17.85 20.20 24.93 32.19 39.42 Computer programmers.............................................. 20.51 23.42 28.92 33.23 36.56 Computer software engineers....................................... 22.69 25.52 34.62 39.90 50.49 Computer software engineers, applications....................... 20.20 24.52 33.65 36.35 40.69 Computer software engineers, systems software................... 23.93 25.63 37.74 48.75 52.29 Computer support specialists...................................... 9.46 12.50 15.95 18.02 28.89 Computer systems analysts......................................... 23.56 28.37 35.10 39.95 44.22 Architecture and engineering occupations............................ 18.26 18.26 21.65 38.02 49.52 Engineers......................................................... 18.26 18.26 20.00 35.08 38.02 Engineering technicians, except drafters.......................... 18.60 20.50 21.65 21.65 25.18 Electrical and electronic engineering technicians............... 18.60 20.50 21.65 21.65 24.34 Community and social services occupations........................... 11.00 12.50 14.19 16.59 20.29 Legal occupations................................................... 27.00 27.00 34.19 60.10 60.58 Education, training, and library occupations........................ 9.50 10.00 13.00 24.18 30.14 Postsecondary teachers............................................ 13.00 13.00 13.50 41.16 56.82 Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers......... 10.00 10.00 11.00 22.94 27.89 Arts, design, entertainment, sports, and media occupations.......... 19.00 19.23 20.19 28.08 28.08 Healthcare practitioner and technical occupations................... 13.00 16.03 21.55 26.87 40.08 Pharmacists....................................................... 39.83 45.02 46.20 49.20 49.25 Registered nurses................................................. 22.60 24.33 26.50 28.64 30.11 Therapists........................................................ 14.47 19.57 23.22 31.50 32.97 Respiratory therapists.......................................... 19.57 19.57 21.70 22.85 26.78 Clinical laboratory technologists and technicians................. 12.60 13.00 19.94 22.90 24.59 Medical and clinical laboratory technologists................... 19.12 21.07 22.98 24.59 25.43 Medical and clinical laboratory technicians..................... 12.35 13.00 13.00 19.60 21.54 Diagnostic related technologists and technicians.................. 9.04 11.25 21.49 23.14 23.34 Health diagnosing and treating practitioner support technicians... 10.43 12.16 16.75 19.23 19.23 Licensed practical and licensed vocational nurses................. 14.14 16.03 16.03 16.88 20.00 Healthcare support occupations...................................... 8.18 8.91 10.05 10.74 12.65 Nursing, psychiatric, and home health aides....................... 8.50 9.27 10.05 10.74 11.00 Nursing aides, orderlies, and attendants........................ 8.50 9.01 10.05 10.74 11.37 Miscellaneous healthcare support occupations...................... 8.00 8.44 10.11 14.41 14.41 Protective service occupations...................................... 8.80 9.75 10.50 11.53 12.50 Security guards and gaming surveillance officers.................. 8.75 9.50 10.15 11.00 11.53 Security guards................................................. $8.75 $9.50 $10.15 $11.00 $11.53 Food preparation and serving related occupations.................... 3.13 3.65 7.00 9.00 11.27 Cooks............................................................. 6.41 6.96 9.00 11.50 12.70 Cooks, restaurant............................................... 6.41 6.41 9.50 12.00 12.75 Food preparation workers.......................................... 7.30 7.50 8.50 9.58 10.71 Food service, tipped.............................................. 2.39 3.13 3.38 3.65 6.81 Waiters and waitresses.......................................... 2.39 3.13 3.38 3.38 4.73 Fast food and counter workers..................................... 6.50 6.75 7.00 7.75 8.75 Combined food preparation and serving workers, including fast food........................................................... 6.50 6.75 7.00 7.80 9.00 Building and grounds cleaning and maintenance occupations........... 7.24 7.75 9.50 11.00 13.50 Building cleaning workers......................................... 7.24 7.75 9.43 11.13 13.50 Janitors and cleaners, except maids and housekeeping cleaners... 7.00 8.50 10.50 12.50 13.50 Personal care and service occupations............................... 6.67 7.21 11.26 14.38 20.00 Sales and related occupations....................................... 7.06 8.45 11.19 16.75 25.98 First-line supervisors/managers, sales workers.................... 10.20 13.29 14.82 19.71 21.91 First-line supervisors/managers of retail sales workers......... 10.20 13.29 14.82 19.23 21.91 Retail sales workers.............................................. 6.90 7.50 9.05 11.64 15.65 Cashiers, all workers........................................... 6.90 7.40 8.00 9.50 10.50 Cashiers...................................................... 6.90 7.40 8.00 9.50 10.50 Retail salespersons............................................. 6.40 7.50 9.00 12.12 18.66 Sales representatives, wholesale and manufacturing................ 21.40 22.41 31.45 32.22 32.22 Sales representatives, wholesale and manufacturing, except technical and scientific products.............................. 21.40 27.16 31.45 32.22 32.22 Telemarketers..................................................... 11.19 12.31 14.50 20.51 25.00 Miscellaneous sales and related workers........................... 7.50 9.14 10.09 12.25 15.68 Office and administrative support occupations....................... 10.00 11.22 13.95 17.13 20.98 First-line supervisors/managers of office and administrative support workers.................................................. 13.00 17.13 17.13 18.00 21.50 Financial clerks.................................................. 10.75 12.31 14.87 16.40 21.20 Bookkeeping, accounting, and auditing clerks.................... 11.57 13.65 15.50 18.25 25.00 Customer service representatives.................................. 11.00 12.06 13.65 18.80 22.97 Interviewers, except eligibility and loan......................... 10.00 10.50 11.98 13.21 14.13 Receptionists and information clerks.............................. 8.95 9.69 11.49 12.00 14.00 Stock clerks and order fillers.................................... 8.03 8.83 9.39 10.00 10.00 Secretaries and administrative assistants......................... 10.00 10.00 12.90 17.00 18.02 Executive secretaries and administrative assistants............. 12.90 16.00 17.55 20.08 25.37 Medical secretaries............................................. 9.50 10.26 12.94 13.14 14.75 Data entry and information processing workers..................... 9.00 10.23 10.88 11.93 14.15 Data entry keyers............................................... 9.00 10.23 10.88 11.93 14.15 Insurance claims and policy processing clerks..................... 12.12 13.22 14.73 16.76 19.94 Office clerks, general............................................ 11.00 11.00 14.00 15.00 20.79 Construction and extraction occupations............................. 10.00 15.00 15.91 19.38 21.11 Electricians...................................................... 14.50 15.00 17.51 19.00 19.50 Installation, maintenance, and repair occupations................... $11.55 $13.53 $17.14 $21.83 $25.33 Industrial machinery installation, repair, and maintenance workers.......................................................... 12.51 16.15 18.06 19.31 20.00 Production occupations.............................................. 8.51 10.03 12.50 15.75 18.00 Butchers and other meat, poultry, and fish processing workers..... 9.00 11.25 13.50 15.00 18.15 Miscellaneous production workers.................................. 10.13 12.50 12.50 15.00 16.60 Transportation and material moving occupations...................... 7.10 8.50 10.80 15.19 21.10 Driver/sales workers and truck drivers............................ 7.75 9.00 10.00 18.46 21.99 Truck drivers, light or delivery services....................... 8.00 9.00 10.00 13.75 14.65 Industrial truck and tractor operators............................ 9.50 11.95 16.25 21.10 23.66 Laborers and material movers, hand................................ 6.40 7.25 8.00 9.50 11.33 Cleaners of vehicles and equipment.............................. 6.40 6.40 6.75 7.60 9.00 Laborers and freight, stock, and material movers, hand.......... 7.50 7.50 9.00 10.60 12.25 Packers and packagers, hand..................................... 6.88 7.75 7.75 9.75 10.94 1 Percentiles designate position in the earnings distribution and are calculated from individual-worker earnings and the hours they are scheduled to work. At the 50th percentile, the median, half of the hours are paid the same as or more than the rate shown, and half are paid the same as or less than the rate shown. At the 25th percentile, one-fourth of the hours are paid the same as or less than the rate shown. At the 75th percentile, one-fourth are paid the same as or more than the rate shown. The 10th and 90th percentiles follow the same logic. Hourly wages are the straight-time wages or salaries paid to employees. They include incentive pay, cost-of-living adjustments, and hazard pay. Excluded are premium pay for overtime, vacations, and holidays; nonproduction bonuses; and tips. 2 Workers are classified by occupation using the 2000 Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) system. See appendix B for more information. Table 8. State and local government workers: Hourly wage percentiles(1), Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL, September 2006 Occupation(2) 10 25 Median 75 90 50 All workers........................................................... $10.79 $14.12 $20.55 $28.16 $32.85 Management occupations.............................................. 19.86 23.93 28.70 37.66 48.73 Education administrators.......................................... 23.93 23.93 32.85 43.50 48.73 Business and financial operations occupations....................... 16.88 18.63 22.39 27.36 35.10 Computer and mathematical science occupations....................... 14.68 17.22 21.55 28.46 32.76 Life, physical, and social science occupations...................... 17.06 19.60 24.93 28.19 29.98 Community and social services occupations........................... 12.51 14.52 17.33 21.36 29.28 Education, training, and library occupations........................ 15.64 25.91 28.16 29.00 38.94 Postsecondary teachers............................................ 28.34 37.22 43.47 67.51 68.01 Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers......... 24.28 25.25 27.85 29.91 38.94 Healthcare practitioner and technical occupations................... 10.83 16.00 19.00 22.91 28.70 Protective service occupations...................................... 14.17 17.78 20.83 26.00 28.84 Fire fighters..................................................... 10.62 15.59 20.84 24.44 25.94 Police officers................................................... 17.43 18.77 21.90 27.95 28.68 Police and sheriff's patrol officers............................ 17.43 18.77 21.90 27.95 28.68 Building and grounds cleaning and maintenance occupations........... 9.10 9.12 9.94 10.75 13.35 Building cleaning workers......................................... 9.10 9.12 9.94 10.03 11.27 Office and administrative support occupations....................... 