NC BL 06/00/2001 Table: Milwaukee-Racine, WI, Bulletin 3105-67, October 2000 Table 1-1. Summary: Mean hourly earnings(1) and weekly hours by selected characteristics, private industry and State and local government, National Compensation Survey, Milwaukee-Racine, WI, October 2000 Total Private industry State and local government 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) Total................................................................. $16.80 2.1 35.2 $16.05 2.4 35.2 $20.73 2.4 35.0 Worker characteristics:(4) White-collar occupations(5)......................................... 20.19 2.5 35.4 19.31 3.1 35.6 23.32 2.9 34.7 Professional specialty and technical.............................. 24.89 3.2 35.1 24.39 4.9 35.6 25.76 2.5 34.3 Executive, administrative, and managerial......................... 27.53 3.2 39.2 26.81 3.5 40.0 31.23 6.3 35.5 Sales............................................................. 13.58 8.7 29.3 13.58 8.7 29.3 € € € Administrative support............................................ 12.92 3.5 37.1 13.01 4.2 37.4 12.49 3.1 35.5 Blue-collar occupations(5).......................................... 15.10 3.0 38.0 15.08 3.2 37.9 15.41 5.9 38.6 Precision production, craft, and repair........................... 19.81 2.7 39.9 19.97 2.9 39.9 18.08 4.5 40.0 Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors....................................................... 13.70 4.5 39.3 13.71 4.5 39.3 - - - Transportation and material moving................................ 17.00 7.5 37.8 16.82 8.2 37.7 19.01 9.6 39.0 Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers..................................................... 10.80 4.8 33.4 10.41 4.7 32.6 12.62 11.9 37.7 Service occupations(5).............................................. 10.27 5.2 28.5 8.33 3.7 27.3 16.72 5.4 33.1 Full time........................................................... 17.86 2.1 40.1 17.17 2.5 40.1 21.41 2.4 40.0 Part time........................................................... 9.94 3.8 19.6 9.02 3.8 20.0 15.59 7.2 17.9 Union............................................................... 18.37 2.4 37.6 16.77 3.5 38.4 20.94 2.7 36.5 Nonunion............................................................ 16.04 2.8 34.1 15.82 2.9 34.3 19.97 5.8 30.5 Time................................................................ 16.80 2.1 35.1 16.03 2.5 35.2 20.73 2.4 35.0 Incentive........................................................... 16.61 12.0 35.6 16.61 12.0 35.6 - - - Establishment characteristics: Goods producing..................................................... (6) (6) (6) - - - (6) (6) (6) Service producing................................................... (6) (6) (6) - - - (6) (6) (6) 50-99 workers(7).................................................... 13.60 6.2 33.3 13.59 6.2 33.3 - - - 100-499 workers..................................................... 15.13 3.7 35.1 14.75 3.9 35.1 21.27 6.9 36.0 500 workers or more................................................. 19.84 2.4 36.1 19.45 3.3 36.8 20.64 2.9 34.8 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, and 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. 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 A classification system including about 480 individual occupations is used to cover all workers in the civilian economy. See appendix B for more information. 6 Classification of establishments into goods-producing and service-producing industries applies to private industry only. 7 Establishments classified with 50-99 workers may contain establishments with fewer than 50 due to staff reductions between survey sampling and collection. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria. IN THIS SURVEY, THE NONRESPONSE RATE FOR ALL INDUS- TRIES AND PRIVATE INDUSTRY EXCEEDED REGULAR SURVEY STANDARDS FOR PUBLICATION. ACCORDINGLY, USERS SHOULD INTERPRET THESE RESULTS WITH THIS LIMITATION IN MIND. Table 2-1. Mean hourly earnings,(1) all workers:(2) Selected occupations, private industry and State and local government, National Compensation Survey, Milwaukee-Racine, WI, October 2000 Total Private industry State and local government Occupation(3) Relative Relative Relative Mean error(4) Mean error(4) Mean error(4) (percent) (percent) (percent) All................................................................... $16.80 2.1 $16.05 2.4 $20.73 2.4 All excluding sales............................................... 17.02 2.1 16.25 2.5 20.73 2.4 White collar........................................................ 20.19 2.5 19.31 3.1 23.32 2.9 White collar excluding sales.................................... 21.24 2.5 20.53 3.2 23.32 2.9 Professional specialty and technical.............................. 24.89 3.2 24.39 4.9 25.76 2.5 Professional specialty.......................................... 27.00 3.5 27.34 5.9 26.57 2.5 Engineers, architects, and surveyors.......................... 28.02 5.2 28.17 5.2 - - Industrial engineers........................................ 24.73 4.9 24.73 4.9 € € Mechanical engineers........................................ 26.91 7.6 26.91 7.6 € € Mathematical and computer scientists.......................... 30.53 9.3 31.72 8.6 - - Computer systems analysts and scientists.................... 27.54 8.6 € € € € Natural scientists............................................ - - - - - - Health related................................................ 20.89 2.2 21.00 2.5 20.25 3.7 Registered nurses........................................... 21.41 1.8 21.55 1.9 € € Teachers, college and university.............................. 45.85 12.3 - - 33.02 9.7 Other post-secondary teachers............................... 36.28 6.4 € € 36.28 6.4 Teachers, except college and university....................... 27.83 4.8 - - 29.25 1.7 Elementary school teachers.................................. 29.07 1.9 € € 29.13 2.0 Secondary school teachers................................... 31.12 1.8 € € 31.10 1.8 Teachers, n.e.c............................................. 28.39 5.4 € € 28.39 5.4 Librarians, archivists, and curators.......................... - - - - - - Social scientists and urban planners.......................... - - € € - - Social, recreation, and religious workers..................... 17.48 4.6 17.00 5.8 17.62 5.7 Social workers.............................................. 17.94 5.3 € € 18.12 5.8 Lawyers and judges............................................ - - € € - - Writers, authors, entertainers, athletes, and professionals, n.e.c...................................................... 26.51 14.5 26.94 14.6 - - Athletes.................................................... 27.44 31.0 € € € € Technical....................................................... 18.17 4.4 18.40 4.8 16.48 6.2 Clinical laboratory technologists and technicians........... 15.30 5.8 15.30 5.8 € € Licensed practical nurses................................... 14.53 1.9 14.59 2.2 € € Engineering technicians, n.e.c.............................. 20.74 1.3 € € € € Drafters.................................................... 17.06 16.9 17.06 16.9 € € Executive, administrative, and managerial......................... 27.53 3.2 26.81 3.5 31.23 6.3 Executives, administrators, and managers...................... 30.13 4.6 29.24 5.5 33.29 6.0 Administrators and officials, public administration......... 29.26 8.9 € € 29.26 8.9 Financial managers.......................................... 29.32 9.7 29.32 9.7 € € Administrators, education and related fields................ 39.51 3.6 € € 39.69 3.8 Managers, medicine and health............................... 24.26 11.2 € € € € Managers and administrators, n.e.c.......................... 32.30 7.5 32.40 8.0 € € Management related............................................ 23.06 7.3 23.30 7.5 - - Accountants and auditors.................................... 20.30 6.9 20.30 6.9 € € Personnel, training, and labor relations specialists........ 18.25 5.5 18.25 5.5 € € Management related, n.e.c................................... $26.22 11.6 $26.36 11.8 € € Sales............................................................. 13.58 8.7 13.58 8.7 € € Supervisors, sales.......................................... 14.28 17.3 14.28 17.3 € € Sales representatives, mining, manufacturing, and wholesale. 21.04 15.4 21.04 15.4 € € Sales workers, other commodities............................ 8.26 5.1 8.26 5.1 € € Cashiers.................................................... 7.04 5.8 7.04 5.8 € € Administrative support, including clerical........................ 12.92 3.5 13.01 4.2 $12.49 3.1 Secretaries................................................. 13.52 4.5 13.84 5.7 12.71 4.8 Information clerks, n.e.c................................... 13.30 4.7 13.30 4.7 € € Records clerks, n.e.c....................................... 13.75 2.5 13.75 2.5 € € Bookkeepers, accounting and auditing clerks................. 12.48 5.1 11.88 5.6 € € Mail clerks, except postal service.......................... 11.93 8.2 11.93 8.2 € € Production coordinators..................................... 14.37 4.6 14.37 4.6 € € Traffic, shipping and receiving clerks...................... 12.36 7.1 12.36 7.1 € € Investigators and adjusters, except insurance............... 13.14 3.7 13.14 3.7 € € General office clerks....................................... 11.05 4.6 9.94 9.4 11.75 4.1 Teachers' aides............................................. 10.86 4.9 € € 10.86 4.9 Administrative support, n.e.c............................... 12.72 5.0 12.44 4.9 € € Blue collar......................................................... 15.10 3.0 15.08 3.2 15.41 5.9 Precision production, craft, and repair........................... 19.81 2.7 19.97 2.9 18.08 4.5 Industrial machinery repairers.............................. 19.84 6.2 19.84 6.2 € € Electricians................................................ 22.99 3.3 23.11 4.0 € € Supervisors, production..................................... 20.48 7.1 20.48 7.1 € € Tool and die makers......................................... 22.70 2.5 22.70 2.5 € € Machinists.................................................. 16.23 5.2 16.23 5.2 € € Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors..................... 13.70 4.5 13.71 4.5 - - Lathe and turning machine operators......................... 17.55 8.0 17.55 8.0 € € Punching and stamping press operators....................... 14.52 5.5 14.52 5.5 € € Drilling and boring machine operators....................... 15.14 8.1 15.14 8.1 € € Grinding, abrading, buffing, and polishing machine operators 11.41 9.6 11.41 9.6 € € Numerical control machine operators......................... 15.59 12.4 15.59 12.4 € € Printing press operators.................................... 15.85 12.9 15.89 13.0 € € Packaging and filling machine operators..................... 15.32 9.0 15.32 9.0 € € Miscellaneous machine operators, n.e.c...................... 15.26 10.3 15.26 10.3 € € Welders and cutters......................................... 14.88 6.8 14.88 6.8 € € Assemblers.................................................. 12.47 11.0 12.47 11.0 € € Miscellaneous hand working, n.e.c........................... 13.91 28.1 13.91 28.1 € € Production inspectors, checkers and examiners............... 11.07 6.8 11.07 6.8 € € Transportation and material moving................................ 17.00 7.5 16.82 8.2 19.01 9.6 Truck drivers............................................... 19.37 4.3 19.76 4.3 € € Bus drivers................................................. $14.02 22.6 € € € € Industrial truck and tractor equipment operators............ 15.08 9.3 $15.08 9.3 € € Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers............... 10.80 4.8 10.41 4.7 $12.62 11.9 Groundskeepers and gardeners, except farm................... 13.34 15.5 € € 15.42 14.8 Production helpers.......................................... 11.98 9.3 11.98 9.3 € € Stock handlers and baggers.................................. 9.21 9.7 9.21 9.7 € € Freight, stock, and material handlers, n.e.c................ 11.17 10.1 11.17 10.1 € € Hand packers and packagers.................................. 10.42 6.1 10.42 6.1 € € Laborers, except construction, n.e.c........................ 9.04 6.5 9.04 7.4 9.07 13.3 Service............................................................. 10.27 5.2 8.33 3.7 16.72 5.4 Protective service............................................ 18.68 5.3 - - 19.11 5.3 Police and detectives, public service....................... 22.84 1.6 € € 22.84 1.6 Food service.................................................. 7.28 6.4 7.15 6.7 9.06 5.1 Waiters, waitresses, and bartenders.......................... 4.14 24.1 4.14 24.1 € € Waiters and waitresses...................................... 3.19 17.4 3.19 17.4 € € Other food service........................................... 8.44 5.2 8.38 5.6 9.06 5.1 Cooks....................................................... 9.14 3.8 9.14 3.8 € € Kitchen workers, food preparation........................... 9.39 5.4 9.59 5.0 € € Food preparation, n.e.c..................................... 7.51 5.9 7.27 5.9 € € Health service................................................ 9.53 4.2 9.46 4.2 - - Health aides, except nursing................................ 11.67 14.0 11.67 14.0 € € Nursing aides, orderlies and attendants..................... 9.38 4.0 9.29 4.1 € € Cleaning and building service................................. $10.37 12.7 $8.41 8.7 $15.85 12.3 Janitors and cleaners....................................... 9.18 9.7 8.00 8.0 13.18 5.3 Personal service.............................................. 8.81 4.5 8.80 4.9 8.84 6.8 Attendants, amusement, and recreation facilities............ 7.61 1.9 € € € € Service, n.e.c.............................................. 9.13 6.0 9.13 6.0 € € 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. 2 All workers include full-time and part-time workers. 3 A classification system including about 480 individual occupations is used to cover all workers in the civilian economy. 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, and n.e.c. means not elsewhere classified. Overall occupational groups may include data for categories not shown separately. IN THIS SURVEY, THE NONRESPONSE RATE FOR ALL INDUSTRIES AND PRIVATE INDUSTRY EXCEEDED REGULAR SURVEY STANDARDS FOR PUBLICATION. ACCORDINGLY, USERS SHOULD INTERPRET THESE RE- SULTS WITH THIS LIMITATION IN MIND. Table 2-2. Mean hourly earnings,(1) full-time workers:(2) Selected occupations, private industry and State and local government, National Compensation Survey, Milwaukee-Racine, WI, October 2000 Total Private industry State and local government Occupation(3) Relative Relative Relative Mean error(4) Mean error(4) Mean error(4) (percent) (percent) (percent) All................................................................... $17.86 2.1 $17.17 2.5 $21.41 2.4 All excluding sales............................................... 17.93 2.2 17.20 2.6 21.41 2.4 White collar........................................................ 21.20 2.5 20.41 3.2 24.04 2.9 White collar excluding sales.................................... 21.74 2.7 20.99 3.4 24.04 2.9 Professional specialty and technical.............................. 25.64 3.4 25.25 5.1 26.33 2.6 Professional specialty.......................................... 27.72 3.7 28.22 6.1 27.09 2.6 Engineers, architects, and surveyors.......................... 28.02 5.2 28.17 5.2 - - Industrial engineers........................................ 24.73 4.9 24.73 4.9 € € Mechanical engineers........................................ 26.91 7.6 26.91 7.6 € € Mathematical and computer scientists.......................... 30.53 9.3 31.72 8.6 - - Computer systems analysts and scientists.................... 27.54 8.6 € € € € Natural scientists............................................ - - - - - - Health related................................................ 20.38 2.7 20.42 3.1 20.18 4.3 Registered nurses........................................... 20.89 1.7 21.03 1.7 € € Teachers, college and university.............................. 48.47 13.4 - - 33.58 14.1 Teachers, except college and university....................... 28.85 3.6 - - 29.94 1.5 Elementary school teachers.................................. 29.11 2.0 € € 29.18 2.0 Secondary school teachers................................... 31.12 1.8 € € 31.10 1.8 Librarians, archivists, and curators.......................... - - - - - - Social scientists and urban planners.......................... - - € € - - Social, recreation, and religious workers..................... 17.81 4.7 16.76 6.6 18.12 5.8 Social workers.............................................. 17.90 5.4 € € 18.12 5.8 Lawyers and judges............................................ - - € € - - Writers, authors, entertainers, athletes, and professionals, n.e.c...................................................... 27.22 15.4 27.22 15.4 € € Technical....................................................... 18.88 4.7 19.12 5.1 17.06 6.9 Clinical laboratory technologists and technicians........... 15.97 6.1 15.97 6.1 € € Licensed practical nurses................................... 14.56 2.6 14.59 2.9 € € Engineering technicians, n.e.c.............................. 20.88 1.3 € € € € Drafters.................................................... 17.06 16.9 17.06 16.9 € € Executive, administrative, and managerial......................... 27.46 3.2 26.81 3.5 31.07 6.7 Executives, administrators, and managers...................... 30.04 4.7 29.24 5.5 33.08 6.3 Administrators and officials, public administration......... 29.26 8.9 € € 29.26 8.9 Financial managers.......................................... 29.32 9.7 29.32 9.7 € € Administrators, education and related fields................ 38.37 2.7 € € 38.52 2.8 Managers, medicine and health............................... 24.26 11.2 € € € € Managers and administrators, n.e.c.......................... 32.30 7.5 32.40 8.0 € € Management related............................................ 23.08 7.3 23.30 7.5 - - Accountants and auditors.................................... 20.30 6.9 20.30 6.9 € € Personnel, training, and labor relations specialists........ 18.25 5.5 18.25 5.5 € € Management related, n.e.c................................... 26.36 11.8 26.36 11.8 € € Sales............................................................. 16.66 8.4 16.66 8.4 € € Supervisors, sales.......................................... $14.28 17.3 $14.28 17.3 € € Sales representatives, mining, manufacturing, and wholesale. 21.04 15.4 21.04 15.4 € € Sales workers, other commodities............................ 10.03 7.2 10.03 7.2 € € Administrative support, including clerical........................ 13.22 3.8 13.28 4.4 $12.88 3.3 Secretaries................................................. 