10.97 12.32 13.55 15.67 19.00 Secretaries and administrative assistants......................... 12.06 13.48 13.48 17.20 20.52 Secretaries, except legal, medical, and executive............... 11.89 12.30 14.25 17.24 18.34 Office clerks, general............................................ 9.39 10.89 12.14 15.17 15.96 Construction and extraction occupations............................. 10.85 13.17 16.17 19.41 22.73 Installation, maintenance, and repair occupations................... 11.58 12.90 15.97 19.44 21.34 Transportation and material moving occupations...................... 9.85 10.25 11.44 13.70 16.68 1 Percentiles designate position in the earnings distribution and are calculated from individual-worker earnings and the hours they are scheduled to work. At the 50th percentile, the median, half of the hours are paid the same as or more than the rate shown, and half are paid the same as or less than the rate shown. At the 25th percentile, one-fourth of the hours are paid the same as or less than the rate shown. At the 75th percentile, one-fourth are paid the same as or more than the rate shown. The 10th and 90th percentiles follow the same logic. Hourly wages are the straight-time wages or salaries paid to employees. They include incentive pay, cost-of-living adjustments, and hazard pay. Excluded are premium pay for overtime, vacations, and holidays; nonproduction bonuses; and tips. 2 Workers are classified by occupation using the 2000 Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) system. See appendix B for more information. Table 9. Full-time(1) civilian workers: Hourly wage percentiles(2), Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL, September 2006 Full-time workers Occupation(3) 10 25 Median 75 90 50 All workers........................................................... $8.92 $10.74 $14.68 $20.96 $29.40 Management occupations.............................................. 21.04 23.93 30.11 37.71 47.56 General and operations managers................................... 31.71 33.97 33.97 43.27 48.17 Education administrators.......................................... 23.93 24.90 32.85 43.00 47.76 Education administrators, elementary and secondary school....... 23.93 28.70 32.85 43.62 48.82 Medical and health services managers.............................. 17.46 24.04 27.40 35.13 36.71 Business and financial operations occupations....................... 16.52 18.06 22.01 26.14 29.81 Accountants and auditors.......................................... 17.00 17.00 22.01 27.38 30.42 Computer and mathematical science occupations....................... 17.47 20.02 24.57 32.19 38.42 Computer programmers.............................................. 19.43 20.51 26.98 32.46 35.51 Computer software engineers....................................... 22.49 25.31 33.65 39.90 48.75 Computer software engineers, applications....................... 20.20 24.52 33.17 36.06 39.90 Computer software engineers, systems software................... 23.93 25.63 37.74 48.75 52.29 Computer support specialists...................................... 9.46 12.50 15.95 18.02 28.89 Computer systems analysts......................................... 23.56 28.37 34.62 39.95 44.22 Architecture and engineering occupations............................ 18.26 18.26 23.00 38.02 49.52 Engineers......................................................... 18.26 18.26 28.73 38.02 41.09 Engineering technicians, except drafters.......................... 18.60 20.50 21.65 21.65 25.18 Electrical and electronic engineering technicians............... 18.60 20.50 21.65 21.65 24.34 Life, physical, and social science occupations...................... 17.69 21.39 27.85 32.82 37.80 Community and social services occupations........................... 12.25 12.51 14.52 18.51 23.24 Social workers.................................................... 11.52 12.51 14.60 18.07 19.47 Education, training, and library occupations........................ 11.26 24.28 27.85 28.82 38.26 Postsecondary teachers............................................ 13.00 14.00 37.22 48.46 68.01 Miscellaneous postsecondary teachers............................ 13.00 13.00 37.22 45.94 68.01 Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers......... 21.57 24.44 27.46 29.00 38.80 Elementary and middle school teachers........................... 24.24 24.44 27.42 28.89 38.94 Middle school teachers, except special and vocational education.................................................... 22.94 25.25 27.85 27.85 33.80 Arts, design, entertainment, sports, and media occupations.......... 17.71 19.23 20.19 28.08 28.08 Healthcare practitioner and technical occupations................... 13.00 16.03 20.16 26.43 31.68 Registered nurses................................................. 22.56 24.15 26.50 28.31 30.01 Therapists........................................................ 14.47 19.57 23.22 31.50 32.97 Respiratory therapists.......................................... 19.57 19.57 21.70 22.85 26.78 Clinical laboratory technologists and technicians................. 12.29 13.00 19.60 22.75 24.59 Medical and clinical laboratory technologists................... 19.00 21.07 22.98 24.59 25.43 Medical and clinical laboratory technicians..................... 11.29 12.60 13.00 19.60 21.54 Health diagnosing and treating practitioner support technicians... 10.43 12.32 18.67 19.23 21.00 Licensed practical and licensed vocational nurses................. $14.14 $16.03 $16.03 $16.88 $19.50 Healthcare support occupations...................................... 8.44 9.27 10.05 10.74 13.04 Nursing, psychiatric, and home health aides....................... 8.76 9.44 10.05 10.62 10.85 Nursing aides, orderlies, and attendants........................ 8.50 9.02 10.05 10.74 11.19 Miscellaneous healthcare support occupations...................... 8.44 8.79 11.50 14.41 14.41 Protective service occupations...................................... 9.00 10.15 11.53 14.31 23.39 Fire fighters..................................................... 10.62 15.59 20.84 24.44 25.94 Police officers................................................... 17.43 18.77 21.90 27.95 28.68 Police and sheriff's patrol officers............................ 17.43 18.77 21.90 27.95 28.68 Security guards and gaming surveillance officers.................. 8.75 9.50 10.15 11.00 11.53 Security guards................................................. 8.75 9.50 10.15 11.00 11.53 Food preparation and serving related occupations.................... 3.38 6.41 8.09 10.50 12.40 Cooks............................................................. 6.41 6.96 10.00 11.79 12.75 Cooks, restaurant............................................... 6.41 6.41 10.50 12.25 12.75 Food preparation workers.......................................... 7.50 8.40 9.34 9.69 11.10 Food service, tipped.............................................. 3.26 3.38 3.38 6.42 6.85 Waiters and waitresses.......................................... 2.41 3.26 3.38 3.65 6.05 Building and grounds cleaning and maintenance occupations........... 7.40 8.16 9.94 11.00 13.50 Building cleaning workers......................................... 7.25 8.00 9.63 11.00 13.03 Janitors and cleaners, except maids and housekeeping cleaners... 7.24 9.11 10.29 11.84 13.50 Personal care and service occupations............................... 6.50 8.50 11.26 13.05 14.38 Sales and related occupations....................................... 8.21 10.09 14.50 19.23 29.11 First-line supervisors/managers, sales workers.................... 10.20 13.29 14.82 19.71 21.91 First-line supervisors/managers of retail sales workers......... 10.20 13.29 14.82 19.23 21.91 Retail sales workers.............................................. 7.70 8.70 10.50 15.00 16.34 Cashiers, all workers........................................... 7.75 8.06 9.50 10.50 10.60 Cashiers...................................................... 7.75 8.06 9.50 10.50 10.60 Retail salespersons............................................. 7.56 8.21 10.30 14.72 18.66 Sales representatives, wholesale and manufacturing................ 21.40 22.41 31.45 32.22 32.22 Sales representatives, wholesale and manufacturing, except technical and scientific products.............................. 21.40 27.16 31.45 32.22 32.22 Telemarketers..................................................... 11.19 12.31 14.50 20.51 25.00 Office and administrative support occupations....................... 10.00 11.49 14.00 17.13 20.98 First-line supervisors/managers of office and administrative support workers.................................................. 13.00 17.13 17.13 18.00 21.50 Financial clerks.................................................. 11.50 12.54 15.00 16.84 21.66 Bookkeeping, accounting, and auditing clerks.................... 11.67 13.71 15.53 18.25 25.00 Customer service representatives.................................. 11.00 12.06 13.65 18.80 22.97 Interviewers, except eligibility and loan......................... 9.88 10.61 11.98 13.21 14.14 Receptionists and information clerks.............................. 9.50 9.85 11.50 14.00 14.00 Stock clerks and order fillers.................................... $8.83 $9.39 $9.80 $10.00 $11.63 Secretaries and administrative assistants......................... 10.00 10.00 12.94 17.00 19.48 Executive secretaries and administrative assistants............. 12.90 16.00 17.55 19.97 24.30 Medical secretaries............................................. 9.50 10.26 12.94 12.94 14.75 Secretaries, except legal, medical, and executive............... 10.00 10.00 11.91 15.97 19.48 Data entry and information processing workers..................... 9.00 10.23 10.88 11.93 14.15 Data entry keyers............................................... 9.00 10.23 10.88 11.93 14.15 Insurance claims and policy processing clerks..................... 12.12 13.33 15.23 17.02 20.94 Office clerks, general............................................ 11.00 11.00 14.00 15.00 20.79 Construction and extraction occupations............................. 10.00 14.50 16.00 19.38 21.88 Carpenters........................................................ 9.63 15.00 15.01 15.01 53.58 Construction equipment operators.................................. 9.57 11.08 13.50 15.84 17.77 Electricians...................................................... 14.50 15.00 17.94 19.00 19.50 Miscellaneous construction and related workers.................... 6.87 11.16 16.00 16.00 16.00 Installation, maintenance, and repair occupations................... 11.55 13.23 17.05 21.52 25.33 First-line supervisors/managers of mechanics, installers, and repairers........................................................ 15.79 21.83 21.83 40.00 40.00 Automotive technicians and repairers.............................. 11.18 13.75 14.38 15.00 19.49 Industrial machinery installation, repair, and maintenance workers.......................................................... 11.82 13.53 17.14 18.72 19.86 Maintenance and repair workers, general......................... 11.12 11.51 12.82 14.74 17.05 Production occupations.............................................. 8.75 10.18 12.50 15.90 18.63 Miscellaneous production workers.................................. 11.09 12.50 12.50 15.00 16.60 Transportation and material moving occupations...................... 7.50 9.00 11.32 16.11 21.31 Driver/sales workers and truck drivers............................ 8.00 9.00 11.40 18.46 22.15 Truck drivers, light or delivery services....................... 8.00 9.00 10.00 14.13 14.65 Industrial truck and tractor operators............................ 9.50 11.95 16.25 21.10 23.66 Laborers and material movers, hand................................ 6.40 7.50 8.70 9.94 11.50 Laborers and freight, stock, and material movers, hand.......... 7.50 7.50 9.00 10.75 12.25 1 Employees are classified as working either a full-time or a part-time schedule based on the definition used by each establishment. Therefore, a worker with a 35-hour-per-week schedule might be considered a full-time employee in one establishment, but classified as part-time in another firm, where a 40-hour week is the minimum full-time schedule. 2 Percentiles designate position in the earnings distribution and are calculated from individual-worker earnings and the hours they are scheduled to work. At the 50th percentile, the median, half of the hours are paid the same as or more than the rate shown, and half are paid the same as or less than the rate shown. At the 25th percentile, one-fourth of the hours are paid the same as or less than the rate shown. At the 75th percentile, one-fourth are paid the same as or more than the rate shown. The 10th and 90th percentiles follow the same logic. Hourly wages are the straight-time wages or salaries paid to employees. They include incentive pay, cost-of-living adjustments, and hazard pay. Excluded are premium pay for overtime, vacations, and holidays; nonproduction bonuses; and tips. 3 Workers are classified by occupation using the 2000 Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) system. See appendix B for more information. Table 10. Part-time(1) civilian workers: Hourly wage percentiles(2), Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL, September 2006 Part-time workers Occupation(3) 10 25 Median 75 90 50 All workers........................................................... $5.15 $6.75 $7.50 $9.49 $17.80 Education, training, and library occupations Postsecondary teachers........................................... 43.47 43.47 43.47 43.47 43.47 Healthcare practitioner and technical occupations................... 16.00 17.67 26.26 40.08 49.20 Registered nurses................................................. 22.20 25.43 28.20 30.00 40.08 Healthcare support occupations...................................... 7.15 7.75 8.25 10.51 11.37 Nursing, psychiatric, and home health aides....................... 7.15 7.15 8.25 11.00 12.02 Nursing aides, orderlies, and attendants........................ 8.25 8.60 11.00 11.04 12.02 Protective service occupations...................................... 7.43 7.99 8.40 8.87 10.03 Food preparation and serving related occupations.................... 2.39 3.38 6.50 7.50 8.10 Food preparation workers.......................................... 7.30 7.45 7.50 9.11 9.89 Food service, tipped.............................................. 2.24 2.39 3.13 3.38 5.38 Waiters and waitresses.......................................... 2.24 2.39 3.13 3.38 3.65 Fast food and counter workers..................................... 6.50 6.50 7.00 7.60 7.85 Personal care and service occupations............................... 6.67 7.00 13.00 20.00 20.00 Sales and related occupations....................................... 6.40 7.00 7.50 8.60 10.50 Retail sales workers.............................................. 6.40 6.90 7.50 8.56 10.50 Cashiers, all workers........................................... 6.90 7.00 7.40 8.00 9.10 Cashiers...................................................... 6.90 7.00 7.40 8.00 9.10 Retail salespersons............................................. 6.40 6.40 7.25 9.00 11.00 Office and administrative support occupations....................... 7.15 8.78 10.07 12.24 16.62 Production occupations.............................................. 8.03 8.14 8.57 9.79 12.00 Transportation and material moving occupations...................... 6.40 6.67 7.00 7.58 8.75 Laborers and material movers, hand................................ 6.67 6.67 7.00 7.50 8.50 1 Employees are classified as working either a full-time or a part-time schedule based on the definition used by each establishment. Therefore, a worker with a 35-hour-per-week schedule might be considered a full-time employee in one establishment, but classified as part-time in another firm, where a 40-hour week is the minimum full-time schedule. 2 Percentiles designate position in the earnings distribution and are calculated from individual-worker earnings and the hours they are scheduled to work. At the 50th percentile, the median, half of the hours are paid the same as or more than the rate shown, and half are paid the same as or less than the rate shown. At the 25th percentile, one-fourth of the hours are paid the same as or less than the rate shown. At the 75th percentile, one-fourth are paid the same as or more than the rate shown. The 10th and 90th percentiles follow the same logic. Hourly wages are the straight-time wages or salaries paid to employees. They include incentive pay, cost-of-living adjustments, and hazard pay. Excluded are premium pay for overtime, vacations, and holidays; nonproduction bonuses; and tips. 3 Workers are classified by occupation using the 2000 Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) system. See appendix B for more information. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria. Overall occupational groups may include data for categories not shown separately SOURCE: Bureau of Labor Statistics, National Compensation Survey. Table 11. Full-time(1) civilian workers: Mean and median hourly, weekly, and annual earnings and mean weekly and annual hours, Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL, September 2006 Hourly earnings(3) Weekly earnings(4) Annual earnings(5) Occupation(2) Mean Mean Mean Median Mean Median weekly Mean Median annual hours hours All workers........................................................... $17.33 $14.68 $689 $580 39.7 $35,360 $30,191 2,040 Management occupations.............................................. 33.17 30.11 1,374 1,204 41.4 70,692 62,631 2,131 General and operations managers................................... 38.66 33.97 1,637 1,359 42.3 85,126 70,666 2,202 Education administrators.......................................... 33.71 32.85 1,322 1,314 39.2 64,366 67,542 1,909 Education administrators, elementary and secondary school....... 35.03 32.85 1,370 1,314 39.1 66,014 67,542 1,884 Medical and health services managers.............................. 28.33 27.40 1,133 1,096 40.0 58,933 56,986 2,080 Business and financial operations occupations....................... 22.78 22.01 918 913 40.3 47,752 47,501 2,096 Accountants and auditors.......................................... 23.23 22.01 943 990 40.6 49,062 51,501 2,112 Computer and mathematical science occupations....................... 26.48 24.57 1,056 981 39.9 54,896 51,000 2,073 Computer programmers.............................................. 27.12 26.98 1,065 1,012 39.3 55,396 52,611 2,042 Computer software engineers....................................... 34.10 33.65 1,364 1,346 40.0 70,927 70,000 2,080 Computer software engineers, applications....................... 31.49 33.17 1,260 1,327 40.0 65,506 69,000 2,080 Computer software engineers, systems software................... 38.10 37.74 1,524 1,510 40.0 79,253 78,499 2,080 Computer support specialists...................................... 17.48 15.95 699 638 40.0 36,356 33,176 2,080 Computer systems analysts......................................... 34.56 34.62 1,366 1,385 39.5 71,053 71,999 2,056 Architecture and engineering occupations............................ 28.42 23.00 1,167 930 41.1 60,683 48,360 2,135 Engineers......................................................... 27.81 28.73 1,172 1,200 42.2 60,959 62,400 2,192 Engineering technicians, except drafters.......................... 21.76 21.65 857 866 39.4 44,559 45,024 2,048 Electrical and electronic engineering technicians............... 21.17 21.65 832 866 39.3 43,271 45,024 2,044 Life, physical, and social science occupations...................... 29.49 27.85 1,157 1,057 39.2 56,050 51,126 1,900 Community and social services occupations........................... 16.36 14.52 661 581 40.4 34,359 30,191 2,101 Social workers.................................................... 15.37 14.60 615 584 40.0 31,966 30,368 2,080 Education, training, and library occupations........................ 27.20 27.85 1,038 1,060 38.2 42,838 41,834 1,575 Postsecondary teachers............................................ 37.63 37.22 1,473 1,489 39.2 62,531 58,068 1,662 Miscellaneous postsecondary teachers............................ 35.78 37.22 1,431 1,489 40.0 62,200 58,068 1,738 Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers......... 27.31 27.46 1,033 1,030 37.8 41,222 40,745 1,510 Elementary and middle school teachers........................... 28.25 27.42 1,063 1,028 37.6 41,744 40,307 1,478 Middle school teachers, except special and vocational education.................................................... 27.84 27.85 1,045 1,044 37.5 40,974 40,938 1,472 Arts, design, entertainment, sports, and media occupations.......... 22.88 20.19 912 808 39.9 47,438 41,999 2,074 Healthcare practitioner and technical occupations................... 22.26 20.16 865 799 38.9 44,961 41,392 2,020 Registered nurses................................................. 26.23 26.50 1,020 1,028 38.9 52,949 53,431 2,019 Therapists........................................................ 24.52 23.22 981 929 40.0 51,005 48,298 2,080 Respiratory therapists.......................................... 22.05 21.70 882 868 40.0 45,874 45,136 2,080 Clinical laboratory technologists and technicians................. 18.29 19.60 732 784 40.0 38,045 40,768 2,080 Medical and clinical laboratory technologists................... 22.45 22.98 898 919 40.0 46,688 47,798 2,080 Medical and clinical laboratory technicians..................... $15.21 $13.00 $608 $520 40.0 $31,636 $27,040 2,080 Health diagnosing and treating practitioner support technicians... 16.42 18.67 657 747 40.0 34,163 38,829 2,080 Licensed practical and licensed vocational nurses................. 16.45 16.03 591 513 35.9 30,734 26,672 1,868 Healthcare support occupations...................................... 10.35 10.05 383 358 37.0 19,899 18,595 1,923 Nursing, psychiatric, and home health aides....................... 9.99 10.05 363 340 36.3 18,868 17,680 1,889 Nursing aides, orderlies, and attendants........................ 10.01 10.05 381 381 38.0 19,800 19,820 1,977 Miscellaneous healthcare support occupations...................... 11.79 11.50 458 471 38.9 23,827 24,482 2,022 Protective service occupations...................................... 13.80 11.53 541 460 39.2 28,119 23,920 2,037 Fire fighters..................................................... 19.93 20.84 983 834 49.4 51,139 43,343 2,566 Police officers................................................... 22.89 21.90 920 883 40.2 47,852 45,906 2,091 Police and sheriff's patrol officers............................ 22.89 21.90 920 883 40.2 47,852 45,906 2,091 Security guards and gaming surveillance officers.................. 10.37 10.15 394 406 38.0 20,504 21,104 1,977 Security guards................................................. 