13.52 4.5 13.84 5.8 12.71 4.8 Records clerks, n.e.c....................................... 13.75 2.5 13.75 2.5 € € Bookkeepers, accounting and auditing clerks................. 12.94 4.7 12.34 4.8 € € Mail clerks, except postal service.......................... 11.93 8.2 11.93 8.2 € € Production coordinators..................................... 14.37 4.6 14.37 4.6 € € Traffic, shipping and receiving clerks...................... 12.36 7.1 12.36 7.1 € € Investigators and adjusters, except insurance............... 13.31 4.1 13.31 4.1 € € General office clerks....................................... 11.48 5.1 € € 11.89 4.1 Teachers' aides............................................. 10.46 4.9 € € 10.46 4.9 Administrative support, n.e.c............................... 12.87 4.9 12.58 4.8 € € Blue collar......................................................... 15.69 2.9 15.68 3.1 15.94 5.8 Precision production, craft, and repair........................... 19.86 2.7 20.02 2.9 18.08 4.5 Industrial machinery repairers.............................. 19.84 6.2 19.84 6.2 € € Electricians................................................ 22.99 3.3 23.11 4.0 € € Supervisors, production..................................... 20.48 7.1 20.48 7.1 € € Tool and die makers......................................... 22.70 2.5 22.70 2.5 € € Machinists.................................................. 16.23 5.2 16.23 5.2 € € Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors..................... 13.80 4.5 13.80 4.5 - - Lathe and turning machine operators......................... 17.55 8.0 17.55 8.0 € € Punching and stamping press operators....................... 14.52 5.5 14.52 5.5 € € Drilling and boring machine operators....................... 15.14 8.1 15.14 8.1 € € Grinding, abrading, buffing, and polishing machine operators 11.41 9.6 11.41 9.6 € € Numerical control machine operators......................... 15.59 12.4 15.59 12.4 € € Printing press operators.................................... 15.85 12.9 15.89 13.0 € € Packaging and filling machine operators..................... 15.88 8.3 15.88 8.3 € € Miscellaneous machine operators, n.e.c...................... 15.37 10.4 15.37 10.4 € € Welders and cutters......................................... 14.88 6.8 14.88 6.8 € € Assemblers.................................................. 12.61 11.3 12.61 11.3 € € Production inspectors, checkers and examiners............... 11.27 7.2 11.27 7.2 € € Transportation and material moving................................ 18.34 3.3 18.26 3.5 - - Truck drivers............................................... 19.50 4.2 19.92 4.1 € € Industrial truck and tractor equipment operators............ 15.88 8.3 15.88 8.3 € € Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers............... 11.89 5.0 11.51 5.0 13.30 12.0 Groundskeepers and gardeners, except farm................... 14.85 15.2 € € € € Production helpers.......................................... 11.98 9.3 11.98 9.3 € € Stock handlers and baggers.................................. 11.37 7.7 11.37 7.7 € € Laborers, except construction, n.e.c........................ $10.07 6.1 $10.52 6.4 $9.24 13.6 Service............................................................. 11.76 6.4 9.19 5.1 17.75 5.1 Protective service............................................ 18.85 5.3 - - 19.24 5.3 Police and detectives, public service....................... 22.84 1.6 € € 22.84 1.6 Food service.................................................. 8.55 13.4 8.57 14.2 - - Other food service........................................... 9.50 4.8 9.60 5.1 € € Health service................................................ 9.57 5.3 9.47 5.4 - - Nursing aides, orderlies and attendants..................... 9.36 5.0 9.24 5.1 € € Cleaning and building service................................. 11.66 10.7 9.34 6.1 16.62 12.1 Janitors and cleaners....................................... 10.34 6.4 8.95 4.8 13.82 5.3 Personal service.............................................. 9.38 6.7 9.33 6.7 - - 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. 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 A classification system including about 480 individual occupations is used to cover all workers in the civilian economy. 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, and n.e.c. means not elsewhere classified. Overall occupational groups may include data for categories not shown separately. IN THIS SURVEY, THE NONRESPONSE RATE FOR ALL INDUSTRIES AND PRIVATE INDUSTRY EXCEEDED REGULAR SURVEY STANDARDS FOR PUBLICATION. ACCORDINGLY, USERS SHOULD INTERPRET THESE RE- SULTS WITH THIS LIMITATION IN MIND. Table 2-3. Mean hourly earnings,(1) part-time workers:(2) Selected occupations, private industry and State and local government, National Compensation Survey, Milwaukee-Racine, WI, October 2000 Total Private industry State and local government Occupation(3) Relative Relative Relative Mean error(4) Mean error(4) Mean error(4) (percent) (percent) (percent) All................................................................... $9.94 3.8 $9.02 3.8 $15.59 7.2 All excluding sales............................................... 10.44 4.3 9.42 4.5 15.59 7.2 White collar........................................................ 12.99 5.4 11.34 6.0 18.46 8.1 White collar excluding sales.................................... 16.26 5.1 15.01 6.4 18.46 8.1 Professional specialty and technical.............................. 19.42 4.5 18.40 5.8 21.37 6.9 Professional specialty.......................................... 21.56 5.0 20.94 6.8 22.41 7.1 Natural scientists............................................ - - € € - - Health related................................................ 22.37 3.1 22.51 3.3 - - Registered nurses........................................... 22.39 3.3 22.55 3.5 € € Teachers, college and university.............................. 31.86 7.9 - - 31.97 8.2 Other post-secondary teachers............................... 32.34 8.3 € € 32.34 8.3 Teachers, except college and university....................... 17.89 14.7 - - 20.82 8.7 Social, recreation, and religious workers..................... - - - - - - Writers, authors, entertainers, athletes, and professionals, n.e.c...................................................... - - - - - - Technical....................................................... 13.82 4.7 13.85 5.5 - - Licensed practical nurses................................... 14.49 2.7 14.60 3.5 € € Executive, administrative, and managerial......................... - - € € - - Executives, administrators, and managers...................... - - € € - - Management related............................................ - - € € - - Sales............................................................. 7.15 5.1 7.15 5.1 € € Sales workers, other commodities............................ 7.34 4.2 7.34 4.2 € € Cashiers.................................................... 6.35 5.0 6.35 5.0 € € Administrative support, including clerical........................ 10.30 4.1 10.00 4.8 10.91 6.1 General office clerks....................................... 9.07 7.1 € € € € Teachers' aides............................................. 11.12 7.2 € € 11.12 7.2 Blue collar......................................................... 8.41 5.2 8.46 5.5 7.56 6.0 Precision production, craft, and repair........................... - - - - € € Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors..................... 8.18 10.6 8.18 10.6 € € Transportation and material moving................................ - - - - - - Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers............... 7.93 6.4 7.96 6.9 7.51 6.4 Groundskeepers and gardeners, except farm................... 7.74 3.9 € € € € Laborers, except construction, n.e.c........................ 6.97 2.4 € € € € Service............................................................. 7.14 4.0 6.94 4.0 9.21 6.3 Protective service............................................ - - - - - - Food service.................................................. $6.24 5.1 $5.97 5.2 - - Waiters, waitresses, and bartenders.......................... 3.75 13.9 3.75 13.9 € € Waiters and waitresses...................................... 3.58 16.2 3.58 16.2 € € Other food service........................................... 7.43 5.4 7.16 4.8 € € Kitchen workers, food preparation........................... 7.87 10.6 7.87 10.6 € € Food preparation, n.e.c..................................... 7.12 5.1 6.75 2.4 € € Health service................................................ 9.42 5.7 9.42 5.7 € € Nursing aides, orderlies and attendants..................... 9.41 6.0 9.41 6.0 € € Cleaning and building service................................. $6.89 10.0 - - - - Janitors and cleaners....................................... 6.89 10.0 € € € € Personal service.............................................. 7.62 1.8 $7.43 1.9 $8.28 4.2 Attendants, amusement, and recreation facilities............ 7.61 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. 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 A classification system including about 480 individual occupations is used to cover all workers in the civilian economy. 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, and n.e.c. means not elsewhere classified. Overall occupational groups may include data for categories not shown separately. IN THIS SURVEY, THE NONRESPONSE RATE FOR ALL INDUSTRIES AND PRIVATE INDUSTRY EXCEEDED REGULAR SURVEY STANDARDS FOR PUBLICATION. ACCORDINGLY, USERS SHOULD INTERPRET THESE RE- SULTS WITH THIS LIMITATION IN MIND. Table 3-1. Mean weekly earnings,(1) full-time workers:(2) Selected occupations, private industry and State and local government, National Compensation Survey, Milwaukee-Racine, WI, October 2000 Total Private industry State and local government Weekly earnings Weekly earnings Weekly earnings Occupation(3) Mean Mean Mean weekly weekly weekly Relative hours(- Relative hours(- Relative hours(- Mean error(4) 5) Mean error(4) 5) Mean error(4) 5) (percen- (percen- (percen- t) t) t) All................................................................... $716 2.2 40.1 $688 2.5 40.1 $856 2.5 40.0 All excluding sales............................................... 718 2.2 40.1 689 2.6 40.1 856 2.5 40.0 White collar........................................................ 850 2.7 40.1 822 3.4 40.3 950 3.0 39.5 White collar excluding sales.................................... 871 2.8 40.1 845 3.6 40.3 950 3.0 39.5 Professional specialty and technical.............................. 1,037 3.8 40.5 1,038 5.9 41.1 1,037 2.8 39.4 Professional specialty.......................................... 1,130 4.3 40.8 1,178 7.2 41.7 1,072 2.7 39.6 Engineers, architects, and surveyors.......................... 1,121 5.2 40.0 1,127 5.2 40.0 - - - Industrial engineers........................................ 989 4.9 40.0 989 4.9 40.0 € € € Mechanical engineers........................................ 1,077 7.6 40.0 1,077 7.6 40.0 € € € Mathematical and computer scientists.......................... 1,198 9.3 39.2 1,268 7.6 40.0 - - - Computer systems analysts and scientists.................... 1,070 12.6 38.8 € € € € € € Natural scientists............................................ - - - - - - - - - Health related................................................ 841 2.6 41.3 849 2.9 41.6 807 4.3 40.0 Registered nurses........................................... 828 1.9 39.6 833 2.0 39.6 € € € Teachers, college and university.............................. 2,402 19.4 49.6 - - - 1,343 14.1 40.0 Teachers, except college and university....................... 1,149 3.6 39.8 - - - 1,192 1.5 39.8 Elementary school teachers.................................. 1,164 2.0 40.0 € € € 1,167 2.0 40.0 Secondary school teachers................................... 1,245 1.8 40.0 € € € 1,244 1.8 40.0 Librarians, archivists, and curators.......................... - - - - - - - - - Social scientists and urban planners.......................... - - - € € € - - - Social, recreation, and religious workers..................... 711 4.6 39.9 670 6.6 40.0 723 5.6 39.9 Social workers.............................................. 715 5.3 39.9 € € € 723 5.6 39.9 Lawyers and judges............................................ - - - € € € - - - Writers, authors, entertainers, athletes, and professionals, n.e.c...................................................... 1,101 16.8 40.4 1,101 16.8 40.4 € € € Technical....................................................... 745 4.8 39.5 762 5.2 39.8 629 6.7 36.9 Clinical laboratory technologists and technicians........... 639 6.1 40.0 639 6.1 40.0 € € € Licensed practical nurses................................... 565 3.7 38.8 563 4.2 38.6 € € € Engineering technicians, n.e.c.............................. 815 1.9 39.0 € € € € € € Drafters.................................................... 682 16.9 40.0 682 16.9 40.0 € € € Executive, administrative, and managerial......................... 1,103 3.3 40.1 1,074 3.6 40.0 1,266 6.9 40.7 Executives, administrators, and managers...................... 1,215 4.8 40.5 1,180 5.7 40.3 1,352 6.4 40.9 Administrators and officials, public administration......... 1,267 8.8 43.3 € € € 1,267 8.8 43.3 Financial managers.......................................... 1,184 9.9 40.4 1,184 9.9 40.4 € € € Administrators, education and related fields................ 1,559 3.0 40.6 € € € 1,568 3.1 40.7 Managers, medicine and health............................... 938 11.9 38.7 € € € € € € Managers and administrators, n.e.c.......................... 1,299 7.9 40.2 1,319 8.4 40.7 € € € Management related............................................ 915 7.4 39.6 923 7.7 39.6 - - - Accountants and auditors.................................... 798 6.3 39.3 798 6.3 39.3 € € € Personnel, training, and labor relations specialists........ $726 5.1 39.8 $726 5.1 39.8 € € € Management related, n.e.c................................... 1,043 11.9 39.6 1,043 11.9 39.6 € € € Sales............................................................. 672 8.5 40.3 672 8.5 40.3 € € € Supervisors, sales.......................................... 585 16.5 41.0 585 16.5 41.0 € € € Sales representatives, mining, manufacturing, and wholesale. 848 15.4 40.3 848 15.4 40.3 € € € Sales workers, other commodities............................ 379 5.9 37.8 379 5.9 37.8 € € € Administrative support, including clerical........................ 523 3.7 39.6 527 4.3 39.7 $505 3.5 39.2 Secretaries................................................. 532 4.8 39.4 549 5.9 39.6 492 6.2 38.7 Records clerks, n.e.c....................................... 533 2.1 38.8 533 2.1 38.8 € € € Bookkeepers, accounting and auditing clerks................. 518 4.7 40.0 494 4.8 40.0 € € € Mail clerks, except postal service.......................... 465 8.9 38.9 465 8.9 38.9 € € € Production coordinators..................................... 577 4.7 40.2 577 4.7 40.2 € € € Traffic, shipping and receiving clerks...................... 494 7.1 40.0 494 7.1 40.0 € € € Investigators and adjusters, except insurance............... 533 4.1 40.0 533 4.1 40.0 € € € General office clerks....................................... 459 5.1 40.0 € € € 475 3.9 39.9 Teachers' aides............................................. 388 5.3 37.1 € € € 388 5.3 37.1 Administrative support, n.e.c............................... 507 4.6 39.4 495 4.4 39.3 € € € Blue collar......................................................... 629 3.0 40.1 628 3.1 40.1 638 5.8 40.0 Precision production, craft, and repair........................... 796 2.7 40.1 802 2.9 40.1 723 4.5 40.0 Industrial machinery repairers.............................. 793 6.2 40.0 793 6.2 40.0 € € € Electricians................................................ 919 3.3 40.0 924 4.0 40.0 € € € Supervisors, production..................................... 828 7.2 40.4 828 7.2 40.4 € € € Tool and die makers......................................... 908 2.5 40.0 908 2.5 40.0 € € € Machinists.................................................. 649 5.2 40.0 649 5.2 40.0 € € € Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors..................... 551 4.5 40.0 551 4.5 40.0 - - - Lathe and turning machine operators......................... 702 8.0 40.0 702 8.0 40.0 € € € Punching and stamping press operators....................... 581 5.5 40.0 581 5.5 40.0 € € € Drilling and boring machine operators....................... 606 8.1 40.0 606 8.1 40.0 € € € Grinding, abrading, buffing, and polishing machine operators 456 9.6 40.0 456 9.6 40.0 € € € Numerical control machine operators......................... 624 12.4 40.0 624 12.4 40.0 € € € Printing press operators.................................... 629 12.5 39.7 630 12.6 39.7 € € € Packaging and filling machine operators..................... 635 8.3 40.0 635 8.3 40.0 € € € Miscellaneous machine operators, n.e.c...................... 613 10.4 39.9 613 10.4 39.9 € € € Welders and cutters......................................... 595 6.8 40.0 595 6.8 40.0 € € € Assemblers.................................................. 504 11.3 40.0 504 11.3 40.0 € € € Production inspectors, checkers and examiners............... 451 7.2 40.0 451 7.2 40.0 € € € Transportation and material moving................................ $746 5.1 40.7 $744 5.6 40.7 - - - Truck drivers............................................... 830 6.8 42.6 857 6.4 43.0 € € € Industrial truck and tractor equipment operators............ 611 10.1 38.5 611 10.1 38.5 € € € Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers............... 474 5.0 39.9 459 4.9 39.9 $532 12.0 40.0 Groundskeepers and gardeners, except farm................... 594 15.2 40.0 € € € € € € Production helpers.......................................... 476 8.8 39.7 476 8.8 39.7 € € € Stock handlers and baggers.................................. 453 7.7 39.8 453 7.7 39.8 € € € Laborers, except construction, n.e.c........................ 402 6.1 39.9 419 6.3 39.8 369 13.6 40.0 Service............................................................. 470 6.6 39.9 361 5.0 39.3 738 5.6 41.6 Protective service............................................ 803 5.9 42.6 - - - 824 5.8 42.8 Police and detectives, public service....................... 896 1.8 39.2 € € € 896 1.8 39.2 Food service.................................................. 337 12.9 39.4 340 13.9 39.7 - - - Other food service........................................... 373 4.8 39.3 380 5.0 39.6 € € € Health service................................................ 377 5.3 39.4 373 5.4 39.4 - - - Nursing aides, orderlies and attendants..................... 369 4.9 39.4 363 5.0 39.3 € € € Cleaning and building service................................. 452 11.2 38.8 357 6.7 38.3 663 12.2 39.9 Janitors and cleaners....................................... 396 7.0 38.3 338 5.7 37.7 550 5.2 39.8 Personal service.............................................. 374 6.6 39.9 373 6.7 40.0 - - - 1 Earnings are the straight-time weekly 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. 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 A classification system including about 480 individual occupations is used to cover all workers in the civilian economy. 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. 5 Mean weekly hours are the hours an employee is scheduled to work in a week, exclusive of overtime. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria, and n.e.c. means not elsewhere classified. Overall occupational groups may include data for categories not shown separately. IN THIS SURVEY, THE NONRESPONSE RATE FOR ALL INDUSTRIES AND PRIVATE INDUSTRY EXCEEDED REGULAR SURVEY STANDARDS FOR PUBLICATION. ACCORDINGLY, USERS SHOULD INTERPRET THESE RESULTS WITH THIS LIMITATION IN MIND. Table 3-2. Mean annual earnings,(1) full-time workers:(2) Selected occupations, private industry and State and local government, National Compensation Survey, Milwaukee-Racine, WI, October 2000 Total Private industry State and local government Annual earnings Annual earnings Annual earnings Occupation(3) Mean Mean Mean annual annual annual Relative hours(- Relative hours(- Relative hours(- Mean error(4) 5) Mean error(4) 5) Mean error(4) 5) (percen- (percen- (percen- t) t) t) All................................................................... $36,464 2.2 2,041 $35,704 2.5 2,079 $39,966 2.5 1,867 All excluding sales............................................... 36,550 2.2 2,039 35,763 2.6 2,079 39,966 2.5 1,867 White collar........................................................ 42,474 2.7 2,003 42,628 3.4 2,088 42,015 3.0 1,747 White collar excluding sales.................................... 43,338 2.8 1,994 43,847 3.6 2,089 42,015 3.0 1,747 Professional specialty and technical.............................. 49,417 3.8 1,927 53,592 5.9 2,123 43,743 2.8 1,661 Professional specialty.......................................... 52,475 4.3 1,893 60,635 7.2 2,149 44,571 2.7 1,645 Engineers, architects, and surveyors.......................... 58,287 5.2 2,080 58,587 5.2 2,080 - - - Industrial engineers........................................ 51,447 4.9 2,080 51,447 4.9 2,080 € € € Mechanical engineers........................................ 55,980 7.6 2,080 55,980 7.6 2,080 € € € Mathematical and computer scientists.......................... 62,304 9.3 2,041 65,941 7.6 2,079 - - - Computer systems analysts and scientists.................... 55,618 12.6 2,020 € € € € € € Natural scientists............................................ - - - - - - - - - Health related................................................ 43,395 2.6 2,130 44,145 2.9 2,162 40,127 4.3 1,989 Registered nurses........................................... 43,041 1.9 2,060 43,303 2.0 2,059 € € € Teachers, college and university.............................. 110,189 19.4 2,273 - - - 56,869 14.1 1,693 Teachers, except college and university....................... 44,585 3.6 1,545 - - - 45,627 1.5 1,524 Elementary school teachers.................................. 44,630 2.0 1,533 € € € 44,793 2.0 1,535 Secondary school teachers................................... 47,477 1.8 1,525 € € € 47,464 1.8 1,526 Librarians, archivists, and curators.......................... - - - - - - - - - Social scientists and urban planners.......................... - - - € € € - - - Social, recreation, and religious workers..................... 36,694 4.6 2,060 34,600 6.6 2,065 37,299 5.6 2,059 Social workers.............................................. 36,807 5.3 2,056 € € € 37,299 5.6 2,059 Lawyers and judges............................................ - - - € € € - - - Writers, authors, entertainers, athletes, and professionals, n.e.c...................................................... 57,244 16.8 2,103 57,244 16.8 2,103 € € € Technical....................................................... 38,646 4.8 2,047 39,602 5.2 2,071 32,094 6.7 1,881 Clinical laboratory technologists and technicians........... 33,228 6.1 2,080 33,228 6.1 2,080 € € € Licensed practical nurses................................... 29,364 3.7 2,017 29,287 4.2 2,008 € € € Engineering technicians, n.e.c.............................. 42,365 1.9 2,029 € € € € € € Drafters.................................................... 35,480 16.9 2,080 35,480 16.9 2,080 € € € Executive, administrative, and managerial......................... 56,884 3.3 2,071 55,795 3.6 2,081 62,682 6.9 2,018 Executives, administrators, and managers...................... 62,389 4.8 2,077 61,295 5.7 2,096 66,399 6.4 2,007 Administrators and officials, public administration......... 65,884 8.8 2,252 € € € 65,884 8.8 2,252 Financial managers.......................................... 61,584 9.9 2,100 61,584 9.9 2,100 € € € Administrators, education and related fields................ 70,450 3.0 1,836 € € € 70,945 3.1 1,842 Managers, medicine and health............................... 48,777 11.9 2,011 € € € € € € Managers and administrators, n.e.c.......................... 67,569 7.9 2,092 68,596 8.4 2,117 € € € Management related............................................ 47,579 7.4 2,062 48,005 7.7 2,060 - - - Accountants and auditors.................................... 41,487 6.3 2,044 41,487 6.3 2,044 € € € Personnel, training, and labor relations specialists........ $37,748 5.1 2,069 $37,748 5.1 2,069 € € € Management related, n.e.c................................... 54,251 11.9 2,058 54,251 11.9 2,058 € € € Sales............................................................. 34,774 8.5 2,087 34,774 8.5 2,087 € € € Supervisors, sales.......................................... 30,431 16.5 2,132 30,431 16.5 2,132 € € € Sales representatives, mining, manufacturing, and wholesale. 44,103 15.4 2,096 44,103 15.4 2,096 € € € Sales workers, other commodities............................ 19,704 5.9 1,964 19,704 5.9 1,964 € € € Administrative support, including clerical........................ 26,818 3.7 2,029 27,393 4.3 2,063 $23,987 3.5 1,862 Secretaries................................................. 26,850 4.8 1,986 28,532 5.9 2,061 23,101 6.2 1,818 Records clerks, n.e.c....................................... 27,726 2.1 2,016 27,726 2.1 2,016 € € € Bookkeepers, accounting and auditing clerks................. 26,776 4.7 2,069 25,664 4.8 2,080 € € € Mail clerks, except postal service.......................... 24,161 8.9 2,025 24,161 8.9 2,025 € € € Production coordinators..................................... 30,023 4.7 2,090 30,023 4.7 2,090 € € € Traffic, shipping and receiving clerks...................... 25,706 7.1 2,080 25,706 7.1 2,080 € € € Investigators and adjusters, except insurance............... 27,691 4.1 2,080 27,691 4.1 2,080 € € € General office clerks....................................... 23,319 5.1 2,032 € € € 23,937 3.9 2,013 Teachers' aides............................................. 14,564 5.3 1,392 € € € 14,564 5.3 1,392 Administrative support, n.e.c............................... 26,355 4.6 2,047 25,738 4.4 2,045 € € € Blue collar......................................................... 32,632 3.0 2,079 32,595 3.1 2,079 33,158 5.8 2,080 Precision production, craft, and repair........................... 41,369 2.7 2,083 41,713 2.9 2,083 37,611 4.5 2,080 Industrial machinery repairers.............................. 41,260 6.2 2,080 41,260 6.2 2,080 € € € Electricians................................................ 47,810 3.3 2,080 48,073 4.0 2,080 € € € Supervisors, production..................................... 43,063 7.2 2,103 43,063 7.2 2,103 € € € Tool and die makers......................................... 47,214 2.5 2,080 47,214 2.5 2,080 € € € Machinists.................................................. 33,756 5.2 2,080 33,756 5.2 2,080 € € € Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors..................... 28,673 4.5 2,078 28,674 4.5 2,078 - - - Lathe and turning machine operators......................... 36,509 8.0 2,080 36,509 8.0 2,080 € € € Punching and stamping press operators....................... 30,202 5.5 2,080 30,202 5.5 2,080 € € € Drilling and boring machine operators....................... 31,496 8.1 2,080 31,496 8.1 2,080 € € € Grinding, abrading, buffing, and polishing machine operators 23,734 9.6 2,080 23,734 9.6 2,080 € € € Numerical control machine operators......................... 32,429 12.4 2,080 32,429 12.4 2,080 € € € Printing press operators.................................... 32,698 12.5 2,063 32,772 12.6 2,063 € € € Packaging and filling machine operators..................... 33,035 8.3 2,080 33,035 8.3 2,080 € € € Miscellaneous machine operators, n.e.c...................... 31,874 10.4 2,074 31,874 10.4 2,074 € € € Welders and cutters......................................... 30,944 6.8 2,080 30,944 6.8 2,080 € € € Assemblers.................................................. 26,221 11.3 2,080 26,221 11.3 2,080 € € € Production inspectors, checkers and examiners............... 23,433 7.2 2,080 23,433 7.2 2,080 € € € Transportation and material moving................................ $38,768 5.1 2,113 $38,648 5.6 2,117 - - - Truck drivers............................................... 43,170 6.8 2,214 44,577 6.4 2,238 € € € Industrial truck and tractor equipment operators............ 31,767 10.1 2,000 31,767 10.1 2,000 € € € Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers............... 24,353 5.0 2,049 23,480 4.9 2,040 $27,665 12.0 2,080 Groundskeepers and gardeners, except farm................... 29,905 15.2 2,014 € € € € € € Production helpers.......................................... 24,746 8.8 2,066 24,746 8.8 2,066 € € € Stock handlers and baggers.................................. 23,541 7.7 2,071 23,541 7.7 2,071 € € € Laborers, except construction, n.e.c........................ 20,882 6.1 2,074 21,780 6.3 2,070 19,211 13.6 2,080 Service............................................................. 24,301 6.6 2,067 18,713 5.0 2,037 38,022 5.6 2,142 Protective service............................................ 41,775 5.9 2,216 - - - 42,853 5.8 2,227 Police and detectives, public service....................... 46,611 1.8 2,041 € € € 46,611 1.8 2,041 Food service.................................................. 17,250 12.9 2,017 17,496 13.9 2,041 - - - Other food service........................................... 19,012 4.8 2,002 19,482 5.0 2,030 € € € Health service................................................ 19,611 5.3 2,049 19,382 5.4 2,047 - - - Nursing aides, orderlies and attendants..................... 19,166 4.9 2,047 18,892 5.0 2,045 € € € Cleaning and building service................................. 23,452 11.2 2,011 18,573 6.7 1,989 34,238 12.2 2,060 Janitors and cleaners....................................... 20,600 7.0 1,992 17,560 5.7 1,962 28,612 5.2 2,070 Personal service.............................................. 19,282 6.6 2,056 19,402 6.7 2,080 - - - 1 Earnings are the straight-time annual 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. 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 A classification system including about 480 individual occupations is used to cover all workers in the civilian economy. 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. 5 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, and n.e.c. means not elsewhere classified. Overall occupational groups may include data for categories not shown separately. IN THIS SURVEY, THE NONRESPONSE RATE FOR ALL INDUSTRIES AND PRIVATE INDUSTRY EXCEEDED REGULAR SURVEY STANDARDS FOR PUBLICATION. ACCORDINGLY, USERS SHOULD INTERPRET THESE RESULTS WITH THIS LIMITATION IN MIND. Table 4-1.Selected occupations(1) and levels,(2) all workers:(3) Mean hourly earnings,(4) private industry and State and local government, National Compensation Survey, Milwaukee-Racine, WI, October 2000 Total Private industry State and local government Occupation and level Relative Relative Relative Mean error(5) Mean error(5) Mean error(5) (percent) (percent) (percent) All................................................................... $16.80 2.1 $16.05 2.4 $20.73 2.4 All excluding sales............................................... 17.02 2.1 16.25 2.5 20.73 2.4 White collar........................................................ 20.19 2.5 19.31 3.1 23.32 2.9 1....................................................... 6.97 7.0 6.94 7.1 € € 2....................................................... 8.61 6.1 8.22 7.0 10.11 3.1 3....................................................... 10.08 3.1 10.00 3.2 11.24 2.8 4....................................................... 12.10 5.5 12.02 6.6 12.50 5.4 5....................................................... 14.17 5.0 14.33 5.9 13.29 3.9 6....................................................... 15.49 2.6 15.72 2.9 14.02 3.0 7....................................................... 18.48 3.4 18.81 4.0 17.05 4.2 8....................................................... 20.40 2.1 20.80 2.4 18.95 2.6 9....................................................... 26.95 2.2 23.94 3.3 29.70 2.3 10........................................................ 23.41 2.9 23.27 3.5 23.81 4.3 11........................................................ 30.76 2.4 30.22 2.4 33.10 6.7 12........................................................ 31.79 4.3 31.46 4.5 35.70 18.7 13........................................................ 46.24 5.7 47.87 6.7 € € 14........................................................ 49.50 4.2 49.50 4.2 € € Not able to be leveled.................................... 19.24 18.2 19.63 19.9 16.00 16.0 White collar excluding sales.................................... 21.24 2.5 20.53 3.2 23.32 2.9 1....................................................... 8.95 9.7 8.99 10.5 € € 2....................................................... 9.84 3.4 9.70 4.6 10.11 3.1 3....................................................... 10.85 3.1 10.80 3.4 11.24 2.8 4....................................................... 12.14 4.5 12.04 5.4 12.50 5.4 5....................................................... 13.41 3.2 13.44 3.8 13.29 3.9 6....................................................... 15.44 3.0 15.72 3.4 14.02 3.0 7....................................................... 18.03 2.7 18.30 3.2 17.05 4.2 8....................................................... 20.51 2.1 20.98 2.5 18.95 2.6 9....................................................... 26.84 2.0 23.57 2.5 29.70 2.3 10........................................................ 23.44 3.0 23.30 3.8 23.81 4.3 11........................................................ 30.47 2.4 29.82 2.4 33.10 6.7 12........................................................ 31.70 4.4 31.35 4.6 35.70 18.7 13........................................................ 46.24 5.7 47.87 6.7 € € 14........................................................ 49.50 4.2 49.50 4.2 € € Not able to be leveled.................................... 20.81 17.8 21.49 19.4 16.00 16.0 Professional specialty and technical.............................. 24.89 3.2 24.39 4.9 25.76 2.5 Professional specialty.......................................... 27.00 3.5 27.34 5.9 26.57 2.5 6....................................................... 14.29 7.3 € € € € 7....................................................... 19.09 4.7 20.44 4.8 17.19 6.9 8....................................................... 21.08 3.1 22.57 3.4 18.75 3.1 9....................................................... 27.31 2.0 23.57 3.5 29.42 2.0 10........................................................ 25.32 4.8 26.10 4.9 € € 11........................................................ 31.94 3.3 31.36 3.6 € € 12........................................................ 25.54 10.4 25.89 10.9 € € Not able to be leveled.................................... 24.58 25.0 25.40 25.3 € € Engineers, architects, and surveyors.......................... $28.02 5.2 $28.17 5.2 - - 9....................................................... 25.49 4.7 25.49 4.7 € € Industrial engineers........................................ 24.73 4.9 24.73 4.9 € € Mechanical engineers........................................ 26.91 7.6 26.91 7.6 € € Mathematical and computer scientists.......................... 30.53 9.3 31.72 8.6 - - Computer systems analysts and scientists.................... 27.54 8.6 € € € € Natural scientists............................................ - - - - - - Health related................................................ 20.89 2.2 21.00 2.5 $20.25 3.7 7....................................................... 20.37 2.0 20.49 2.4 € € 8....................................................... 21.70 4.4 22.55 5.1 € € 9....................................................... 22.86 4.0 22.64 4.1 € € Registered nurses........................................... 21.41 1.8 21.55 1.9 € € 7....................................................... 20.49 2.4 20.49 2.4 € € 8....................................................... 21.26 3.6 21.62 4.1 € € 9....................................................... 21.88 3.0 21.92 3.0 € € Teachers, college and university.............................. 45.85 12.3 - - 33.02 9.7 9....................................................... 32.69 11.0 € € € € Other post-secondary teachers............................... 36.28 6.4 € € 36.28 6.4 Teachers, except college and university....................... 27.83 4.8 - - 29.25 1.7 9....................................................... 29.79 1.5 € € 29.79 1.5 Elementary school teachers.................................. 29.07 1.9 € € 29.13 2.0 9....................................................... 29.05 2.0 € € 29.04 2.0 Secondary school teachers................................... 31.12 1.8 € € 31.10 1.8 9....................................................... 30.75 1.9 € € 30.77 2.0 Teachers, n.e.c............................................. 28.39 5.4 € € 28.39 5.4 Librarians, archivists, and curators.......................... - - - - - - Social scientists and urban planners.......................... - - € € - - Social, recreation, and religious workers..................... 17.48 4.6 17.00 5.8 17.62 5.7 9....................................................... 19.64 6.6 € € € € Social workers.............................................. 17.94 5.3 € € 18.12 5.8 9....................................................... 20.70 9.9 € € € € Lawyers and judges............................................ - - € € - - Writers, authors, entertainers, athletes, and professionals, n.e.c...................................................... 26.51 14.5 26.94 14.6 - - Not able to be leveled.................................... 24.66 25.1 25.40 25.3 € € Athletes.................................................... 