10.37 10.15 394 406 38.0 20,504 21,104 1,977 Food preparation and serving related occupations.................... 8.15 8.09 315 320 38.7 16,259 16,640 1,995 Cooks............................................................. 9.63 10.00 380 370 39.4 19,757 19,240 2,051 Cooks, restaurant............................................... 9.74 10.50 384 394 39.5 19,990 20,475 2,052 Food preparation workers.......................................... 9.19 9.34 368 374 40.0 19,117 19,436 2,080 Food service, tipped.............................................. 4.47 3.38 167 135 37.3 8,682 7,030 1,941 Waiters and waitresses.......................................... 3.75 3.38 137 130 36.5 7,115 6,781 1,897 Building and grounds cleaning and maintenance occupations........... 10.10 9.94 396 390 39.2 20,413 19,914 2,022 Building cleaning workers......................................... 9.81 9.63 383 376 39.1 19,784 19,032 2,016 Janitors and cleaners, except maids and housekeeping cleaners... 10.43 10.29 403 400 38.6 20,727 20,800 1,988 Personal care and service occupations............................... 10.64 11.26 421 450 39.6 21,900 23,417 2,058 Sales and related occupations....................................... 15.98 14.50 639 580 40.0 33,247 30,160 2,081 First-line supervisors/managers, sales workers.................... 17.62 14.82 720 677 40.8 37,431 35,186 2,124 First-line supervisors/managers of retail sales workers......... 16.23 14.82 658 677 40.5 34,201 35,186 2,107 Retail sales workers.............................................. 11.54 10.50 463 412 40.1 24,052 21,445 2,084 Cashiers, all workers........................................... 9.44 9.50 378 380 40.0 19,632 19,760 2,080 Cashiers...................................................... 9.44 9.50 378 380 40.0 19,632 19,760 2,080 Retail salespersons............................................. 11.66 10.30 468 403 40.1 24,326 20,977 2,087 Sales representatives, wholesale and manufacturing................ 28.47 31.45 1,139 1,258 40.0 59,226 65,410 2,080 Sales representatives, wholesale and manufacturing, except technical and scientific products.............................. 29.09 31.45 1,163 1,258 40.0 60,499 65,410 2,080 Telemarketers..................................................... 17.10 14.50 684 580 40.0 35,563 30,160 2,080 Office and administrative support occupations....................... 15.15 14.00 601 553 39.7 31,208 28,746 2,060 First-line supervisors/managers of office and administrative support workers.................................................. 17.75 17.13 709 685 40.0 36,890 35,622 2,078 Financial clerks.................................................. 15.59 15.00 621 600 39.9 32,301 31,200 2,072 Bookkeeping, accounting, and auditing clerks.................... $16.79 $15.53 $667 $620 39.8 $34,706 $32,261 2,067 Customer service representatives.................................. 15.43 13.65 615 546 39.9 31,994 28,388 2,073 Interviewers, except eligibility and loan......................... 11.83 11.98 473 479 40.0 24,601 24,927 2,080 Receptionists and information clerks.............................. 11.48 11.50 447 412 38.9 23,225 21,424 2,024 Stock clerks and order fillers.................................... 10.15 9.80 406 392 40.0 21,103 20,384 2,080 Secretaries and administrative assistants......................... 13.75 12.94 546 508 39.7 28,374 26,333 2,063 Executive secretaries and administrative assistants............. 18.21 17.55 724 702 39.7 37,631 36,504 2,067 Medical secretaries............................................. 12.04 12.94 467 466 38.8 24,298 24,224 2,018 Secretaries, except legal, medical, and executive............... 12.95 11.91 517 476 40.0 26,898 24,773 2,077 Data entry and information processing workers..................... 11.25 10.88 443 446 39.4 23,048 23,192 2,048 Data entry keyers............................................... 11.25 10.88 443 446 39.4 23,048 23,192 2,048 Insurance claims and policy processing clerks..................... 15.53 15.23 611 606 39.4 31,787 31,537 2,046 Office clerks, general............................................ 13.99 14.00 556 560 39.7 28,512 29,120 2,039 Construction and extraction occupations............................. 17.32 16.00 690 636 39.8 35,841 33,087 2,069 Carpenters........................................................ 22.47 15.01 899 600 40.0 46,728 31,219 2,080 Construction equipment operators.................................. 13.57 13.50 543 540 40.0 28,220 28,080 2,080 Electricians...................................................... 17.18 17.94 686 700 39.9 35,570 36,421 2,070 Miscellaneous construction and related workers.................... 13.41 16.00 528 640 39.3 27,438 33,280 2,046 Installation, maintenance, and repair occupations................... 18.28 17.05 736 680 40.3 38,285 35,360 2,094 First-line supervisors/managers of mechanics, installers, and repairers........................................................ 28.30 21.83 1,182 873 41.8 61,462 45,411 2,172 Automotive technicians and repairers.............................. 14.94 14.38 598 575 40.0 31,083 29,900 2,080 Industrial machinery installation, repair, and maintenance workers.......................................................... 16.78 17.14 670 685 39.9 34,828 35,630 2,075 Maintenance and repair workers, general......................... 13.51 12.82 537 513 39.7 27,899 26,666 2,066 Production occupations.............................................. 13.41 12.50 539 500 40.2 28,042 26,000 2,090 Miscellaneous production workers.................................. $13.15 $12.50 $526 $500 40.0 $27,349 $26,000 2,080 Transportation and material moving occupations...................... 12.89 11.32 520 450 40.4 26,970 23,400 2,092 Driver/sales workers and truck drivers............................ 14.20 11.40 589 403 41.5 30,610 20,946 2,156 Truck drivers, light or delivery services....................... 11.02 10.00 441 400 40.0 22,919 20,800 2,080 Industrial truck and tractor operators............................ 16.12 16.25 645 650 40.0 33,519 33,800 2,080 Laborers and material movers, hand................................ 8.83 8.70 353 348 40.0 18,375 18,096 2,080 Laborers and freight, stock, and material movers, hand.......... 9.46 9.00 379 360 40.0 19,684 18,720 2,080 1 Employees are classified as working either a full-time or a part-time schedule based on the definition used by each establishment. Therefore, a worker with a 35-hour-per-week schedule might be considered a full-time employee in one establishment, but classified as part-time in another firm, where a 40-hour week is the minimum full-time schedule. 2 Workers are classified by occupation using the 2000 Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) system. See appendix B for more information. 3 Earnings are the straight-time hourly wages or salaries paid to employees. They include incentive pay, cost-of-living adjustments, and hazard pay. Excluded are premium pay for overtime, vacations, holidays, nonproduction bonuses, and tips. The mean is computed by totaling the pay of all workers and dividing by the number of workers, weighted by hours. See appendix A for more information. 4 Mean weekly earnings are the straight-time weekly wages or salaries paid to employees. Median weekly earnings designates position - one-half of the hours are paid the same as or more than the rate shown. Mean weekly hours are the hours an employee is scheduled to work in a week, exclusive of overtime. 5 Mean annual earnings are the straight-time annual wages or salaries paid to employees. Median annual earnings designates position - one-half of the hours are paid the same as or more than the rate shown. Mean annual hours are the hours an employee is scheduled to work in a year, exclusive of overtime. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria. Overall occupational groups may include data for categories not shown separately SOURCE: Bureau of Labor Statistics, National Compensation Survey. Table 12. Full-time(1) private industry workers: Mean and median hourly, weekly, and annual earnings and mean weekly and annual hours, Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL, September 2006 Hourly earnings(3) Weekly earnings(4) Annual earnings(5) Occupation(2) Mean Mean Mean Median Mean Median weekly Mean Median annual hours hours All workers........................................................... $16.70 $14.13 $665 $556 39.8 $34,522 $28,912 2,068 Management occupations.............................................. 33.53 30.11 1,408 1,224 42.0 73,205 63,646 2,183 General and operations managers................................... 39.69 37.69 1,695 1,359 42.7 88,131 70,666 2,220 Business and financial operations occupations....................... 22.37 22.01 903 923 40.4 46,960 48,000 2,099 Accountants and auditors.......................................... 22.82 22.01 928 990 40.7 48,255 51,501 2,115 Computer and mathematical science occupations....................... 26.69 24.93 1,065 992 39.9 55,369 51,563 2,075 Computer programmers.............................................. 28.57 28.92 1,113 1,092 39.0 57,868 56,800 2,026 Computer software engineers....................................... 34.31 34.62 1,372 1,385 40.0 71,366 72,001 2,080 Computer software engineers, applications....................... 31.71 33.65 1,268 1,346 40.0 65,953 70,000 2,080 Computer software engineers, systems software................... 38.10 37.74 1,524 1,510 40.0 79,253 78,499 2,080 Computer support specialists...................................... 17.48 15.95 699 638 40.0 36,356 33,176 2,080 Computer systems analysts......................................... 34.96 35.10 1,380 1,431 39.5 71,762 74,400 2,053 Architecture and engineering occupations............................ 27.99 21.65 1,153 866 41.2 59,965 45,024 2,142 Engineers......................................................... 26.15 20.00 1,113 1,000 42.6 57,892 52,000 2,214 Engineering technicians, except drafters.......................... 21.76 21.65 857 866 39.4 44,559 45,024 2,048 Electrical and electronic engineering technicians............... 21.17 21.65 832 866 39.3 43,271 45,024 2,044 Community and social services occupations........................... 14.48 14.19 590 568 40.7 30,659 29,515 2,117 Education, training, and library occupations........................ 21.20 20.41 828 791 39.1 38,732 33,716 1,827 Postsecondary teachers............................................ 25.77 13.50 1,000 540 38.8 46,584 29,120 1,807 Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers......... 18.67 20.41 727 788 38.9 31,615 32,600 1,693 Arts, design, entertainment, sports, and media occupations.......... 23.13 20.19 925 808 40.0 48,102 41,999 2,080 Healthcare practitioner and technical occupations................... 22.47 20.25 871 799 38.8 45,302 41,538 2,016 Registered nurses................................................. 26.08 26.50 1,012 1,028 38.8 52,545 53,431 2,015 Therapists........................................................ 24.52 23.22 981 929 40.0 51,005 48,298 2,080 Respiratory therapists.......................................... 22.05 21.70 882 868 40.0 45,874 45,136 2,080 Clinical laboratory technologists and technicians................. 18.89 19.97 756 799 40.0 39,292 41,538 2,080 Medical and clinical laboratory technologists................... 22.48 22.98 899 919 40.0 46,749 47,798 2,080 Medical and clinical laboratory technicians..................... 