27.44 31.0 € € € € Not able to be leveled.................................... 27.44 31.0 € € € € Technical....................................................... 18.17 4.4 18.40 4.8 16.48 6.2 5....................................................... 14.88 3.8 14.98 4.0 € € 6....................................................... 15.71 5.0 15.80 5.3 € € 7....................................................... 19.22 8.3 19.86 9.6 € € 8....................................................... 20.65 6.7 20.57 6.9 € € 9....................................................... 24.58 7.4 24.58 7.4 € € Clinical laboratory technologists and technicians........... 15.30 5.8 15.30 5.8 € € Licensed practical nurses................................... 14.53 1.9 14.59 2.2 € € 6....................................................... 14.59 2.9 € € € € Engineering technicians, n.e.c.............................. $20.74 1.3 € € € € Drafters.................................................... 17.06 16.9 $17.06 16.9 € € Executive, administrative, and managerial......................... 27.53 3.2 26.81 3.5 $31.23 6.3 7....................................................... 17.82 3.5 17.74 3.7 € € 8....................................................... 19.36 2.6 19.35 3.0 € € 9....................................................... 25.65 6.7 23.15 3.5 € € 10........................................................ 22.34 5.9 € € € € 11........................................................ 30.26 3.2 29.59 3.1 32.64 9.2 12........................................................ 35.78 4.9 34.89 5.1 € € 13........................................................ 43.69 7.6 € € € € Executives, administrators, and managers...................... 30.13 4.6 29.24 5.5 33.29 6.0 9....................................................... 26.76 9.1 22.92 5.0 € € 11........................................................ 29.66 3.0 28.73 2.9 32.64 9.2 12........................................................ 35.60 6.0 34.44 6.3 € € Administrators and officials, public administration......... 29.26 8.9 € € 29.26 8.9 Financial managers.......................................... 29.32 9.7 29.32 9.7 € € Administrators, education and related fields................ 39.51 3.6 € € 39.69 3.8 Managers, medicine and health............................... 24.26 11.2 € € € € Managers and administrators, n.e.c.......................... 32.30 7.5 32.40 8.0 € € 12........................................................ 36.22 7.6 36.22 7.6 € € Management related............................................ 23.06 7.3 23.30 7.5 - - 7....................................................... 17.05 3.3 16.87 3.3 € € 8....................................................... 18.64 3.5 18.28 4.0 € € 9....................................................... 23.32 4.5 23.45 4.6 € € Accountants and auditors.................................... 20.30 6.9 20.30 6.9 € € Personnel, training, and labor relations specialists........ 18.25 5.5 18.25 5.5 € € Management related, n.e.c................................... 26.22 11.6 26.36 11.8 € € Sales............................................................. 13.58 8.7 13.58 8.7 € € 1....................................................... 6.17 2.1 6.17 2.1 € € 2....................................................... 6.63 7.7 6.63 7.7 € € 3....................................................... 8.01 3.1 8.01 3.1 € € 4....................................................... 11.97 19.1 11.97 19.1 € € 5....................................................... 18.58 12.2 18.58 12.2 € € 7....................................................... 21.65 14.5 21.65 14.5 € € 8....................................................... 18.96 4.8 18.96 4.8 € € Supervisors, sales.......................................... 14.28 17.3 14.28 17.3 € € Sales representatives, mining, manufacturing, and wholesale. 21.04 15.4 21.04 15.4 € € Sales workers, other commodities............................ 8.26 5.1 8.26 5.1 € € Cashiers.................................................... 7.04 5.8 7.04 5.8 € € 3....................................................... 8.21 7.5 8.21 7.5 € € Administrative support, including clerical........................ 12.92 3.5 13.01 4.2 12.49 3.1 1....................................................... 8.95 9.7 8.99 10.5 € € 2....................................................... 9.84 3.4 9.70 4.6 € € 3....................................................... $10.84 3.2 $10.80 3.4 $11.24 2.8 4....................................................... 12.05 4.6 12.06 5.6 12.02 4.9 5....................................................... 13.17 3.3 13.19 4.1 13.07 3.4 6....................................................... 14.68 3.7 15.01 4.6 € € 7....................................................... 16.39 4.2 16.40 5.0 € € Secretaries................................................. 13.52 4.5 13.84 5.7 12.71 4.8 4....................................................... 12.92 7.1 13.15 8.3 € € 5....................................................... 12.87 3.2 € € € € Information clerks, n.e.c................................... 13.30 4.7 13.30 4.7 € € Records clerks, n.e.c....................................... 13.75 2.5 13.75 2.5 € € Bookkeepers, accounting and auditing clerks................. 12.48 5.1 11.88 5.6 € € 3....................................................... 12.04 5.9 € € € € Mail clerks, except postal service.......................... 11.93 8.2 11.93 8.2 € € Production coordinators..................................... 14.37 4.6 14.37 4.6 € € Traffic, shipping and receiving clerks...................... 12.36 7.1 12.36 7.1 € € Investigators and adjusters, except insurance............... 13.14 3.7 13.14 3.7 € € General office clerks....................................... 11.05 4.6 9.94 9.4 11.75 4.1 3....................................................... 10.02 7.1 € € € € 4....................................................... 12.76 4.7 € € 12.85 7.3 Teachers' aides............................................. 10.86 4.9 € € 10.86 4.9 4....................................................... 10.14 4.5 € € 10.14 4.5 Administrative support, n.e.c............................... 12.72 5.0 12.44 4.9 € € Blue collar......................................................... 15.10 3.0 15.08 3.2 15.41 5.9 1....................................................... 8.54 4.8 8.52 4.9 € € 2....................................................... 9.54 4.5 9.77 4.9 € € 3....................................................... 13.91 6.1 13.86 6.5 14.71 10.4 4....................................................... 14.82 6.0 14.75 6.2 € € 5....................................................... 16.96 3.7 16.93 4.1 17.29 6.2 6....................................................... 18.15 2.7 18.27 3.0 17.43 3.3 7....................................................... 20.88 2.5 20.76 2.6 € € 8....................................................... 23.12 9.3 23.12 9.3 € € 9....................................................... 25.31 5.9 25.31 5.9 € € Precision production, craft, and repair........................... 19.81 2.7 19.97 2.9 18.08 4.5 5....................................................... 15.00 5.6 14.80 6.6 € € 6....................................................... 18.36 3.6 18.46 4.5 € € 7....................................................... 21.40 2.9 21.36 3.0 € € 8....................................................... 23.93 10.1 23.93 10.1 € € 9....................................................... 25.31 5.9 25.31 5.9 € € Industrial machinery repairers.............................. 19.84 6.2 19.84 6.2 € € 7....................................................... 23.53 5.8 23.53 5.8 € € Electricians................................................ 22.99 3.3 23.11 4.0 € € 7....................................................... 22.47 3.8 22.45 5.3 € € Supervisors, production..................................... 20.48 7.1 20.48 7.1 € € 7....................................................... 21.55 8.9 21.55 8.9 € € Tool and die makers......................................... $22.70 2.5 $22.70 2.5 € € 7....................................................... 22.91 2.6 22.91 2.6 € € Machinists.................................................. 16.23 5.2 16.23 5.2 € € Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors..................... 13.70 4.5 13.71 4.5 - - 1....................................................... 8.05 6.5 8.05 6.5 € € 2....................................................... 10.16 5.3 10.16 5.3 € € 3....................................................... 14.26 8.4 14.26 8.4 € € 4....................................................... 15.48 5.7 15.48 5.7 € € 5....................................................... 15.51 5.2 15.51 5.2 € € 6....................................................... 17.77 3.3 17.77 3.3 € € 7....................................................... 19.21 4.7 19.21 4.7 € € Lathe and turning machine operators......................... 17.55 8.0 17.55 8.0 € € Punching and stamping press operators....................... 14.52 5.5 14.52 5.5 € € Drilling and boring machine operators....................... 15.14 8.1 15.14 8.1 € € Grinding, abrading, buffing, and polishing machine operators 11.41 9.6 11.41 9.6 € € Numerical control machine operators......................... 15.59 12.4 15.59 12.4 € € 7....................................................... 20.51 3.1 20.51 3.1 € € Printing press operators.................................... 15.85 12.9 15.89 13.0 € € Packaging and filling machine operators..................... 15.32 9.0 15.32 9.0 € € Miscellaneous machine operators, n.e.c...................... 15.26 10.3 15.26 10.3 € € 3....................................................... 11.04 10.2 11.04 10.2 € € Welders and cutters......................................... 14.88 6.8 14.88 6.8 € € Assemblers.................................................. 12.47 11.0 12.47 11.0 € € 1....................................................... 8.18 8.1 8.18 8.1 € € 2....................................................... 10.67 6.4 10.67 6.4 € € 3....................................................... 18.13 9.6 18.13 9.6 € € Miscellaneous hand working, n.e.c........................... 13.91 28.1 13.91 28.1 € € Production inspectors, checkers and examiners............... 11.07 6.8 11.07 6.8 € € Transportation and material moving................................ 17.00 7.5 16.82 8.2 $19.01 9.6 3....................................................... 14.47 5.7 13.51 7.0 € € 5....................................................... 19.95 3.6 19.95 3.6 € € Truck drivers............................................... 19.37 4.3 19.76 4.3 € € Bus drivers................................................. 14.02 22.6 € € € € Industrial truck and tractor equipment operators............ 15.08 9.3 15.08 9.3 € € 3....................................................... 13.57 8.4 13.57 8.4 € € Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers............... 10.80 4.8 10.41 4.7 12.62 11.9 1....................................................... 8.88 6.2 8.84 6.3 € € 2....................................................... 8.82 6.1 9.21 7.0 € € 3....................................................... 11.60 5.8 11.90 5.8 € € 4....................................................... 15.19 4.0 € € € € 5....................................................... 16.87 7.6 € € € € Groundskeepers and gardeners, except farm................... 13.34 15.5 € € 15.42 14.8 Production helpers.......................................... 11.98 9.3 11.98 9.3 € € Stock handlers and baggers.................................. $9.21 9.7 $9.21 9.7 € € 3....................................................... 9.89 5.9 9.89 5.9 € € Freight, stock, and material handlers, n.e.c................ 11.17 10.1 11.17 10.1 € € Hand packers and packagers.................................. 10.42 6.1 10.42 6.1 € € Laborers, except construction, n.e.c........................ 9.04 6.5 9.04 7.4 $9.07 13.3 1....................................................... 7.44 5.4 7.50 5.5 € € 2....................................................... 8.66 7.1 € € € € Service............................................................. 10.27 5.2 8.33 3.7 16.72 5.4 1....................................................... 7.13 6.8 7.01 7.1 9.43 6.5 2....................................................... 8.85 5.8 8.54 5.5 € € 3....................................................... 9.80 3.6 9.45 3.2 10.89 7.3 4....................................................... 9.33 4.7 8.95 3.5 € € 5....................................................... 11.00 5.2 € € € € 7....................................................... 18.81 6.1 € € 19.69 6.4 Protective service............................................ 18.68 5.3 - - 19.11 5.3 7....................................................... 18.85 7.4 € € 18.85 7.4 Police and detectives, public service....................... 22.84 1.6 € € 22.84 1.6 Food service.................................................. 7.28 6.4 7.15 6.7 9.06 5.1 1....................................................... 6.42 10.0 6.31 10.3 € € 2....................................................... 7.64 16.4 7.42 17.6 € € 3....................................................... 8.91 4.9 9.20 5.9 € € Waiters, waitresses, and bartenders.......................... 4.14 24.1 4.14 24.1 € € 1....................................................... 3.37 19.6 3.37 19.6 € € Waiters and waitresses...................................... 3.19 17.4 3.19 17.4 € € 1....................................................... 3.19 21.0 3.19 21.0 € € Other food service........................................... 8.44 5.2 8.38 5.6 9.06 5.1 1....................................................... 7.79 7.1 7.70 7.5 € € 2....................................................... 9.55 4.5 € € € € 3....................................................... 8.91 4.9 9.20 5.9 € € Cooks....................................................... 9.14 3.8 9.14 3.8 € € Kitchen workers, food preparation........................... 9.39 5.4 9.59 5.0 € € 1....................................................... 9.63 5.8 9.63 5.8 € € Food preparation, n.e.c..................................... 7.51 5.9 7.27 5.9 € € 1....................................................... 7.15 4.7 6.98 4.1 € € Health service................................................ 9.53 4.2 9.46 4.2 - - 2....................................................... 9.03 8.0 9.03 8.0 € € 3....................................................... 9.52 4.2 9.50 4.3 € € Health aides, except nursing................................ 11.67 14.0 11.67 14.0 € € Nursing aides, orderlies and attendants..................... 9.38 4.0 9.29 4.1 € € 2....................................................... 9.03 8.1 9.03 8.1 € € 3....................................................... 9.48 4.6 9.46 4.8 € € Cleaning and building service................................. 10.37 12.7 8.41 8.7 15.85 12.3 1....................................................... 7.83 8.2 7.71 8.0 € € 2....................................................... 10.73 8.5 9.32 3.5 € € 3....................................................... 11.30 7.8 € € € € Janitors and cleaners....................................... $9.18 9.7 $8.00 8.0 $13.18 5.3 1....................................................... 7.82 8.4 7.68 8.2 € € 2....................................................... 11.81 8.4 € € € € 3....................................................... 11.30 7.8 € € € € Personal service.............................................. 8.81 4.5 8.80 4.9 8.84 6.8 1....................................................... 8.87 6.7 8.95 7.3 € € Attendants, amusement, and recreation facilities............ 7.61 1.9 € € € € Service, n.e.c.............................................. 9.13 6.0 9.13 6.0 € € 1 A classification system including about 480 individual occupations is used to cover all workers in the civilian economy. See appendix B for more information. 2 Each occupation for which data are collected in an establishment is evaluated based on 10 factors, including knowledge, complexity, work environment, etc. 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 appendixes C and D for more information. 3 All workers include full-time and part-time workers. 4 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. 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, and n.e.c. means not elsewhere classified. Overall occupational groups may include data for categories not shown separately. IN THIS SURVEY, THE NONRESPONSE RATE FOR ALL INDUSTRIES AND PRIVATE INDUSTRY EXCEEDED REGULAR SURVEY STANDARDS FOR PUBLICATION. ACCORDINGLY, USERS SHOULD INTERPRET THESE RESULTS WITH THIS LIMITATION IN MIND. Table 4-2. Selected occupations(1) and levels,(2) full-time workers:(3) Mean hourly earnings,(4) private industry and State and local government, National Compensation Survey, Milwaukee-Racine, WI, October 2000 Total Private industry State and local government Occupation and level Relative Relative Relative Mean error(5) Mean error(5) Mean error(5) (percent) (percent) (percent) All................................................................... $17.86 2.1 $17.17 2.5 $21.41 2.4 All excluding sales............................................... 17.93 2.2 17.20 2.6 21.41 2.4 White collar........................................................ 21.20 2.5 20.41 3.2 24.04 2.9 2....................................................... 9.43 6.2 9.10 7.2 € € 3....................................................... 10.81 3.1 10.75 3.3 € € 4....................................................... 12.28 5.8 12.21 6.9 12.66 5.9 5....................................................... 14.33 5.3 14.45 5.9 13.27 4.0 6....................................................... 15.58 2.8 15.79 3.1 14.13 3.1 7....................................................... 18.46 3.6 18.77 4.2 17.08 4.7 8....................................................... 20.25 2.3 20.62 2.6 18.75 2.9 9....................................................... 26.96 2.3 23.92 3.5 29.71 2.4 10........................................................ 23.40 3.0 23.48 3.7 € € 11........................................................ 30.77 2.4 30.22 2.4 33.15 6.8 12........................................................ 31.48 4.3 31.46 4.5 € € 13........................................................ 46.05 5.9 47.87 6.7 € € 14........................................................ 49.50 4.2 49.50 4.2 € € Not able to be leveled.................................... 22.04 19.3 22.54 20.5 € € White collar excluding sales.................................... 21.74 2.7 20.99 3.4 24.04 2.9 2....................................................... 10.00 5.5 9.78 7.6 € € 3....................................................... 10.96 3.5 10.90 3.7 € € 4....................................................... 12.27 4.5 12.15 5.5 12.66 5.9 5....................................................... 13.46 3.0 13.49 3.4 13.27 4.0 6....................................................... 15.54 3.3 15.81 3.7 14.13 3.1 7....................................................... 17.98 2.9 18.22 3.4 17.08 4.7 8....................................................... 20.36 2.4 20.80 2.7 18.75 2.9 9....................................................... 26.85 2.1 23.53 2.6 29.71 2.4 10........................................................ 23.43 3.2 23.53 4.1 € € 11........................................................ 30.47 2.4 29.82 2.4 33.15 6.8 12........................................................ 31.39 4.4 31.35 4.6 € € 13........................................................ 46.05 5.9 47.87 6.7 € € 14........................................................ 49.50 4.2 49.50 4.2 € € Not able to be leveled.................................... 22.04 19.3 22.54 20.5 € € Professional specialty and technical.............................. 25.64 3.4 25.25 5.1 26.33 2.6 Professional specialty.......................................... 27.72 3.7 28.22 6.1 27.09 2.6 7....................................................... 19.06 5.7 20.48 6.2 € € 8....................................................... 20.92 4.0 22.55 4.2 18.43 3.8 9....................................................... 27.34 2.2 23.49 3.7 29.38 2.2 10........................................................ 26.16 3.8 € € € € 11........................................................ 31.97 3.3 31.36 3.6 € € 12........................................................ 25.54 10.4 25.89 10.9 € € Engineers, architects, and surveyors.......................... 28.02 5.2 28.17 5.2 - - 9....................................................... 25.49 4.7 25.49 4.7 € € Industrial engineers........................................ 24.73 4.9 24.73 4.9 € € Mechanical engineers........................................ 26.91 7.6 26.91 7.6 € € Mathematical and computer scientists.......................... $30.53 9.3 $31.72 8.6 - - Computer systems analysts and scientists.................... 27.54 8.6 € € € € Natural scientists............................................ - - - - - - Health related................................................ 20.38 2.7 20.42 3.1 $20.18 4.3 8....................................................... 21.42 6.5 € € € € 9....................................................... 22.37 4.3 22.03 4.4 € € Registered nurses........................................... 20.89 1.7 21.03 1.7 € € 8....................................................... 20.37 4.5 € € € € 9....................................................... 21.13 1.9 21.17 1.9 € € Teachers, college and university.............................. 48.47 13.4 - - 33.58 14.1 Teachers, except college and university....................... 28.85 3.6 - - 29.94 1.5 9....................................................... 29.81 1.5 € € 29.81 1.5 Elementary school teachers.................................. 29.11 2.0 € € 29.18 2.0 9....................................................... 29.10 2.1 € € 29.09 2.1 Secondary school teachers................................... 31.12 1.8 € € 31.10 1.8 9....................................................... 30.75 1.9 € € 30.77 2.0 Librarians, archivists, and curators.......................... - - - - - - Social scientists and urban planners.......................... - - € € - - Social, recreation, and religious workers..................... 17.81 4.7 16.76 6.6 18.12 5.8 9....................................................... 19.62 6.9 € € € € Social workers.............................................. 17.90 5.4 € € 18.12 5.8 9....................................................... 20.74 10.6 € € € € Lawyers and judges............................................ - - € € - - Writers, authors, entertainers, athletes, and professionals, n.e.c...................................................... 27.22 15.4 27.22 15.4 € € Technical....................................................... 18.88 4.7 19.12 5.1 17.06 6.9 5....................................................... 15.09 4.6 15.09 4.6 € € 6....................................................... 15.90 6.0 15.99 6.3 € € 7....................................................... 19.42 8.8 20.18 10.4 € € 8....................................................... 20.68 7.0 20.60 7.2 € € 9....................................................... 24.58 7.4 24.58 7.4 € € Clinical laboratory technologists and technicians........... 15.97 6.1 15.97 6.1 € € Licensed practical nurses................................... 14.56 2.6 14.59 2.9 € € Engineering technicians, n.e.c.............................. 20.88 1.3 € € € € Drafters.................................................... 17.06 16.9 17.06 16.9 € € Executive, administrative, and managerial......................... 27.46 3.2 26.81 3.5 31.07 6.7 7....................................................... 17.82 3.5 17.74 3.7 € € 8....................................................... 19.36 2.6 19.35 3.0 € € 9....................................................... 25.71 6.8 23.15 3.5 € € 10........................................................ 21.64 6.0 € € € € 11........................................................ 30.26 3.2 29.59 3.1 32.64 9.2 12........................................................ 35.34 4.8 34.89 5.1 € € 13........................................................ 43.69 7.6 € € € € Executives, administrators, and managers...................... 30.04 4.7 29.24 5.5 33.08 6.3 9....................................................... 26.76 9.1 22.92 5.0 € € 11........................................................ $29.66 3.0 $28.73 2.9 $32.64 9.2 12........................................................ 35.04 5.9 34.44 6.3 € € Administrators and officials, public administration......... 29.26 8.9 € € 29.26 8.9 Financial managers.......................................... 29.32 9.7 29.32 9.7 € € Administrators, education and related fields................ 38.37 2.7 € € 38.52 2.8 Managers, medicine and health............................... 24.26 11.2 € € € € Managers and administrators, n.e.c.......................... 32.30 7.5 32.40 8.0 € € 12........................................................ 36.22 7.6 36.22 7.6 € € Management related............................................ 23.08 7.3 23.30 7.5 - - 7....................................................... 17.05 3.3 16.87 3.3 € € 8....................................................... 18.64 3.5 18.28 4.0 € € 9....................................................... 23.45 4.6 23.45 4.6 € € Accountants and auditors.................................... 20.30 6.9 20.30 6.9 € € Personnel, training, and labor relations specialists........ 18.25 5.5 18.25 5.5 € € Management related, n.e.c................................... 26.36 11.8 26.36 11.8 € € Sales............................................................. 16.66 8.4 16.66 8.4 € € 4....................................................... 12.33 19.9 12.33 19.9 € € 5....................................................... 18.93 11.7 18.93 11.7 € € 7....................................................... 21.65 14.5 21.65 14.5 € € 8....................................................... 18.96 4.8 18.96 4.8 € € Supervisors, sales.......................................... 14.28 17.3 14.28 17.3 € € Sales representatives, mining, manufacturing, and wholesale. 21.04 15.4 21.04 15.4 € € Sales workers, other commodities............................ 10.03 7.2 10.03 7.2 € € Administrative support, including clerical........................ 13.22 3.8 13.28 4.4 12.88 3.3 2....................................................... 9.99 5.5 9.78 7.6 € € 3....................................................... 10.96 3.5 10.90 3.7 € € 4....................................................... 12.15 4.5 12.15 5.5 12.14 5.5 5....................................................... 13.12 3.1 13.09 3.6 13.27 4.0 6....................................................... 14.68 3.7 15.01 4.6 € € 7....................................................... 16.39 4.2 16.40 5.0 € € Secretaries................................................. 13.52 4.5 13.84 5.8 12.71 4.8 4....................................................... 12.88 7.3 13.11 8.5 € € 5....................................................... 12.87 3.2 € € € € Records clerks, n.e.c....................................... 13.75 2.5 13.75 2.5 € € Bookkeepers, accounting and auditing clerks................. 12.94 4.7 12.34 4.8 € € Mail clerks, except postal service.......................... 11.93 8.2 11.93 8.2 € € Production coordinators..................................... 14.37 4.6 14.37 4.6 € € Traffic, shipping and receiving clerks...................... 12.36 7.1 12.36 7.1 € € Investigators and adjusters, except insurance............... 13.31 4.1 13.31 4.1 € € General office clerks....................................... 11.48 5.1 € € 11.89 4.1 4....................................................... 12.76 4.7 € € 12.85 7.3 Teachers' aides............................................. 10.46 4.9 € € 10.46 4.9 Administrative support, n.e.c............................... 12.87 4.9 12.58 4.8 € € Blue collar......................................................... $15.69 2.9 $15.68 3.1 $15.94 5.8 1....................................................... 9.03 6.5 8.96 6.5 € € 2....................................................... 9.78 5.0 10.07 5.5 € € 3....................................................... 14.10 6.3 13.97 6.7 € € 4....................................................... 15.51 4.6 15.47 4.9 € € 5....................................................... 17.00 3.8 16.97 4.1 17.29 6.2 6....................................................... 18.15 2.7 18.27 3.0 17.43 3.3 7....................................................... 20.90 2.5 20.78 2.6 € € 8....................................................... 23.12 9.3 23.12 9.3 € € 9....................................................... 25.31 5.9 25.31 5.9 € € Precision production, craft, and repair........................... 19.86 2.7 20.02 2.9 18.08 4.5 5....................................................... 15.00 5.6 14.80 6.6 € € 6....................................................... 18.36 3.6 18.46 4.5 € € 7....................................................... 21.40 2.9 21.36 3.0 € € 8....................................................... 23.93 10.1 23.93 10.1 € € 9....................................................... 25.31 5.9 25.31 5.9 € € Industrial machinery repairers.............................. 19.84 6.2 19.84 6.2 € € 7....................................................... 23.53 5.8 23.53 5.8 € € Electricians................................................ 22.99 3.3 23.11 4.0 € € 7....................................................... 22.47 3.8 22.45 5.3 € € Supervisors, production..................................... 20.48 7.1 20.48 7.1 € € 7....................................................... 21.55 8.9 21.55 8.9 € € Tool and die makers......................................... 22.70 2.5 22.70 2.5 € € 7....................................................... 22.91 2.6 22.91 2.6 € € Machinists.................................................. 16.23 5.2 16.23 5.2 € € Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors..................... 13.80 4.5 13.80 4.5 - - 1....................................................... 8.06 6.9 8.06 6.9 € € 2....................................................... 10.31 5.4 10.31 5.4 € € 3....................................................... 14.28 8.4 14.28 8.4 € € 4....................................................... 15.48 5.7 15.48 5.7 € € 5....................................................... 15.51 5.2 15.51 5.2 € € 6....................................................... 17.77 3.3 17.77 3.3 € € 7....................................................... 19.27 4.8 19.27 4.8 € € Lathe and turning machine operators......................... 17.55 8.0 17.55 8.0 € € Punching and stamping press operators....................... 14.52 5.5 14.52 5.5 € € Drilling and boring machine operators....................... 15.14 8.1 15.14 8.1 € € Grinding, abrading, buffing, and polishing machine operators 11.41 9.6 11.41 9.6 € € Numerical control machine operators......................... 15.59 12.4 15.59 12.4 € € 7....................................................... 20.51 3.1 20.51 3.1 € € Printing press operators.................................... 15.85 12.9 15.89 13.0 € € Packaging and filling machine operators..................... 15.88 8.3 15.88 8.3 € € Miscellaneous machine operators, n.e.c...................... 15.37 10.4 15.37 10.4 € € 3....................................................... 11.04 10.2 11.04 10.2 € € Welders and cutters......................................... $14.88 6.8 $14.88 6.8 € € Assemblers.................................................. 12.61 11.3 12.61 11.3 € € 1....................................................... 8.19 8.3 8.19 8.3 € € 2....................................................... 10.95 6.6 10.95 6.6 € € 3....................................................... 18.22 9.4 18.22 9.4 € € Production inspectors, checkers and examiners............... 11.27 7.2 11.27 7.2 € € Transportation and material moving................................ 18.34 3.3 18.26 3.5 - - 3....................................................... 14.68 5.7 13.68 7.2 € € 4....................................................... 16.40 8.5 16.40 8.5 € € 5....................................................... 19.95 3.6 19.95 3.6 € € Truck drivers............................................... 19.50 4.2 19.92 4.1 € € Industrial truck and tractor equipment operators............ 15.88 8.3 15.88 8.3 € € 3....................................................... 13.57 8.4 13.57 8.4 € € Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers............... 11.89 5.0 11.51 5.0 $13.30 12.0 1....................................................... 10.69 6.6 10.53 6.7 € € 2....................................................... 8.98 6.8 9.50 8.1 € € 3....................................................... 12.05 7.1 12.05 7.1 € € 4....................................................... 15.19 4.0 € € € € Groundskeepers and gardeners, except farm................... 14.85 15.2 € € € € Production helpers.......................................... 11.98 9.3 11.98 9.3 € € Stock handlers and baggers.................................. 11.37 7.7 11.37 7.7 € € Laborers, except construction, n.e.c........................ 10.07 6.1 10.52 6.4 9.24 13.6 2....................................................... 8.69 7.6 € € € € Service............................................................. 11.76 6.4 9.19 5.1 17.75 5.1 1....................................................... 8.21 11.7 8.12 11.9 € € 2....................................................... 9.22 6.8 8.83 5.8 € € 3....................................................... 10.14 3.8 9.71 2.7 11.41 8.3 4....................................................... 9.30 4.8 € € € € 5....................................................... 11.80 3.5 € € € € 7....................................................... 18.81 6.1 € € 19.69 6.4 Protective service............................................ 18.85 5.3 - - 19.24 5.3 7....................................................... 18.85 7.4 € € 18.85 7.4 Police and detectives, public service....................... 22.84 1.6 € € 22.84 1.6 Food service.................................................. 8.55 13.4 8.57 14.2 - - 1....................................................... 7.15 22.0 7.12 22.3 € € Other food service........................................... 9.50 4.8 9.60 5.1 € € 1....................................................... 9.26 7.3 € € € € Health service................................................ 9.57 5.3 9.47 5.4 - - 2....................................................... 8.58 8.8 8.58 8.8 € € 3....................................................... 9.83 3.0 9.81 3.1 € € Nursing aides, orderlies and attendants..................... 9.36 5.0 9.24 5.1 € € 2....................................................... 8.58 8.8 8.58 8.8 € € 3....................................................... 9.82 3.4 9.81 3.6 € € Cleaning and building service................................. $11.66 10.7 $9.34 6.1 $16.62 12.1 1....................................................... 8.82 5.4 8.66 5.2 € € 2....................................................... 10.74 8.7 9.27 3.8 € € 3....................................................... 12.01 6.9 € € € € Janitors and cleaners....................................... 10.34 6.4 8.95 4.8 13.82 5.3 1....................................................... 8.85 5.8 8.69 5.6 € € 3....................................................... 12.01 6.9 € € € € Personal service.............................................. $9.38 6.7 $9.33 6.7 - - 1 A classification system including about 480 individual occupations is used to cover all workers in the civilian economy. See appendix B for more information. 2 Each occupation for which data are collected in an establishment is evaluated based on 10 factors, including knowledge, complexity, work environment, etc. 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 appendixes C and D 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 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. 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, and n.e.c. means not elsewhere classified. Overall occupational groups may include data for categories not shown separately. IN THIS SURVEY, THE NONRESPONSE RATE FOR ALL INDUSTRIES AND PRIVATE INDUSTRY EXCEEDED REGULAR SURVEY STANDARDS FOR PUBLICATION. ACCORDINGLY, USERS SHOULD INTERPRET THESE RESULTS WITH THIS LIMITATION IN MIND. Table 4-3. Selected occupations(1) and levels,(2) part-time workers:(3) Mean hourly earnings,(4) private industry and State and local government, National Compensation Survey, Milwaukee-Racine, WI, October 2000 Total Private industry State and local government Occupation and level Relative Relative Relative Mean error(5) Mean error(5) Mean error(5) (percent) (percent) (percent) All................................................................... $9.94 3.8 $9.02 3.8 $15.59 7.2 All excluding sales............................................... 