15.90 13.00 636 520 40.0 33,071 27,040 2,080 Health diagnosing and treating practitioner support technicians... 15.63 16.75 625 670 40.0 32,512 34,840 2,080 Licensed practical and licensed vocational nurses................. 16.46 16.03 591 513 35.9 30,735 26,672 1,868 Healthcare support occupations...................................... 10.34 10.05 381 354 36.9 19,837 18,429 1,919 Nursing, psychiatric, and home health aides....................... 10.00 10.05 363 340 36.3 18,871 17,680 1,887 Nursing aides, orderlies, and attendants........................ 10.03 10.05 381 381 38.0 19,822 19,820 1,976 Miscellaneous healthcare support occupations...................... 11.84 11.54 459 483 38.8 23,866 25,126 2,016 Protective service occupations...................................... 10.71 10.50 411 406 38.4 21,376 21,104 1,995 Security guards and gaming surveillance officers.................. $10.25 $10.15 $389 $406 38.0 $20,229 $21,104 1,974 Security guards................................................. 10.25 10.15 389 406 38.0 20,229 21,104 1,974 Food preparation and serving related occupations.................... 8.14 8.09 317 320 38.9 16,468 16,640 2,024 Cooks............................................................. 9.63 10.00 380 370 39.4 19,757 19,240 2,051 Cooks, restaurant............................................... 9.74 10.50 384 394 39.5 19,990 20,475 2,052 Food preparation workers.......................................... 9.19 9.34 368 374 40.0 19,117 19,436 2,080 Food service, tipped.............................................. 4.47 3.38 167 135 37.3 8,682 7,030 1,941 Waiters and waitresses.......................................... 3.75 3.38 137 130 36.5 7,115 6,781 1,897 Building and grounds cleaning and maintenance occupations........... 9.81 10.00 386 388 39.3 20,043 20,280 2,043 Building cleaning workers......................................... 9.79 9.50 384 374 39.3 19,993 19,469 2,041 Janitors and cleaners, except maids and housekeeping cleaners... 10.55 10.75 411 420 38.9 21,356 21,861 2,024 Personal care and service occupations............................... 10.56 11.00 418 450 39.6 21,732 23,417 2,058 Sales and related occupations....................................... 15.97 14.50 639 580 40.0 33,239 30,160 2,081 First-line supervisors/managers, sales workers.................... 17.62 14.82 720 677 40.8 37,431 35,186 2,124 First-line supervisors/managers of retail sales workers......... 16.23 14.82 658 677 40.5 34,201 35,186 2,107 Retail sales workers.............................................. 11.54 10.50 463 412 40.1 24,052 21,445 2,084 Cashiers, all workers........................................... 9.44 9.50 378 380 40.0 19,632 19,760 2,080 Cashiers...................................................... 9.44 9.50 378 380 40.0 19,632 19,760 2,080 Retail salespersons............................................. 11.66 10.30 468 403 40.1 24,326 20,977 2,087 Sales representatives, wholesale and manufacturing................ 28.47 31.45 1,139 1,258 40.0 59,226 65,410 2,080 Sales representatives, wholesale and manufacturing, except technical and scientific products.............................. 29.09 31.45 1,163 1,258 40.0 60,499 65,410 2,080 Telemarketers..................................................... 17.10 14.50 684 580 40.0 35,563 30,160 2,080 Office and administrative support occupations....................... 15.22 14.00 604 558 39.7 31,396 28,999 2,063 First-line supervisors/managers of office and administrative support workers.................................................. 17.75 17.13 709 685 40.0 36,890 35,622 2,078 Financial clerks.................................................. 15.55 15.00 620 600 39.8 32,228 31,200 2,072 Bookkeeping, accounting, and auditing clerks.................... 16.80 15.50 668 620 39.7 34,714 32,240 2,067 Customer service representatives.................................. 15.45 13.65 616 546 39.9 32,016 28,388 2,073 Interviewers, except eligibility and loan......................... 11.83 11.98 473 479 40.0 24,601 24,927 2,080 Receptionists and information clerks.............................. 11.52 11.50 448 412 38.9 23,291 21,424 2,021 Stock clerks and order fillers.................................... 9.80 9.73 392 389 40.0 20,380 20,247 2,080 Secretaries and administrative assistants......................... 13.50 12.90 535 480 39.6 27,816 24,960 2,061 Executive secretaries and administrative assistants............. 18.09 17.55 718 702 39.7 37,359 36,500 2,065 Medical secretaries............................................. 12.04 12.94 467 466 38.8 24,298 24,224 2,018 Data entry and information processing workers..................... 11.25 10.88 443 446 39.4 23,048 23,192 2,048 Data entry keyers............................................... 11.25 10.88 443 446 39.4 23,048 23,192 2,048 Insurance claims and policy processing clerks..................... 15.20 14.73 598 584 39.3 31,086 30,385 2,045 Office clerks, general............................................ 14.26 14.00 568 560 39.9 29,562 29,120 2,073 Construction and extraction occupations............................. $17.37 $15.91 $693 $636 39.9 $36,014 $33,087 2,073 Electricians...................................................... 17.12 17.51 685 700 40.0 35,614 36,421 2,080 Installation, maintenance, and repair occupations................... 18.51 17.14 746 680 40.3 38,799 35,381 2,096 Industrial machinery installation, repair, and maintenance workers.......................................................... 17.62 18.06 705 722 40.0 36,654 37,565 2,080 Production occupations.............................................. 13.31 12.50 535 500 40.2 27,818 26,000 2,091 Miscellaneous production workers.................................. 13.15 12.50 526 500 40.0 27,349 26,000 2,080 Transportation and material moving occupations...................... 12.90 11.30 522 450 40.5 27,163 23,400 2,105 Driver/sales workers and truck drivers............................ 14.20 11.40 589 403 41.5 30,610 20,946 2,156 Truck drivers, light or delivery services....................... 11.02 10.00 441 400 40.0 22,919 20,800 2,080 Industrial truck and tractor operators............................ 16.36 16.25 654 650 40.0 34,032 33,800 2,080 Laborers and material movers, hand................................ 8.82 8.70 353 348 40.0 18,352 18,096 2,080 Laborers and freight, stock, and material movers, hand.......... 9.45 9.00 378 360 40.0 19,647 18,720 2,080 1 Employees are classified as working either a full-time or a part-time schedule based on the definition used by each establishment. Therefore, a worker with a 35-hour-per-week schedule might be considered a full-time employee in one establishment, but classified as part-time in another firm, where a 40-hour week is the minimum full-time schedule. 2 Workers are classified by occupation using the 2000 Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) system. See appendix B for more information. 3 Earnings are the straight-time hourly wages or salaries paid to employees. They include incentive pay, cost-of-living adjustments, and hazard pay. Excluded are premium pay for overtime, vacations, holidays, nonproduction bonuses, and tips. The mean is computed by totaling the pay of all workers and dividing by the number of workers, weighted by hours. See appendix A for more information. 4 Mean weekly earnings are the straight-time weekly wages or salaries paid to employees. Median weekly earnings designates position - one-half of the hours are paid the same as or more than the rate shown. Mean weekly hours are the hours an employee is scheduled to work in a week, exclusive of overtime. 5 Mean annual earnings are the straight-time annual wages or salaries paid to employees. Median annual earnings designates position - one-half of the hours are paid the same as or more than the rate shown. Mean annual hours are the hours an employee is scheduled to work in a year, exclusive of overtime. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria. Overall occupational groups may include data for categories not shown separately SOURCE: Bureau of Labor Statistics, National Compensation Survey. Table 13. Full-time(1) State and local government workers: Mean and median hourly, weekly, and annual earnings and mean weekly and annual hours, Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL, September 2006 Hourly earnings(3) Weekly earnings(4) Annual earnings(5) Occupation(2) Mean Mean Mean Median Mean Median weekly Mean Median annual hours hours All workers........................................................... $22.22 $20.63 $871 $827 39.2 $41,111 $40,273 1,850 Management occupations.............................................. 31.92 28.70 1,260 1,148 39.5 62,747 54,203 1,966 Education administrators.......................................... 33.76 32.85 1,322 1,314 39.2 64,019 67,542 1,896 Business and financial operations occupations....................... 24.77 22.39 991 896 40.0 51,512 46,573 2,080 Computer and mathematical science occupations....................... 23.56 21.64 932 862 39.6 48,462 44,822 2,057 Life, physical, and social science occupations...................... 24.40 24.93 966 1,018 39.6 45,254 40,760 1,855 Community and social services occupations........................... 18.73 17.33 749 693 40.0 38,967 36,046 2,080 Education, training, and library occupations........................ 28.61 28.16 1,086 1,067 38.0 43,643 41,834 1,526 Postsecondary teachers............................................ 48.51 45.94 1,914 1,822 39.5 75,054 71,659 1,547 Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers......... 29.03 27.85 1,092 1,044 37.6 42,897 40,938 1,477 Healthcare practitioner and technical occupations................... 19.32 19.07 772 763 40.0 40,160 39,659 2,079 Protective service occupations...................................... 21.97 20.84 912 834 41.5 47,406 43,343 2,158 Fire fighters..................................................... 19.93 20.84 983 834 49.4 51,139 43,343 2,566 Police officers................................................... 22.89 21.90 920 883 40.2 47,852 45,906 2,091 Police and sheriff's patrol officers............................ 22.89 21.90 920 883 40.2 47,852 45,906 2,091 Building and grounds cleaning and maintenance occupations........... 11.06 9.94 427 392 38.6 21,602 19,618 1,953 Building cleaning workers......................................... 9.88 9.94 379 376 38.4 19,089 18,747 1,932 Office and administrative support occupations....................... 14.38 13.55 572 540 39.8 29,254 28,030 2,034 Secretaries and administrative assistants......................... 15.16 13.48 605 539 39.9 31,442 28,030 2,074 Secretaries, except legal, medical, and executive............... 14.93 14.25 593 566 39.8 30,858 29,432 2,067 Office clerks, general............................................ 12.68 12.14 496 476 39.1 23,956 22,824 1,889 Construction and extraction occupations............................. 16.62 16.17 654 642 39.4 33,618 33,234 2,023 Installation, maintenance, and repair occupations................... 16.13 15.97 643 639 39.8 33,422 33,218 2,072 Transportation and material moving occupations...................... 