10.44 4.3 9.42 4.5 15.59 7.2 White collar........................................................ 12.99 5.4 11.34 6.0 18.46 8.1 1....................................................... 6.43 5.3 6.36 5.3 € € 2....................................................... 7.77 10.3 7.42 11.8 € € 3....................................................... 8.17 3.5 8.02 3.4 10.11 7.3 4....................................................... 10.42 4.7 10.18 5.5 € € 5....................................................... 13.01 7.1 12.65 12.5 € € 6....................................................... 14.45 4.3 14.80 4.8 € € 7....................................................... 18.71 6.3 19.42 6.0 € € 8....................................................... 21.48 2.9 22.43 3.2 19.75 3.9 9....................................................... 26.63 4.6 24.19 7.1 29.44 3.5 Not able to be leveled.................................... 11.18 7.0 € € 15.16 20.5 White collar excluding sales.................................... 16.26 5.1 15.01 6.4 18.46 8.1 2....................................................... 9.59 1.1 € € € € 3....................................................... 9.91 3.3 9.85 3.4 10.11 7.3 4....................................................... 11.03 4.8 10.93 6.0 € € 5....................................................... 13.13 7.4 € € € € 6....................................................... 14.45 4.3 14.80 4.8 € € 7....................................................... 18.71 6.3 19.42 6.0 € € 8....................................................... 21.48 2.9 22.43 3.2 19.75 3.9 9....................................................... 26.63 4.6 24.19 7.1 29.44 3.5 Not able to be leveled.................................... 11.97 16.6 € € 15.16 20.5 Professional specialty and technical.............................. 19.42 4.5 18.40 5.8 21.37 6.9 Professional specialty.......................................... 21.56 5.0 20.94 6.8 22.41 7.1 7....................................................... 19.17 6.7 € € € € 8....................................................... 21.56 3.0 22.63 3.3 19.75 3.9 9....................................................... 26.87 4.7 24.19 7.1 € € Not able to be leveled.................................... 11.32 10.6 € € € € Natural scientists............................................ - - € € - - Health related................................................ 22.37 3.1 22.51 3.3 - - 8....................................................... 22.19 3.1 22.49 3.4 € € 9....................................................... 24.47 7.2 24.47 7.2 € € Registered nurses........................................... 22.39 3.3 22.55 3.5 € € 8....................................................... 22.19 3.1 22.49 3.4 € € 9....................................................... 24.26 7.8 24.26 7.8 € € Teachers, college and university.............................. 31.86 7.9 - - 31.97 8.2 Other post-secondary teachers............................... 32.34 8.3 € € 32.34 8.3 Teachers, except college and university....................... 17.89 14.7 - - 20.82 8.7 Social, recreation, and religious workers..................... - - - - - - Writers, authors, entertainers, athletes, and professionals, n.e.c...................................................... - - - - - - Technical....................................................... 13.82 4.7 13.85 5.5 - - 6....................................................... 14.80 4.2 € € € € Licensed practical nurses................................... $14.49 2.7 $14.60 3.5 € € Executive, administrative, and managerial......................... - - € € - - Executives, administrators, and managers...................... - - € € - - Management related............................................ - - € € - - Sales............................................................. 7.15 5.1 7.15 5.1 € € 3....................................................... 7.44 2.6 7.44 2.6 € € Sales workers, other commodities............................ 7.34 4.2 7.34 4.2 € € Cashiers.................................................... 6.35 5.0 6.35 5.0 € € Administrative support, including clerical........................ 10.30 4.1 10.00 4.8 $10.91 6.1 2....................................................... 9.60 1.1 € € € € 3....................................................... 9.77 3.3 9.64 3.1 10.11 7.3 4....................................................... 11.03 5.6 10.91 7.5 € € General office clerks....................................... 9.07 7.1 € € € € Teachers' aides............................................. 11.12 7.2 € € 11.12 7.2 Blue collar......................................................... 8.41 5.2 8.46 5.5 7.56 6.0 1....................................................... 7.37 5.6 7.42 5.8 € € 2....................................................... 7.69 3.7 7.68 3.8 € € 3....................................................... 10.30 6.4 11.06 4.2 € € Precision production, craft, and repair........................... - - - - € € Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors..................... 8.18 10.6 8.18 10.6 € € Transportation and material moving................................ - - - - - - Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers............... 7.93 6.4 7.96 6.9 7.51 6.4 1....................................................... 7.33 6.1 7.38 6.4 € € 2....................................................... 7.89 5.0 7.88 5.2 € € 3....................................................... 10.37 7.3 € € € € Groundskeepers and gardeners, except farm................... 7.74 3.9 € € € € Laborers, except construction, n.e.c........................ 6.97 2.4 € € € € Service............................................................. 7.14 4.0 6.94 4.0 9.21 6.3 1....................................................... 6.27 4.9 6.08 5.0 € € 2....................................................... 8.11 11.1 7.97 11.6 € € 3....................................................... 8.90 5.9 8.81 6.8 9.25 9.6 Protective service............................................ - - - - - - Food service.................................................. 6.24 5.1 5.97 5.2 - - 1....................................................... 6.01 7.5 5.83 7.8 € € 2....................................................... 5.72 26.4 € € € € Waiters, waitresses, and bartenders.......................... 3.75 13.9 3.75 13.9 € € 1....................................................... 3.93 16.6 3.93 16.6 € € Waiters and waitresses...................................... $3.58 16.2 $3.58 16.2 € € Other food service........................................... 7.43 5.4 7.16 4.8 € € 1....................................................... 6.96 4.1 6.77 2.3 € € Kitchen workers, food preparation........................... 7.87 10.6 7.87 10.6 € € Food preparation, n.e.c..................................... 7.12 5.1 6.75 2.4 € € 1....................................................... 6.96 4.5 6.75 2.4 € € Health service................................................ 9.42 5.7 9.42 5.7 € € 2....................................................... 10.24 5.3 10.24 5.3 € € 3....................................................... 8.74 8.7 8.74 8.7 € € Nursing aides, orderlies and attendants..................... 9.41 6.0 9.41 6.0 € € 2....................................................... 10.34 5.5 10.34 5.5 € € 3....................................................... 8.71 8.9 8.71 8.9 € € Cleaning and building service................................. 6.89 10.0 - - - - Janitors and cleaners....................................... 6.89 10.0 € € € € Personal service.............................................. 7.62 1.8 7.43 1.9 $8.28 4.2 1....................................................... 7.50 3.4 € € € € Attendants, amusement, and recreation facilities............ 7.61 1.9 € € € € 1 A classification system including about 480 individual occupations is used to cover all workers in the civilian economy. See appendix B for more information. 2 Each occupation for which data are collected in an establishment is evaluated based on 10 factors, including knowledge, complexity, work environment, etc. 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 appendixes C and D 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 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. 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, and n.e.c. means not elsewhere classified. Overall occupational groups may include data for categories not shown separately. IN THIS SURVEY, THE NONRESPONSE RATE FOR ALL INDUSTRIES AND PRIVATE INDUSTRY EXCEEDED REGULAR SURVEY STANDARDS FOR PUBLICATION. ACCORDINGLY, USERS SHOULD INTERPRET THESE RESULTS WITH THIS LIMITATION IN MIND. Table 5-1. Selected worker characteristics: Mean hourly earnings(1) by occupational group,(2) National Compensation Survey, Milwaukee-Racine, WI, October 2000 Private industry and State and local government Occupational group Full-time Part-time Nonunion- Incen- workers(- workers(- Union(4) (4) Time(5) tive(5) 3) 3) Mean All occupations....................................................... $17.86 $9.94 $18.37 $16.04 $16.80 $16.61 All excluding sales............................................. 17.93 10.44 18.54 16.24 17.05 13.96 White collar........................................................ 21.20 12.99 21.20 19.91 20.30 17.58 White-collar excluding sales.................................... 21.74 16.26 22.02 20.99 21.29 - Professional specialty and technical.............................. 25.64 19.42 26.48 24.14 24.89 € Professional specialty.......................................... 27.72 21.56 27.21 26.87 27.00 € Technical....................................................... 18.88 13.82 16.53 18.33 18.17 € Executive, administrative, and managerial......................... 27.46 - 25.18 27.72 27.53 € Sales............................................................. 16.66 7.15 - 13.84 11.95 18.41 Administrative support, including clerical........................ 13.22 10.30 13.75 12.67 12.95 - Blue collar......................................................... 15.69 8.41 17.45 13.13 15.11 14.62 Precision production, craft, and repair........................... 19.86 - 20.60 19.02 19.75 - Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors..................... 13.80 8.18 16.44 11.96 13.75 12.62 Transportation and material moving................................ 18.34 - 18.90 13.51 17.00 € Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers............... 11.89 7.93 13.03 9.22 10.78 - Service............................................................. 11.76 7.14 15.34 8.13 10.27 € B Full-time Part-time Nonunion- Incen- Occupational group workers(- workers(- Union(4) (4) Time(5) tive(5) 3) 3) Relative error(6) (percent) All occupations....................................................... 2.1 3.8 2.4 2.8 2.1 12.0 All excluding sales............................................. 2.2 4.3 2.4 2.9 2.1 12.0 White collar........................................................ 2.5 5.4 3.6 3.1 2.5 14.4 White-collar excluding sales.................................... 2.7 5.1 3.3 3.1 2.5 - Professional specialty and technical.............................. 3.4 4.5 2.6 4.6 3.2 € Professional specialty.......................................... 3.7 5.0 2.5 5.6 3.5 € Technical....................................................... 4.7 4.7 5.0 4.7 4.4 € Executive, administrative, and managerial......................... 3.2 - 17.0 3.2 3.2 € Sales............................................................. 8.4 5.1 - 9.7 9.2 15.8 Administrative support, including clerical........................ 3.8 4.1 3.7 4.5 3.5 - Blue collar......................................................... 2.9 5.2 3.3 3.9 3.1 14.5 Precision production, craft, and repair........................... 2.7 - 2.6 4.5 2.7 - Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors..................... 4.5 10.6 5.4 5.0 4.6 14.3 Transportation and material moving................................ 3.3 - 3.2 12.6 7.5 € Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers............... 5.0 6.4 7.2 4.3 4.9 - Service............................................................. 6.4 4.0 6.4 3.9 5.2 € 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. 2 A classification system including about 480 individual occupations is used to cover all workers in the civilian economy. See appendix B 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 Union workers are those whose wages are determined through collective bargaining. 5 Time workers' wages are based solely on an 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. 6 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. IN THIS SURVEY, THE NONRE- SPONSE RATE FOR ALL INDUSTRIES AND PRIVATE INDUSTRY EXCEEDED REGULAR SURVEY STANDARDS FOR PUBLICATION. ACCORDINGLY, USERS SHOULD INTERPRET THESE RESULTS WITH THIS LIMITATION IN MIND. Table 5-2. Major industry division: Mean hourly earnings(1) by occupational group,(2) private industry, National Compensation Survey, Milwaukee-Racine, WI, October 2000 Full-time and part-time workers Goods-producing indust- Service-producing industries(4) ries(3) Occupational group All pri- vate indus- Trans- Wholesale Finance, tries Con- Manu- portation and insur- Serv- Total Mining struc- fac- Total and pub- retail ance, and ices tion turing lic trade real utilities estate Mean All occupations....................................................... $16.05 - € - - - - - - - All excluding sales............................................. 16.25 - € - - - - - - - White collar........................................................ 19.31 - € - - - - - - - White-collar excluding sales.................................... 20.53 - € - - - - - - - Professional specialty and technical.............................. 24.39 - € - - - - - - - Professional specialty.......................................... 27.34 - € - - - - - - - Technical....................................................... 18.40 - € - - - - - - - Executive, administrative, and managerial......................... 26.81 - € - - - - - - - Sales............................................................. 13.58 - € - - - - - - - Administrative support, including clerical........................ 13.01 - € - - - - - - - Blue collar......................................................... 15.08 - € - - - - - - - Precision production, craft, and repair........................... 19.97 - € - - - - - - - Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors..................... 13.71 - € - - - - - - - Transportation and material moving................................ 16.82 - € - - - - - - - Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers............... 10.41 - € - - - - - - - Service............................................................. 8.33 - € - - - - - - - B Goods-producing indust- Service-producing industries(4) ries(3) All pri- vate Occupational group indus- Trans- Wholesale Finance, tries Con- Manu- portation and insur- Serv- Total Mining struc- fac- Total and pub- retail ance, and ices tion turing lic trade real utilities estate Relative error(5) (percent) All occupations....................................................... 2.4 - € - - - - - - - All excluding sales............................................. 2.5 - € - - - - - - - White collar........................................................ 3.1 - € - - - - - - - White-collar excluding sales.................................... 3.2 - € - - - - - - - Professional specialty and technical.............................. 4.9 - € - - - - - - - Professional specialty.......................................... 5.9 - € - - - - - - - Technical....................................................... 4.8 - € - - - - - - - Executive, administrative, and managerial......................... 3.5 - € - - - - - - - Sales............................................................. 8.7 - € - - - - - - - Administrative support, including clerical........................ 4.2 - € - - - - - - - Blue collar......................................................... 3.2 - € - - - - - - - Precision production, craft, and repair........................... 2.9 - € - - - - - - - Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors..................... 4.5 - € - - - - - - - Transportation and material moving................................ 8.2 - € - - - - - - - Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers............... 4.7 - € - - - - - - - Service............................................................. 3.7 - € - - - - - - - 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. 2 A classification system including about 480 individual occupations is used to cover all workers in the civilian economy. See appendix B for more information. 3 Goods-producing industries include mining, construction, and manufacturing. 4 Service-producing industries include transportation and public utilities; wholesale and retail trade; finance, insurance, and real estate; and services. 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. IN THIS SURVEY, THE NONRESPONSE RATE FOR ALL INDUS- TRIES AND PRIVATE INDUSTRY EXCEEDED REGULAR SURVEY STANDARDS FOR PUBLICATION. ACCORDINGLY, USERS SHOULD INTERPRET THESE RESULTS WITH THIS LIMITATION IN MIND. Table 5-3. Establishment employment size: Mean hourly earnings(1) by occupational group,(2) private industry, National Compensation Survey, Milwaukee-Racine, WI, October 2000 Full-time and part-time workers 100 workers or more Occupational group All 50 - 99 private workers(- industry 3) 100 - 499 500 workers Total workers workers or more Mean All occupations....................................................... $16.05 $13.59 $16.77 $14.75 $19.45 All excluding sales............................................. 16.25 13.62 16.98 14.82 19.69 White collar........................................................ 19.31 16.47 19.93 17.55 22.33 White-collar excluding sales.................................... 20.53 18.00 20.95 18.55 23.00 Professional specialty and technical.............................. 24.39 22.36 24.64 21.16 26.40 Professional specialty.......................................... 27.34 22.16 28.09 24.30 29.79 Technical....................................................... 18.40 - 18.01 16.34 19.07 Executive, administrative, and managerial......................... 26.81 24.40 27.31 24.51 30.42 Sales............................................................. 13.58 13.31 13.71 13.93 - Administrative support, including clerical........................ 13.01 11.14 13.38 13.45 13.30 Blue collar......................................................... 15.08 14.57 15.22 14.03 16.97 Precision production, craft, and repair........................... 