12.34 11.44 443 435 35.9 20,206 20,875 1,638 1 Employees are classified as working either a full-time or a part-time schedule based on the definition used by each establishment. Therefore, a worker with a 35-hour-per-week schedule might be considered a full-time employee in one establishment, but classified as part-time in another firm, where a 40-hour week is the minimum full-time schedule. 2 Workers are classified by occupation using the 2000 Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) system. See appendix B for more information. 3 Earnings are the straight-time hourly wages or salaries paid to employees. They include incentive pay, cost-of-living adjustments, and hazard pay. Excluded are premium pay for overtime, vacations, holidays, nonproduction bonuses, and tips. The mean is computed by totaling the pay of all workers and dividing by the number of workers, weighted by hours. See appendix A for more information. 4 Mean weekly earnings are the straight-time weekly wages or salaries paid to employees. Median weekly earnings designates position - one-half of the hours are paid the same as or more than the rate shown. Mean weekly hours are the hours an employee is scheduled to work in a week, exclusive of overtime. 5 Mean annual earnings are the straight-time annual wages or salaries paid to employees. Median annual earnings designates position - one-half of the hours are paid the same as or more than the rate shown. Mean annual hours are the hours an employee is scheduled to work in a year, exclusive of overtime. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria. Overall occupational groups may include data for categories not shown separately SOURCE: Bureau of Labor Statistics, National Compensation Survey. Table 14. Size of establishment: Mean hourly earnings(1) of private industry establishments for major occupational groups, Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL, September 2006 1-99 100-499 500 Occupational group(2) Total workers workers workers or more All workers.................................. $15.93 $15.53 $16.10 $16.58 Management, professional, and related...... 27.24 25.66 28.30 27.83 Management, business, and financial...... 29.81 27.29 34.26 26.19 Professional and related................. 26.03 25.08 24.28 28.53 Service.................................... 9.28 8.86 9.78 9.38 Sales and office........................... 14.62 15.29 14.05 14.09 Sales and related........................ 14.11 14.06 15.06 13.50 Office and administrative support........ 15.00 16.83 13.58 14.35 Natural resources, construction, and maintenance............................... 17.78 18.81 15.60 15.14 Construction and extraction............. 17.37 18.19 – – Installation, maintenance, and repair.... 18.51 19.96 – 15.74 Production, transportation, and material moving.................................... 12.72 13.04 12.66 10.85 Production............................... 13.23 13.81 12.85 11.64 Transportation and material moving....... 12.51 12.76 12.59 – B 1-99 100-499 500 Total workers workers workers or more Occupational group(2) Relative error(3) (percent) Relative error(3) (percent) All workers........................................................... 3.6 5.7 7.6 2.3 Management, professional, and related............................... 4.2 11.5 4.7 3.8 Management, business, and financial............................... 4.2 8.4 5.8 8.4 Professional and related.......................................... 5.7 16.1 5.8 5.6 Service............................................................. 4.5 10.4 2.4 2.2 Sales and office.................................................... 3.7 6.1 5.1 5.4 Sales and related................................................. 6.4 9.8 6.6 10.0 Office and administrative support................................. 4.9 9.8 5.4 5.0 Natural resources, construction, and maintenance.................... 6.5 7.9 8.8 13.4 Construction and extraction...................................... 5.5 7.3 – – Installation, maintenance, and repair............................. 8.5 9.2 – 15.9 Production, transportation, and material moving..................... 6.2 7.6 11.6 4.5 Production........................................................ 4.4 4.4 8.3 8.5 Transportation and material moving................................ 9.2 11.3 16.1 – 1 Earnings are the straight-time hourly wages or salaries paid to employees. They include incentive pay, cost-of-living adjustments, and hazard pay. Excluded are premium pay for overtime, vacations, holidays, nonproduction bonuses, and tips. The mean is computed by totaling the pay of all workers and dividing by the number of workers, weighted by hours. See appendix A for more information. 2 Workers are classified by occupation using the 2000 Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) system. See appendix B for more information. 3 The relative standard error (RSE) is the standard error expressed as a percent of the estimate. It can be used to calculate a "confidence interval" around a sample estimate. For more information about RSEs, see appendix A. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria. SOURCE: Bureau of Labor Statistics, National Compensation Survey. Table 15. Establishments with fewer than 100 workers: Mean and median hourly, weekly, and annual earnings and mean weekly and annual hours for full-time(1) private industry workers, Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL, September 2006 Hourly earnings(3) Weekly earnings(4) Annual earnings(5) Occupation(2) Mean Mean Mean Median Mean Median weekly Mean Median annual hours hours All workers........................................................... $16.72 $14.75 $670 $586 40.1 $34,826 $30,478 2,083 Management occupations.............................................. 28.97 27.40 1,215 1,096 41.9 63,200 56,986 2,181 Healthcare practitioner and technical occupations................... 17.50 16.00 700 640 40.0 36,405 33,280 2,080 Food preparation and serving related occupations.................... 7.71 6.96 296 279 38.4 15,382 14,483 1,995 Cooks............................................................. 9.24 9.00 363 360 39.2 18,851 18,720 2,041 Cooks, restaurant............................................... 9.54 10.00 376 387 39.4 19,532 20,134 2,047 Food service, tipped.............................................. 3.68 3.38 134 130 36.5 6,986 6,781 1,897 Sales and related occupations....................................... 16.19 13.53 652 538 40.3 33,886 28,001 2,093 First-line supervisors/managers, sales workers.................... 16.18 14.82 658 677 40.7 34,219 35,186 2,114 First-line supervisors/managers of retail sales workers......... 16.18 14.82 658 677 40.7 34,219 35,186 2,114 Retail sales workers.............................................. 11.02 9.61 447 384 40.6 23,239 19,991 2,109 Retail salespersons............................................. 11.41 10.09 467 370 41.0 24,307 19,240 2,131 Sales representatives, wholesale and manufacturing................ 29.09 31.45 1,164 1,258 40.0 60,510 65,410 2,080 Office and administrative support occupations....................... 17.35 15.00 682 600 39.3 35,486 31,200 2,045 Financial clerks.................................................. 16.82 15.50 673 620 40.0 34,977 32,240 2,080 Bookkeeping, accounting, and auditing clerks.................... 18.77 15.50 751 620 40.0 39,036 32,240 2,080 Secretaries and administrative assistants......................... 13.51 12.94 528 466 39.1 27,446 24,224 2,031 Construction and extraction occupations............................. 18.19 17.50 728 700 40.0 37,844 36,400 2,080 Installation, maintenance, and repair occupations................... 19.96 17.61 809 704 40.5 42,050 36,629 2,107 Production occupations.............................................. 13.90 12.50 561 500 40.4 29,183 26,000 2,100 Miscellaneous production workers.................................. 13.77 12.50 551 500 40.0 28,644 26,000 2,080 Transportation and material moving occupations...................... 13.21 11.56 538 462 40.8 28,001 24,045 2,119 Driver/sales workers and truck drivers............................ 14.55 10.00 613 400 42.1 31,856 20,800 2,190 Industrial truck and tractor operators............................ 16.48 16.25 659 650 40.0 34,275 33,800 2,080 Laborers and material movers, hand................................ 7.49 7.20 300 288 40.0 15,574 14,976 2,080 1 Employees are classified as working either a full-time or a part-time schedule based on the definition used by each establishment. Therefore, a worker with a 35-hour-per-week schedule might be considered a full-time employee in one establishment, but classified as part-time in another firm, where a 40-hour week is the minimum full-time schedule. 2 Workers are classified by occupation using the 2000 Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) system. See appendix B for more information. 3 Earnings are the straight-time hourly wages or salaries paid to employees. They include incentive pay, cost-of-living adjustments, and hazard pay. Excluded are premium pay for overtime, vacations, holidays, nonproduction bonuses, and tips. The mean is computed by totaling the pay of all workers and dividing by the number of workers, weighted by hours. See appendix A for more information. 4 Mean weekly earnings are the straight-time weekly wages or salaries paid to employees. Median weekly earnings designates position - one-half of the hours are paid the same as or more than the rate shown. Mean weekly hours are the hours an employee is scheduled to work in a week, exclusive of overtime. 5 Mean annual earnings are the straight-time annual wages or salaries paid to employees. Median annual earnings designates position - one-half of the hours are paid the same as or more than the rate shown. Mean annual hours are the hours an employee is scheduled to work in a year, exclusive of overtime. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria. Overall occupational groups may include data for categories not shown separately SOURCE: Bureau of Labor Statistics, National Compensation Survey. Table 16. Establishments with 100 workers or more: Mean and median hourly, weekly, and annual earnings and mean weekly and annual hours for full-time(1) private industry workers, Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL, September 2006 Hourly earnings(3) Weekly earnings(4) Annual earnings(5) Occupation(2) Mean Mean Mean Median Mean Median weekly Mean Median annual hours hours All workers........................................................... $16.68 $13.33 $660 $520 39.6 $34,249 $27,082 2,053 Management occupations.............................................. 35.94 34.60 1,510 1,442 42.0 78,496 74,999 2,184 Business and financial operations occupations....................... 22.86 22.84 925 971 40.4 48,082 50,500 2,103 Accountants and auditors.......................................... 24.30 24.76 992 1,000 40.8 51,594 52,000 2,124 Computer and mathematical science occupations....................... 30.53 30.36 1,216 1,214 39.8 63,231 63,149 2,071 Computer programmers.............................................. 30.33 30.52 1,173 1,217 38.7 61,014 63,301 2,012 Computer software engineers....................................... 34.75 35.12 1,390 1,405 40.0 72,284 73,058 2,080 Computer software engineers, applications....................... 32.35 34.62 1,294 1,385 40.0 67,291 72,001 2,080 Computer software engineers, systems software................... 38.10 37.74 1,524 1,510 40.0 79,253 78,499 2,080 Computer support specialists...................................... 17.62 15.95 705 638 40.0 36,645 33,176 2,080 Computer systems analysts......................................... 34.96 35.10 1,380 1,431 39.5 71,762 74,400 2,053 Architecture and engineering occupations............................ 24.49 21.65 986 866 40.3 51,287 45,024 2,094 Engineers......................................................... 30.43 30.00 1,252 1,200 41.1 65,113 62,400 2,140 Engineering technicians, except drafters.......................... 21.76 21.65 857 866 39.4 44,559 45,024 2,048 Electrical and electronic engineering technicians............... 21.17 21.65 832 866 39.3 43,271 45,024 2,044 Community and social services occupations........................... 14.85 14.19 594 568 40.0 30,896 29,515 2,080 Education, training, and library occupations........................ 26.34 24.08 1,017 913 38.6 45,156 44,300 1,714 Arts, design, entertainment, sports, and media occupations.......... 26.40 28.08 1,056 1,123 40.0 54,912 58,413 2,080 Healthcare practitioner and technical occupations................... 23.91 22.47 919 873 38.4 47,776 45,406 1,998 Registered nurses................................................. 26.08 26.50 1,012 1,028 38.8 52,544 53,431 2,015 Therapists........................................................ 24.52 23.22 981 929 40.0 51,005 48,298 2,080 Respiratory therapists.......................................... 22.05 21.70 882 868 40.0 45,874 45,136 2,080 Clinical laboratory technologists and technicians................. 18.68 19.60 747 784 40.0 38,854 40,768 2,080 Medical and clinical laboratory technologists................... 21.40 21.41 856 856 40.0 44,508 44,533 2,080 Health diagnosing and treating practitioner support technicians... 13.10 12.32 524 493 40.0 27,249 25,626 2,080 Licensed practical and licensed vocational nurses................. 16.46 16.03 591 513 35.9 30,735 26,672 1,868 Healthcare support occupations...................................... 9.99 10.05 367 339 36.8 19,103 17,626 1,912 Nursing, psychiatric, and home health aides....................... 10.10 10.05 364 339 36.0 18,935 17,626 1,874 Nursing aides, orderlies, and attendants........................ 10.10 10.05 385 381 38.2 20,042 19,820 1,985 Miscellaneous healthcare support occupations...................... 9.84 9.25 394 370 40.0 20,467 19,240 2,080 Protective service occupations...................................... 10.29 10.50 386 385 37.6 20,096 20,020 1,953 Security guards and gaming surveillance officers.................. 10.27 10.50 385 385 37.5 20,044 20,020 1,952 Security guards................................................. 10.27 10.50 385 385 37.5 20,044 20,020 1,952 Food preparation and serving related occupations.................... 8.78 8.50 350 340 39.8 18,180 17,680 2,070 Food preparation workers.......................................... $9.08 $9.58 $363 $383 40.0 $18,894 $19,926 2,080 Building and grounds cleaning and maintenance occupations........... 9.06 8.55 362 342 40.0 18,837 17,784 2,080 Building cleaning workers......................................... 8.98 8.55 359 342 40.0 18,681 17,784 2,080 Janitors and cleaners, except maids and housekeeping cleaners... 9.98 10.22 399 409 40.0 20,751 21,258 2,080 Personal care and service occupations............................... 10.56 11.00 418 450 39.6 21,732 23,417 2,058 Sales and related occupations....................................... 15.67 14.56 623 580 39.7 32,375 30,160 2,066 First-line supervisors/managers, sales workers.................... 22.30 16.73 925 658 41.5 48,085 34,195 2,156 Retail sales workers.............................................. 12.31 11.68 485 460 39.4 25,208 23,920 2,048 Retail salespersons............................................. 12.02 11.20 468 440 39.0 24,352 22,880 2,026 Telemarketers..................................................... 17.52 14.70 701 588 40.0 36,448 30,570 2,080 Office and administrative support occupations....................... 14.11 13.21 562 526 39.8 29,236 27,331 2,072 First-line supervisors/managers of office and administrative support workers.................................................. 21.09 21.06 840 860 39.8 43,697 44,718 2,072 Financial clerks.................................................. 14.85 14.87 591 585 39.8 30,713 30,430 2,068 Bookkeeping, accounting, and auditing clerks.................... 15.31 15.67 605 623 39.6 31,486 32,406 2,057 Customer service representatives.................................. 14.21 13.25 566 530 39.8 29,433 27,560 2,072 Interviewers, except eligibility and loan......................... 12.08 12.35 483 494 40.0 25,118 25,694 2,080 Stock clerks and order fillers.................................... 9.81 10.00 392 400 40.0 20,406 20,800 2,080 Secretaries and administrative assistants......................... 13.49 12.00 539 480 39.9 28,001 24,960 2,076 Executive secretaries and administrative assistants............. 18.05 17.00 716 702 39.7 37,251 36,504 2,064 Insurance claims and policy processing clerks..................... 15.19 14.57 596 583 39.3 31,017 30,299 2,042 Office clerks, general............................................ 14.29 13.58 569 543 39.8 29,595 28,236 2,071 Construction and extraction occupations............................. 14.54 15.01 573 600 39.4 29,795 31,219 2,048 Installation, maintenance, and repair occupations................... 16.18 13.85 647 554 40.0 33,643 28,808 2,079 Production occupations.............................................. 12.43 11.16 496 446 40.0 25,816 23,213 2,078 Transportation and material moving occupations...................... 12.34 10.07 493 400 40.0 25,652 20,800 2,079 Laborers and material movers, hand................................ 9.48 9.22 379 369 40.0 19,714 19,178 2,080 Laborers and freight, stock, and material movers, hand.......... 9.56 9.22 382 369 40.0 19,875 19,178 2,080 1 Employees are classified as working either a full-time or a part-time schedule based on the definition used by each establishment. Therefore, a worker with a 35-hour-per-week schedule might be considered a full-time employee in one establishment, but classified as part-time in another firm, where a 40-hour week is the minimum full-time schedule. 2 Workers are classified by occupation using the 2000 Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) system. See appendix B for more information. 3 Earnings are the straight-time hourly wages or salaries paid to employees. They include incentive pay, cost-of-living adjustments, and hazard pay. Excluded are premium pay for overtime, vacations, holidays, nonproduction bonuses, and tips. The mean is computed by totaling the pay of all workers and dividing by the number of workers, weighted by hours. See appendix A for more information. 4 Mean weekly earnings are the straight-time weekly wages or salaries paid to employees. Median weekly earnings designates position - one-half of the hours are paid the same as or more than the rate shown. Mean weekly hours are the hours an employee is scheduled to work in a week, exclusive of overtime. 5 Mean annual earnings are the straight-time annual wages or salaries paid to employees. Median annual earnings designates position - one-half of the hours are paid the same as or more than the rate shown. Mean annual hours are the hours an employee is scheduled to work in a year, exclusive of overtime. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria. Overall occupational groups may include data for categories not shown separately Table 17. Union(1) and nonunion workers: Mean hourly earnings(2) for major occupational groups, Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL, September 2006 Union Nonunion Occupational group(3) Private State and Private State and Civilian industry local Civilian industry local workers workers government workers workers government workers workers All workers........................................................... $20.71 $18.57 $21.57 $16.21 $15.86 $22.67 Management, professional, and related............................... 25.61 – 25.61 27.64 27.25 30.81 Management, business, and financial............................... – – – 30.10 29.81 31.55 Professional and related.......................................... 25.65 – 25.65 26.36 26.04 30.03 Service............................................................. 15.06 – 16.15 9.95 9.25 19.79 Sales and office.................................................... 17.08 – 12.96 14.48 14.46 15.02 Sales and related................................................. – – – 14.12 14.11 – Office and administrative support................................. 17.08 – 12.96 14.75 14.73 14.96 Natural resources, construction, and maintenance.................... 20.21 22.63 16.99 17.40 17.47 15.72 Construction and extraction...................................... 16.34 – 16.34 17.37 17.37 17.05 Installation, maintenance, and repair............................. 21.57 22.63 17.98 17.58 17.77 14.75 Production, transportation, and material moving..................... 15.17 – 14.63 12.68 12.67 13.76 Production........................................................ – – – 13.16 13.13 – Transportation and material moving................................ – – – 12.50 12.49 – Union Nonunion Private State and Private State and Civilian industry local Civilian industry local workers workers government workers workers government workers workers Relative error(4) (percent) Relative error(4) (percent) All workers........................................................... 2.4 7.2 1.2 3.5 3.8 1.8 Management, professional, and related............................... 1.2 – 1.3 3.5 4.2 2.8 Management, business, and financial............................... – – – 3.5 4.2 4.3 Professional and related.......................................... 1.7 – 1.8 5.1 5.8 3.4 Service............................................................. 10.8 – 11.8 4.6 4.6 2.0 Sales and office.................................................... 6.9 – 1.5 3.6 3.7 3.5 Sales and related................................................. – – – 6.3 6.4 – Office and administrative support................................. 6.9 – 1.5 4.8 5.1 3.4 Natural resources, construction, and maintenance.................... 7.0 9.0 5.5 7.2 7.5 7.3 Construction and extraction...................................... 8.1 – 8.1 5.3 5.5 10.4 Installation, maintenance, and repair............................. 7.5 9.0 4.9 11.2 11.7 4.6 Production, transportation, and material moving..................... 13.5 – 22.6 6.4 6.4 16.7 Production........................................................ – – – 4.4 4.5 – Transportation and material moving................................ – – – 9.3 9.4 – 1 Union workers are those whose wages are determined through collective bargaining. 2 Earnings are the straight-time hourly wages or salaries paid to employees. They include incentive pay, cost-of-living adjustments, and hazard pay. Excluded are premium pay for overtime, vacations, holidays, nonproduction bonuses, and tips. The mean is computed by totaling the pay of all workers and dividing by the number of workers, weighted by hours. See appendix A for more information. 3 Workers are classified by occupation using the 2000 Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) system. See appendix B for more information. 