19.97 17.62 20.90 20.70 21.16 Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors..................... 13.71 11.24 14.33 13.27 15.85 Transportation and material moving................................ 16.82 - 15.70 12.91 18.19 Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers............... 10.41 10.94 10.33 9.76 11.80 Service............................................................. 8.33 7.61 8.84 8.59 9.73 B Full-time and part-time workers 100 workers or more Occupational group All 50 - 99 private workers(- industry 3) 100 - 499 500 workers Total workers workers or more Relative error(4) (percent) All occupations....................................................... 2.4 6.2 2.7 3.9 3.3 All excluding sales............................................. 2.5 6.4 2.8 4.0 3.4 White collar........................................................ 3.1 10.4 3.1 4.1 4.3 White-collar excluding sales.................................... 3.2 11.9 3.1 3.7 4.4 Professional specialty and technical.............................. 4.9 17.5 5.0 5.1 6.6 Professional specialty.......................................... 5.9 22.1 5.7 4.4 7.5 Technical....................................................... 4.8 - 5.0 8.6 6.0 Executive, administrative, and managerial......................... 3.5 7.6 4.0 4.2 5.2 Sales............................................................. 8.7 16.7 10.1 12.6 - Administrative support, including clerical........................ 4.2 6.7 4.3 8.0 4.2 Blue collar......................................................... 3.2 7.8 3.7 4.6 5.0 Precision production, craft, and repair........................... 2.9 4.8 2.8 4.1 3.7 Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors..................... 4.5 12.1 4.4 5.0 7.0 Transportation and material moving................................ 8.2 - 9.7 13.7 5.7 Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers............... 4.7 10.6 5.1 6.1 7.5 Service............................................................. 3.7 5.4 5.6 7.0 2.3 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. 2 A classification system including about 480 individual occupations is used to cover all workers in the civilian economy. See appendix B for more information. 3 Establishments classified with 50-99 workers may contain establishments with fewer than 50 due to staff reductions between survey sampling and collection. 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. IN THIS SURVEY, THE NONRESPONSE RATE FOR ALL INDUSTRIES AND PRIVATE INDUSTRY EXCEEDED REGULAR SURVEY STANDARDS FOR PUBLICATION. ACCORD- INGLY, USERS SHOULD INTERPRET THESE RESULTS WITH THIS LIMITATION IN MIND. Table 6-1. Hourly wage percentiles for establishment jobs,(1) all workers:(2) Selected occupations, all industries, National Compensation Survey, Milwaukee-Racine, WI, October 2000 Occupation(3) 10 25 Median 75 90 50 All............................................... $7.72 $10.00 $14.97 $21.00 $27.95 All excluding sales........................... 8.00 10.26 15.14 21.18 28.42 White collar.................................... 9.57 12.09 17.78 25.93 32.82 White collar excluding sales................ 10.45 13.20 18.98 27.16 34.03 Professional specialty and technical.......... 14.45 18.08 22.28 29.38 35.00 Professional specialty...................... 15.65 19.97 25.38 31.15 37.92 Engineers, architects, and surveyors...... 22.39 23.61 27.43 29.66 34.93 Industrial engineers.................... 19.90 23.35 23.61 27.43 29.66 Mechanical engineers.................... 20.50 23.63 26.44 27.77 34.93 Mathematical and computer scientists...... 21.63 21.75 29.78 36.63 46.72 Computer systems analysts and scientists 15.65 25.38 28.79 29.78 35.49 Natural scientists........................ - - - - - Health related............................ 15.17 19.00 20.71 22.00 26.78 Registered nurses....................... 19.12 19.88 21.16 22.00 23.97 Teachers, college and university.......... 18.84 32.96 44.13 51.83 92.28 Other post-secondary teachers........... 17.89 32.96 32.96 44.13 47.95 Teachers, except college and university... 18.27 28.42 29.37 31.15 32.44 Elementary school teachers.............. 25.10 28.42 28.84 30.73 31.96 Secondary school teachers............... 28.72 29.38 31.15 32.44 34.03 Teachers, n.e.c......................... 20.59 29.49 29.49 31.17 33.62 Librarians, archivists, and curators...... - - - - - Social scientists and urban planners...... - - - - - Social, recreation, and religious workers. 14.45 14.45 18.46 19.21 20.01 Social workers.......................... 14.45 14.45 18.93 19.92 20.01 Lawyers and judges........................ - - - - - Writers, authors, entertainers, athletes, and professionals, n.e.c............... 14.24 17.59 21.20 31.93 52.08 Athletes................................ 13.05 15.50 17.59 52.08 52.08 Technical................................... 13.21 14.07 17.22 21.70 26.65 Clinical laboratory technologists and technicians.......................... 10.90 12.55 16.43 18.54 19.52 Licensed practical nurses............... 13.30 13.93 14.76 15.51 15.66 Engineering technicians, n.e.c.......... 17.22 17.22 21.95 23.71 23.71 Drafters................................ 13.50 13.50 13.50 15.14 35.00 Executive, administrative, and managerial..... 16.83 19.23 25.00 32.81 41.59 Executives, administrators, and managers.. 19.23 22.69 26.92 35.58 42.06 Administrators and officials, public administration....................... 23.83 23.83 24.00 32.48 38.14 Financial managers...................... 19.23 21.63 26.92 31.72 42.26 Administrators, education and related fields............................... 36.40 37.75 39.76 39.76 39.80 Managers, medicine and health........... 17.74 20.11 21.00 27.88 40.12 Managers and administrators, n.e.c...... 21.00 24.46 31.25 36.00 45.79 Management related........................ 15.67 16.77 18.86 25.27 39.53 Accountants and auditors................ 13.15 19.86 20.20 23.87 26.21 Personnel, training, and labor relations specialists.......................... 16.25 16.38 16.77 20.25 22.67 Management related, n.e.c............... 17.02 18.55 19.22 39.53 41.93 Sales......................................... $5.81 $7.65 $10.63 $17.65 $23.07 Supervisors, sales...................... 7.75 8.19 10.63 17.43 22.52 Sales representatives, mining, manufacturing, and wholesale......... 12.01 16.00 17.78 19.95 36.05 Sales workers, other commodities........ 5.52 7.54 7.68 8.90 11.41 Cashiers................................ 5.54 5.81 6.75 7.78 9.95 Administrative support, including clerical.... 9.57 10.30 12.09 14.70 17.41 Secretaries............................. 10.29 11.39 12.73 14.34 17.30 Information clerks, n.e.c............... 11.06 11.70 14.23 14.23 15.39 Records clerks, n.e.c................... 13.04 13.18 13.28 14.84 15.09 Bookkeepers, accounting and auditing clerks............................... 10.40 10.50 12.25 14.71 15.10 Mail clerks, except postal service...... 10.25 10.25 11.03 11.54 15.88 Production coordinators................. 12.70 12.70 13.44 15.58 17.25 Traffic, shipping and receiving clerks.. 9.77 11.00 12.12 12.53 16.60 Investigators and adjusters, except insurance............................ 11.21 11.50 11.70 15.07 16.19 General office clerks................... 8.00 10.00 10.89 11.90 13.04 Teachers' aides......................... 9.32 9.63 10.30 12.70 12.97 Administrative support, n.e.c........... 8.50 10.70 12.10 14.90 17.21 Blue collar..................................... 7.88 10.01 14.69 19.32 22.64 Precision production, craft, and repair....... 13.60 16.23 19.40 22.64 25.56 Industrial machinery repairers.......... 13.60 16.50 18.92 23.72 26.92 Electricians............................ 20.78 21.04 22.58 25.39 26.92 Supervisors, production................. 15.19 16.25 19.30 21.63 27.95 Tool and die makers..................... 19.77 20.94 23.22 24.03 25.00 Machinists.............................. 12.55 13.50 16.62 19.00 19.60 Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors. 7.98 9.85 13.12 16.70 21.21 Lathe and turning machine operators..... 11.63 13.34 19.60 21.51 22.42 Punching and stamping press operators... 10.17 13.70 14.59 16.21 17.03 Drilling and boring machine operators... 11.83 11.91 14.84 17.60 21.51 Grinding, abrading, buffing, and polishing machine operators.......... 8.55 8.63 9.50 14.20 14.97 Numerical control machine operators..... 10.48 11.49 14.61 20.19 21.51 Printing press operators................ 8.16 12.35 15.16 20.96 21.41 Packaging and filling machine operators. 9.17 11.15 16.95 18.53 20.60 Miscellaneous machine operators, n.e.c.. 9.27 11.25 14.82 19.58 22.34 Welders and cutters..................... 12.93 13.12 13.12 18.70 19.40 Assemblers.............................. 7.00 8.87 11.68 15.75 22.71 Miscellaneous hand working, n.e.c....... 6.69 8.40 8.67 23.63 23.63 Production inspectors, checkers and examiners............................ 9.26 9.90 9.90 13.36 13.70 Transportation and material moving............ 10.00 14.00 18.12 20.53 22.95 Truck drivers........................... 15.81 17.98 20.53 20.53 21.18 Bus drivers............................. 10.00 10.00 10.00 18.65 18.65 Industrial truck and tractor equipment operators............................ $9.57 $12.01 $14.15 $19.58 $22.95 Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers................................... 6.53 7.50 9.90 13.98 16.12 Groundskeepers and gardeners, except farm................................. 7.75 8.47 11.11 20.05 20.05 Production helpers...................... 8.47 9.43 12.81 13.70 18.29 Stock handlers and baggers.............. 6.18 6.95 8.25 11.45 13.62 Freight, stock, and material handlers, n.e.c................................ 5.54 9.67 10.35 13.99 15.45 Hand packers and packagers.............. 8.40 10.01 10.50 12.43 12.45 Laborers, except construction, n.e.c.... 6.79 6.79 8.30 9.90 15.35 Service......................................... 5.78 7.44 9.21 10.96 17.98 Protective service........................ 10.85 12.78 20.48 23.53 23.77 Police and detectives, public service... 21.93 21.93 22.22 23.62 23.77 Food service.............................. 2.33 6.03 7.44 9.90 10.50 Waiters, waitresses, and bartenders...... 2.33 2.33 2.60 5.18 5.93 Waiters and waitresses.................. 2.33 2.33 2.50 5.18 5.18 Other food service....................... 6.50 6.50 8.06 10.00 10.50 Cooks................................... 7.44 8.33 9.00 10.00 10.04 Kitchen workers, food preparation....... 6.50 8.07 10.26 10.50 10.50 Food preparation, n.e.c................. 6.03 6.50 7.00 8.06 9.33 Health service............................ 7.15 8.74 9.46 10.12 11.05 Health aides, except nursing............ 8.75 9.49 10.12 16.83 16.83 Nursing aides, orderlies and attendants. 7.15 8.64 9.25 10.07 11.04 Cleaning and building service............. 5.78 7.15 8.98 12.62 17.25 Janitors and cleaners................... 5.78 7.00 8.50 11.12 13.86 Personal service.......................... 7.59 7.60 8.41 9.43 10.96 Attendants, amusement, and recreation facilities........................... 6.45 6.50 7.60 8.23 9.00 Service, n.e.c.......................... 8.41 8.41 8.41 9.75 10.96 1 Percentiles are calculated from average hourly wages for sampled establishment jobs within each occupation. The percentiles describe the distribution of an occupation's employment by the average wage rates for its jobs. For example, at the 10th percentile hourly wage for an occupation, one-tenth of the occupation's employment are found in sampled establishment jobs whose average wages are the same or less, and nine-tenths are in jobs averaging the same or more. The calculations of the 25th, 50th, 75th, 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, holidays, nonproduction bonuses, and tips. 2 All workers include full-time and part-time workers. 3 A classification system including about 480 individual occupations is used to cover all workers in the civilian economy. See appendix B for more information. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria. IN THIS SURVEY, THE NONRESPONSE RATE FOR ALL INDUSTRIES AND PRIVATE INDUSTRY EXCEEDED REGULAR SURVEY STAN- DARDS FOR PUBLICATION. ACCORDINGLY, USERS SHOULD INTERPRET THESE RESULTS WITH THIS LIMITATION IN MIND. Table 6-2. Hourly wage percentiles for establishment jobs,(1) all workers:(2) Selected occupations, private industry, National Compensation Survey, Milwaukee-Racine, WI, October 2000 Private industry Occupation(3) 10 25 Median 75 90 50 All............................................... $7.54 $9.85 $14.20 $20.11 $25.72 All excluding sales........................... 7.72 9.94 14.37 20.46 25.87 White collar.................................... 9.02 11.56 16.71 23.56 32.31 White collar excluding sales................ 10.25 12.55 18.04 24.94 34.75 Professional specialty and technical.......... 13.50 17.22 21.63 27.50 37.39 Professional specialty...................... 15.01 19.90 23.35 29.78 45.10 Engineers, architects, and surveyors...... 23.35 23.63 27.52 29.66 34.93 Industrial engineers.................... 19.90 23.35 23.61 27.43 29.66 Mechanical engineers.................... 20.50 23.63 26.44 27.77 34.93 Mathematical and computer scientists...... 21.75 25.38 29.78 36.63 46.72 Natural scientists........................ - - - - - Health related............................ 15.17 19.12 21.16 22.28 26.88 Registered nurses....................... 19.12 20.03 21.57 22.28 24.14 Teachers, college and university.......... - - - - - Teachers, except college and university... - - - - - Librarians, archivists, and curators...... - - - - - Social, recreation, and religious workers. 13.07 14.20 18.46 18.46 18.46 Writers, authors, entertainers, athletes, and professionals, n.e.c............... 14.24 17.59 21.20 31.93 52.08 Technical................................... 13.21 13.96 17.22 21.70 26.65 Clinical laboratory technologists and technicians.......................... 10.90 12.55 16.43 18.54 19.52 Licensed practical nurses............... 13.30 13.71 14.76 15.51 15.96 Drafters................................ 13.50 13.50 13.50 15.14 35.00 Executive, administrative, and managerial..... 16.40 19.23 24.85 31.72 41.92 Executives, administrators, and managers.. 19.23 21.00 26.45 32.36 42.26 Financial managers...................... 19.23 21.63 26.92 31.72 42.26 Managers and administrators, n.e.c...... 21.00 23.72 31.25 36.00 45.79 Management related........................ 15.67 16.40 19.07 26.15 39.53 Accountants and auditors................ 13.15 19.86 20.20 23.87 26.21 Personnel, training, and labor relations specialists.......................... 16.25 16.38 16.77 20.25 22.67 Management related, n.e.c............... 17.02 18.55 19.22 39.53 41.93 Sales......................................... 5.81 7.65 10.63 17.65 23.07 Supervisors, sales...................... 7.75 8.19 10.63 17.43 22.52 Sales representatives, mining, manufacturing, and wholesale......... 12.01 16.00 17.78 19.95 36.05 Sales workers, other commodities........ 5.52 7.54 7.68 8.90 11.41 Cashiers................................ 5.54 5.81 6.75 7.78 9.95 Administrative support, including clerical.... 9.57 10.29 12.00 14.74 18.07 Secretaries............................. 10.45 11.54 12.41 15.38 19.94 Information clerks, n.e.c............... 11.06 11.70 14.23 14.23 15.39 Records clerks, n.e.c................... 13.04 13.18 13.28 14.84 15.09 Bookkeepers, accounting and auditing clerks............................... $8.68 $10.40 $12.00 $13.60 $14.71 Mail clerks, except postal service...... 10.25 10.25 11.03 11.54 15.88 Production coordinators................. 12.70 12.70 13.44 15.58 17.25 Traffic, shipping and receiving clerks.. 9.77 11.00 12.12 12.53 16.60 Investigators and adjusters, except insurance............................ 11.21 11.50 11.70 15.07 16.19 General office clerks................... 7.50 8.00 10.00 11.90 12.93 Administrative support, n.e.c........... 8.50 10.50 11.83 14.74 16.71 Blue collar..................................... 8.00 10.01 14.44 19.44 22.64 Precision production, craft, and repair....... 13.52 16.23 19.67 23.22 25.76 Industrial machinery repairers.......... 13.60 16.50 18.92 23.72 26.92 Electricians............................ 20.78 21.04 21.96 25.39 26.92 Supervisors, production................. 15.19 16.25 19.30 21.63 27.95 Tool and die makers..................... 19.77 20.94 23.22 24.03 25.00 Machinists.............................. 12.55 13.50 16.62 19.00 19.60 Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors. 7.98 9.85 13.12 16.70 21.21 Lathe and turning machine operators..... 11.63 13.34 19.60 21.51 22.42 Punching and stamping press operators... 10.17 13.70 14.59 16.21 17.03 Drilling and boring machine operators... 11.83 11.91 14.84 17.60 21.51 Grinding, abrading, buffing, and polishing machine operators.......... 8.55 8.63 9.50 14.20 14.97 Numerical control machine operators..... 10.48 11.49 14.61 20.19 21.51 Printing press operators................ 8.16 12.35 15.16 20.96 21.41 Packaging and filling machine operators. 9.17 11.15 16.95 18.53 20.60 Miscellaneous machine operators, n.e.c.. 9.27 11.25 14.82 19.58 22.34 Welders and cutters..................... 12.93 13.12 13.12 18.70 19.40 Assemblers.............................. 7.00 8.87 11.68 15.75 22.71 Miscellaneous hand working, n.e.c....... 6.69 8.40 8.67 23.63 23.63 Production inspectors, checkers and examiners............................ 9.26 9.90 9.90 13.36 13.70 Transportation and material moving............ 10.00 12.48 18.12 20.53 22.15 Truck drivers........................... 16.86 20.53 20.53 21.18 21.18 Industrial truck and tractor equipment operators............................ 9.57 12.01 14.15 19.58 22.95 Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers................................... 6.50 7.50 9.90 12.81 15.45 Production helpers...................... 8.47 9.43 12.81 13.70 18.29 Stock handlers and baggers.............. 6.18 6.95 8.25 11.45 13.62 Freight, stock, and material handlers, n.e.c................................ 5.54 9.67 10.35 13.99 15.45 Hand packers and packagers.............. 8.40 10.01 10.50 12.43 12.45 Laborers, except construction, n.e.c.... 6.79 6.79 9.17 9.90 10.06 Service......................................... $5.78 $7.00 $8.41 $9.90 $10.91 Protective service........................ - - - - - Food service.............................. 2.33 5.50 7.00 9.90 10.50 Waiters, waitresses, and bartenders...... 2.33 2.33 2.60 5.18 5.93 Waiters and waitresses.................. 2.33 2.33 2.50 5.18 5.18 Other food service....................... 6.50 6.50 8.00 10.04 10.50 Cooks................................... 7.44 8.33 9.00 10.00 10.04 Kitchen workers, food preparation....... 6.50 10.00 10.50 10.50 10.50 Food preparation, n.e.c................. 6.03 6.50 6.81 7.75 8.50 Health service............................ 7.15 8.64 9.46 10.07 11.04 Health aides, except nursing............ 