4 The relative standard error (RSE) is the standard error expressed as a percent of the estimate. It can be used to calculate a "confidence interval" around a sample estimate. For more information about RSEs, see appendix A. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria. Table 18. Time and incentive workers(1): Mean hourly earnings(2) for major occupational groups, Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL, September 2006 Time Incentive Occupational group(3) Civilian Private Civilian Private workers industry workers industry workers workers All workers........................................................... $16.11 $15.34 $22.81 $22.81 Management, professional, and related............................... 27.15 27.04 34.16 34.16 Management, business, and financial............................... 29.54 29.41 34.44 34.44 Professional and related.......................................... 26.19 26.02 – – Service............................................................. 10.38 9.28 – – Sales and office.................................................... 13.29 13.22 21.85 21.85 Sales and related................................................. 11.54 11.53 22.02 22.02 Office and administrative support................................. 14.27 14.27 21.54 21.54 Natural resources, construction, and maintenance.................... 17.16 17.23 – – Construction and extraction...................................... – 16.38 – – Installation, maintenance, and repair............................. 18.39 18.64 – – Production, transportation, and material moving..................... 12.15 12.11 – – Production........................................................ 13.33 13.22 – – Transportation and material moving................................ 11.64 11.62 – – Time Incentive Civilian Private Civilian Private workers industry workers industry workers workers Relative error(4) (percent) Relative error(4) (percent) All workers........................................................... 3.8 4.6 6.9 6.9 Management, professional, and related............................... 2.9 4.0 17.7 17.7 Management, business, and financial............................... 3.3 4.2 19.3 19.3 Professional and related.......................................... 4.1 5.8 – – Service............................................................. 4.5 4.5 – – Sales and office.................................................... 3.0 3.2 8.5 8.5 Sales and related................................................. 5.4 5.4 10.2 10.2 Office and administrative support................................. 3.6 3.9 17.2 17.2 Natural resources, construction, and maintenance.................... 3.9 4.3 – – Construction and extraction...................................... – 3.3 – – Installation, maintenance, and repair............................. 8.1 9.0 – – Production, transportation, and material moving..................... 5.6 5.7 – – Production........................................................ 4.4 4.5 – – Transportation and material moving................................ 9.4 9.6 – – 1 Wages of time workers are based solely on hourly rate or salary. Incentive workers are those whose wages are at least partially based on productivity payments such as piece rates, commissions, and production bonuses. 2 Earnings are the straight-time hourly wages or salaries paid to employees. They include incentive pay, cost-of-living adjustments, and hazard pay. Excluded are premium pay for overtime, vacations, holidays, nonproduction bonuses, and tips. The mean is computed by totaling the pay of all workers and dividing by the number of workers, weighted by hours. See appendix A for more information. 3 Workers are classified by occupation using the 2000 Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) system. See appendix B for more information. 4 The relative standard error (RSE) is the standard error expressed as a percent of the estimate. It can be used to calculate a "confidence interval" around a sample estimate. For more information about RSEs, see appendix A. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria. Table 19. Industry sector(1): Mean hourly earnings(2) for private industry workers by major occupational group, Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL, September 2006 Goods producing Service providing Occupational group(3) Trade, Profes- Education Leisure Construc- Manufac- transpor- Infor- Financial sional and and Other tion turing tation, mation activiti- and health hospital- services and es business services ity utilities services All workers........................................................... - $17.00 - - - - $16.27 $8.63 - Management, professional, and related............................... - 27.15 - - - - 21.85 – - Management, business, and financial............................... - 28.45 - - - - 31.88 – - Professional and related.......................................... - 26.22 - - - - 20.12 – - Service............................................................. - – - - - - 10.07 7.99 - Sales and office.................................................... - 19.58 - - - - 13.65 12.08 - Sales and related................................................. - – - - - - – 11.99 - Office and administrative support................................. - 18.67 - - - - 13.26 12.17 - Natural resources, construction, and maintenance.................... - 16.00 - - - - – – - Installation, maintenance, and repair............................. - 16.93 - - - - – – - Production, transportation, and material moving..................... - 13.01 - - - - – 7.17 - Production........................................................ - 13.93 - - - - – – - Transportation and material moving................................ - – - - - - – – - B Goods producing Service providing Trade, Profes- Education Leisure Construc- Manufac- transpor- Infor- Financial sional and and Other Occupational group(3) tion turing tation, mation activiti- and health hospital- services and es business services ity utilities services Relative error(4) (percent) Relative error(4) (percent) All workers........................................................... - 6.5 - - - - 4.4 10.6 - Management, professional, and related............................... - 2.1 - - - - 4.8 – - Management, business, and financial............................... - 8.4 - - - - 9.1 – - Professional and related.......................................... - 9.4 - - - - 3.5 – - Service............................................................. - – - - - - 3.0 8.7 - Sales and office.................................................... - 7.6 - - - - 4.1 15.8 - Sales and related................................................. - – - - - - – 25.2 - Office and administrative support................................. - 15.4 - - - - 2.5 9.7 - Natural resources, construction, and maintenance.................... - 8.2 - - - - – – - Installation, maintenance, and repair............................. - 6.3 - - - - – – - Production, transportation, and material moving..................... - 7.4 - - - - – 4.1 - Production........................................................ - 4.6 - - - - – – - Transportation and material moving................................ - – - - - - – – - 1 Industry sectors are determined by the 2002 North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). 2 Earnings are the straight-time hourly wages or salaries paid to employees. They include incentive pay, cost-of-living adjustments, and hazard pay. Excluded are premium pay for overtime, vacations, holidays, nonproduction bonuses, and tips. The mean is computed by totaling the pay of all workers and dividing by the number of workers, weighted by hours. See appendix A for more information. 3 Workers are classified by occupation using the 2000 Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) system. See appendix B for more information. 4 The relative standard error (RSE) is the standard error expressed as a percent of the estimate. It can be used to calculate a "confidence interval" around a sample estimate. For more information about RSEs, see appendix A. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria. SOURCE: Bureau of Labor Statistics, National Compensation Survey. Appendix table 1. Number of workers(1) represented by the survey, Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL, September 2006 Private State and Occupational group(2) Civilian industry local workers workers government workers All workers........................................................... 1,141,900 1,013,700 128,200 Management, professional, and related............................... 245,300 174,300 71,100 Management, business, and financial............................... 66,600 52,100 14,500 Professional and related.......................................... 178,700 122,200 56,500 Service............................................................. 230,900 204,500 26,400 Sales and office.................................................... 373,300 355,500 17,800 Sales and related................................................. 162,300 161,800 – Office and administrative support................................. 211,000 193,700 17,300 Natural resources, construction, and maintenance.................... 112,700 103,500 9,200 Construction and extraction...................................... 66,600 61,800 4,800 Installation, maintenance, and repair............................. 45,500 41,200 4,400 Production, transportation, and material moving..................... 179,700 175,900 3,800 Production........................................................ 50,200 49,700 – Transportation and material moving................................ 129,500 126,300 3,200 1 The number of workers represented by the survey are rounded to the nearest 100. Estimates of the number of workers provide a description of size and composition of the labor force included in the survey. Estimates are not intended, however, for comparison to other statistical series to measure employment trends or levels. 2 Workers are classified by occupation using the 2000 Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) system. See appendix B for more information. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria. SOURCE: Bureau of Labor Statistics, National Compensation Survey. Appendix table 2. Survey establishment response, Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL, September 2006 Private State and Establishments Total industry local government Total in sampling frame(1)............................................ 56,862 56,802 60 Total in sample....................................................... 478 450 28 Responding........................................................ 254 227 27 Refused or unable to provide data................................. 159 158 1 Out of business or not in survey scope............................ 65 65 0 1 The list of establishments from which the survey sample was selected (sampling frame) was developed from State unemployment insurance reports and is based on the 2002 North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). For private industries, an establishment is usually a single physical location. For State and local governments, an establishment is defined as all locations of a government entity. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria. SOURCE: Bureau of Labor Statistics, National Compensation Survey.