8.75 9.49 10.12 16.83 16.83 Nursing aides, orderlies and attendants. 7.15 8.64 9.25 9.94 11.04 Cleaning and building service............. 5.78 7.00 8.08 9.26 11.12 Janitors and cleaners................... 5.78 5.78 7.72 8.98 10.02 Personal service.......................... 7.50 7.59 8.41 9.43 10.96 Service, n.e.c.......................... 8.41 8.41 8.41 9.75 10.96 1 Percentiles are calculated from average hourly wages for sampled establishment jobs within each occupation. The percentiles describe the distribution of an occupation's employment by the average wage rates for its jobs. For example, at the 10th percentile hourly wage for an occupation, one-tenth of the occupation's employment are found in sampled establishment jobs whose average wages are the same or less, and nine-tenths are in jobs averaging the same or more. The calculations of the 25th, 50th, 75th, 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, holidays, nonproduction bonuses, and tips. 2 All workers include full-time and part-time workers. 3 A classification system including about 480 individual occupations is used to cover all workers in the civilian economy. See appendix B for more information. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria, and n.e.c. means not elsewhere classified. Overall occupational groups may include data for categories not shown separately. IN THIS SURVEY, THE NONRESPONSE RATE FOR ALL INDUSTRIES AND PRIVATE INDUSTRY EXCEEDED REGULAR SURVEY STANDARDS FOR PUBLICATION. ACCORDINGLY, USERS SHOULD INTERPRET THESE RESULTS WITH THIS LIMITATION IN MIND. Table 6-3. Hourly wage percentiles for establishment jobs,(1) all workers:(2) Selected occupations, State and local government, National Compensation Survey, Milwaukee-Racine, WI, October 2000 State and local government Occupation(3) 10 25 Median 75 90 50 All............................................... $10.12 $14.10 $18.98 $28.82 $31.96 All excluding sales........................... 10.12 14.10 18.98 28.82 31.96 White collar.................................... 11.39 14.79 23.14 29.98 33.62 White collar excluding sales................ 11.39 14.79 23.14 29.98 33.62 Professional specialty and technical.......... 15.16 19.92 28.84 31.15 32.82 Professional specialty...................... 16.43 20.01 28.84 31.15 32.96 Engineers, architects, and surveyors...... - - - - - Mathematical and computer scientists...... - - - - - Natural scientists........................ - - - - - Health related............................ 17.12 18.98 19.97 20.47 26.78 Teachers, college and university.......... 17.89 18.84 32.96 44.13 44.13 Other post-secondary teachers........... 17.89 32.96 32.96 44.13 47.95 Teachers, except college and university... 25.10 28.84 29.38 31.17 32.44 Elementary school teachers.............. 25.10 28.42 28.84 30.73 31.96 Secondary school teachers............... 28.72 29.38 31.15 32.44 34.03 Teachers, n.e.c......................... 20.59 29.49 29.49 31.17 33.62 Librarians, archivists, and curators...... - - - - - Social scientists and urban planners...... - - - - - Social, recreation, and religious workers. 14.45 14.45 18.93 19.92 20.01 Social workers.......................... 14.45 14.79 19.21 19.92 20.01 Lawyers and judges........................ - - - - - Writers, authors, entertainers, athletes, and professionals, n.e.c............... - - - - - Technical................................... 13.93 14.64 15.16 21.59 21.95 Executive, administrative, and managerial..... 18.82 23.83 30.49 38.83 39.80 Executives, administrators, and managers.. 23.83 24.00 36.40 39.76 40.12 Administrators and officials, public administration....................... 23.83 23.83 24.00 32.48 38.14 Administrators, education and related fields............................... 36.40 37.75 39.76 39.76 39.80 Management related........................ - - - - - Administrative support, including clerical.... 9.63 10.82 12.33 14.10 15.88 Secretaries............................. 9.73 11.39 13.23 13.65 14.88 General office clerks................... 10.19 10.88 11.49 11.53 14.70 Teachers' aides......................... 9.32 9.63 10.30 12.70 12.97 Blue collar..................................... 6.92 12.82 16.09 18.51 20.05 Precision production, craft, and repair....... 16.09 16.09 18.51 18.58 22.58 Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors. - - - - - Transportation and material moving............ 15.81 15.81 17.69 24.96 24.96 Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers................................... $6.89 $7.03 $15.22 $16.12 $20.05 Groundskeepers and gardeners, except farm................................. 8.16 8.47 15.54 20.05 20.05 Laborers, except construction, n.e.c.... 6.67 6.89 7.88 7.88 17.50 Service......................................... 9.33 11.47 15.83 22.25 23.70 Protective service........................ 11.39 15.83 20.48 23.53 23.77 Police and detectives, public service... 21.93 21.93 22.22 23.62 23.77 Food service.............................. 8.07 8.07 9.13 9.33 11.89 Other food service....................... 8.07 8.07 9.13 9.33 11.89 Health service............................ - - - - - Cleaning and building service............. $9.46 $12.62 $13.91 $22.29 $22.29 Janitors and cleaners................... 9.46 12.62 12.95 13.91 16.09 Personal service.......................... 7.60 7.60 8.23 10.95 11.39 1 Percentiles are calculated from average hourly wages for sampled establishment jobs within each occupation. The percentiles describe the distribution of an occupation's employment by the average wage rates for its jobs. For example, at the 10th percentile hourly wage for an occupation, one-tenth of the occupation's employment are found in sampled establishment jobs whose average wages are the same or less, and nine-tenths are in jobs averaging the same or more. The calculations of the 25th, 50th, 75th, 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, holidays, nonproduction bonuses, and tips. 2 All workers include full-time and part-time workers. 3 A classification system including about 480 individual occupations is used to cover all workers in the civilian economy. See appendix B for more information. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria, and n.e.c. means not elsewhere classified. Overall occupational groups may include data for categories not shown separately. IN THIS SURVEY, THE NONRESPONSE RATE FOR ALL INDUSTRIES AND PRIVATE INDUSTRY EXCEEDED REGULAR SURVEY STANDARDS FOR PUBLICATION. ACCORDINGLY, USERS SHOULD INTERPRET THESE RESULTS WITH THIS LIMITATION IN MIND. Table 6-4. Hourly wage percentiles for establishment jobs,(1) full-time workers:(2) Selected occupations, all industries, National Compensation Survey, Milwaukee-Racine, WI, October 2000 Occupation(3) 10 25 Median 75 90 50 All............................................... $9.17 $11.40 $16.09 $21.81 $28.84 All excluding sales........................... 9.21 11.49 16.07 21.94 28.84 White collar.................................... 10.45 13.22 18.81 26.92 34.65 White collar excluding sales................ 10.89 13.50 19.23 27.91 34.93 Professional specialty and technical.......... 14.76 18.48 23.63 29.56 36.63 Professional specialty...................... 15.68 20.03 27.50 31.15 40.78 Engineers, architects, and surveyors...... 22.39 23.61 27.43 29.66 34.93 Industrial engineers.................... 19.90 23.35 23.61 27.43 29.66 Mechanical engineers.................... 20.50 23.63 26.44 27.77 34.93 Mathematical and computer scientists...... 21.63 21.75 29.78 36.63 46.72 Computer systems analysts and scientists 15.65 25.38 28.79 29.78 35.49 Natural scientists........................ - - - - - Health related............................ 15.01 18.98 19.97 21.94 26.78 Registered nurses....................... 19.12 19.88 21.16 21.94 22.29 Teachers, college and university.......... 18.84 40.06 45.00 51.83 92.28 Teachers, except college and university... 25.10 28.84 29.38 31.17 32.44 Elementary school teachers.............. 25.10 28.84 28.84 30.73 31.96 Secondary school teachers............... 28.72 29.38 31.15 32.44 34.03 Librarians, archivists, and curators...... - - - - - Social scientists and urban planners...... - - - - - Social, recreation, and religious workers. 14.45 14.45 18.46 19.92 20.01 Social workers.......................... 14.45 14.45 18.93 19.92 20.01 Lawyers and judges........................ - - - - - Writers, authors, entertainers, athletes, and professionals, n.e.c............... 14.24 17.59 21.20 31.93 52.08 Technical................................... 13.50 14.76 17.88 21.95 26.65 Clinical laboratory technologists and technicians.......................... 12.55 13.21 16.43 18.54 19.52 Licensed practical nurses............... 13.30 13.30 14.99 15.51 15.66 Engineering technicians, n.e.c.......... 17.22 17.22 21.95 23.71 23.71 Drafters................................ 13.50 13.50 13.50 15.14 35.00 Executive, administrative, and managerial..... 16.77 19.23 25.00 32.81 41.59 Executives, administrators, and managers.. 19.23 22.69 26.92 35.58 42.06 Administrators and officials, public administration....................... 23.83 23.83 24.00 32.48 38.14 Financial managers...................... 19.23 21.63 26.92 31.72 42.26 Administrators, education and related fields............................... 36.40 36.40 38.83 39.76 39.80 Managers, medicine and health........... 17.74 20.11 21.00 27.88 40.12 Managers and administrators, n.e.c...... 21.00 24.46 31.25 36.00 45.79 Management related........................ 15.67 16.77 19.07 25.27 39.53 Accountants and auditors................ 13.15 19.86 20.20 23.87 26.21 Personnel, training, and labor relations specialists.......................... 16.25 16.38 16.77 20.25 22.67 Management related, n.e.c............... 17.02 18.55 19.22 39.53 41.93 Sales......................................... 7.78 9.71 16.21 20.06 25.72 Supervisors, sales...................... 7.75 8.19 10.63 17.43 22.52 Sales representatives, mining, manufacturing, and wholesale......... $12.01 $16.00 $17.78 $19.95 $36.05 Sales workers, other commodities........ 8.72 8.72 8.90 11.41 14.18 Administrative support, including clerical.... 9.57 10.60 12.12 14.84 17.75 Secretaries............................. 10.29 11.39 12.41 14.23 17.30 Records clerks, n.e.c................... 13.04 13.18 13.28 14.84 15.09 Bookkeepers, accounting and auditing clerks............................... 10.40 10.50 12.25 14.86 15.10 Mail clerks, except postal service...... 10.25 10.25 11.03 11.54 15.88 Production coordinators................. 12.70 12.70 13.44 15.58 17.25 Traffic, shipping and receiving clerks.. 9.77 11.00 12.12 12.53 16.60 Investigators and adjusters, except insurance............................ 10.50 11.21 14.33 15.07 16.19 General office clerks................... 8.00 10.23 11.49 12.33 13.04 Teachers' aides......................... 8.93 9.32 10.30 11.32 12.70 Administrative support, n.e.c........... 8.50 10.70 12.55 14.90 17.21 Blue collar..................................... 8.87 11.37 15.45 19.65 22.71 Precision production, craft, and repair....... 13.66 16.23 19.44 22.64 25.56 Industrial machinery repairers.......... 13.60 16.50 18.92 23.72 26.92 Electricians............................ 20.78 21.04 22.58 25.39 26.92 Supervisors, production................. 15.19 16.25 19.30 21.63 27.95 Tool and die makers..................... 19.77 20.94 23.22 24.03 25.00 Machinists.............................. 12.55 13.50 16.62 19.00 19.60 Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors. 8.27 9.85 13.12 16.76 21.21 Lathe and turning machine operators..... 11.63 13.34 19.60 21.51 22.42 Punching and stamping press operators... 10.17 13.70 14.59 16.21 17.03 Drilling and boring machine operators... 11.83 11.91 14.84 17.60 21.51 Grinding, abrading, buffing, and polishing machine operators.......... 8.55 8.63 9.50 14.20 14.97 Numerical control machine operators..... 10.48 11.49 14.61 20.19 21.51 Printing press operators................ 8.16 12.35 15.16 20.96 21.41 Packaging and filling machine operators. 9.17 14.59 16.95 18.53 20.60 Miscellaneous machine operators, n.e.c.. 9.27 11.25 14.82 19.58 22.34 Welders and cutters..................... 12.93 13.12 13.12 18.70 19.40 Assemblers.............................. 7.00 8.87 11.91 15.75 22.71 Production inspectors, checkers and examiners............................ 9.26 9.90 9.90 13.36 13.70 Transportation and material moving............ 12.93 15.82 18.65 20.53 24.02 Truck drivers........................... 15.81 17.98 20.53 20.53 21.18 Industrial truck and tractor equipment operators............................ 9.82 12.48 14.32 19.58 22.95 Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers................................... 6.92 9.17 10.50 15.22 17.50 Groundskeepers and gardeners, except farm................................. 9.50 11.11 15.54 20.05 20.05 Production helpers...................... $8.47 $9.43 $12.81 $13.70 $18.29 Stock handlers and baggers.............. 6.95 9.18 11.45 13.62 14.15 Laborers, except construction, n.e.c.... 6.89 7.88 9.90 9.90 16.00 Service......................................... 7.15 8.41 10.00 13.12 22.18 Protective service........................ 11.39 15.83 20.48 23.53 23.77 Police and detectives, public service... 21.93 21.93 22.22 23.62 23.77 Food service.............................. 2.33 7.44 9.00 10.40 10.50 Waiters, waitresses, and bartenders...... - - - - - Other food service....................... 7.44 8.07 9.90 10.40 10.50 Health service............................ 7.15 9.21 9.46 10.07 11.04 Nursing aides, orderlies and attendants. 7.15 8.93 9.25 10.07 11.04 Cleaning and building service............. 7.72 8.20 9.46 13.91 22.29 Janitors and cleaners................... 7.03 7.72 9.46 12.62 13.91 Personal service.......................... 8.41 8.41 8.41 10.80 12.42 1 Percentiles are calculated from average hourly wages for sampled establishment jobs within each occupation. The percentiles describe the distribution of an occupation's employment by the average wage rates for its jobs. For example, at the 10th percentile hourly wage for an occupation, one-tenth of the occupation's employment are found in sampled establishment jobs whose average wages are the same or less, and nine-tenths are in jobs averaging the same or more. The calculations of the 25th, 50th, 75th, 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, holidays, nonproduction bonuses, and tips. 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 A classification system including about 480 individual occupations is used to cover all workers in the civilian economy. See appendix B for more information. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria, and n.e.c. means not elsewhere classified. Overall occupational groups may include data for categories not shown separately. IN THIS SURVEY, THE NONRESPONSE RATE FOR ALL INDUSTRIES AND PRIVATE INDUSTRY EXCEEDED REGULAR SURVEY STANDARDS FOR PUBLICATION. ACCORDINGLY, USERS SHOULD INTERPRET THESE RESULTS WITH THIS LIMITATION IN MIND. Table 6-5. Hourly wage percentiles for establishment jobs,(1) part-time workers:(2) Selected occupations, all industries, National Compensation Survey, Milwaukee-Racine, WI, October 2000 Occupation(3) 10 25 Median 75 90 50 All............................................... $5.78 $6.69 $8.16 $10.35 $17.41 All excluding sales........................... 5.78 6.79 8.68 11.05 20.07 White collar.................................... 5.81 7.54 9.75 16.73 22.31 White collar excluding sales................ 9.02 9.75 13.96 20.71 26.88 Professional specialty and technical.......... 10.90 14.07 19.62 22.28 28.00 Professional specialty...................... 10.51 18.18 21.43 24.14 32.96 Natural scientists........................ - - - - - Health related............................ 19.07 20.46 21.88 22.31 26.88 Registered nurses....................... 19.07 20.71 21.88 22.31 24.14 Teachers, college and university.......... 17.89 28.43 32.96 32.96 53.06 Other post-secondary teachers........... 17.89 32.96 32.96 32.96 53.06 Teachers, except college and university... 9.57 9.57 16.69 20.59 27.58 Social, recreation, and religious workers. - - - - - Writers, authors, entertainers, athletes, and professionals, n.e.c............... - - - - - Technical................................... 10.90 11.05 13.96 15.27 17.10 Licensed practical nurses............... 12.18 13.93 14.07 15.27 15.96 Executive, administrative, and managerial..... - - - - - Executives, administrators, and managers.. - - - - - Management related........................ - - - - - Sales......................................... 5.54 5.81 7.05 7.68 8.45 Sales workers, other commodities........ 5.52 7.34 7.54 7.68 7.68 Cashiers................................ 5.54 5.72 5.81 6.69 8.45 Administrative support, including clerical.... 7.81 9.02 9.75 11.59 12.97 General office clerks................... 7.50 7.50 10.00 10.00 10.00 Teachers' aides......................... 9.63 9.63 10.62 12.97 12.97 Blue collar..................................... 6.37 6.79 8.25 10.00 10.35 Precision production, craft, and repair....... - - - - - Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors. 6.50 6.69 6.89 8.61 8.74 Transportation and material moving............ - - - - - Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers................................... 6.18 6.79 7.03 8.47 10.35 Groundskeepers and gardeners, except farm................................. 6.50 7.03 8.16 8.16 8.47 Laborers, except construction, n.e.c.... 6.37 6.79 6.79 6.79 8.30 Service......................................... 5.18 5.78 7.00 8.33 9.81 Protective service........................ - - - - - Food service.............................. 2.60 5.18 6.50 7.47 9.33 Waiters, waitresses, and bartenders...... 2.33 2.50 2.61 5.18 5.50 Waiters and waitresses.................. 2.33 2.50 2.61 5.18 5.18 Other food service....................... $6.03 $6.50 $6.81 $8.06 $9.33 Kitchen workers, food preparation....... 6.40 6.47 7.20 10.65 10.65 Food preparation, n.e.c................. 6.03 6.50 6.50 7.52 9.33 Health service............................ 7.57 7.71 9.46 10.50 11.73 Nursing aides, orderlies and attendants. 7.57 7.71 9.46 9.81 11.73 Cleaning and building service............. 5.78 5.78 5.78 7.79 9.11 Janitors and cleaners................... 5.78 5.78 5.78 7.79 9.11 Personal service.......................... 6.50 7.00 7.59 7.60 8.53 Attendants, amusement, and recreation facilities........................... 6.45 6.50 7.60 8.23 9.00 1 Percentiles are calculated from average hourly wages for sampled establishment jobs within each occupation. The percentiles describe the distribution of an occupation's employment by the average wage rates for its jobs. For example, at the 10th percentile hourly wage for an occupation, one-tenth of the occupation's employment are found in sampled establishment jobs whose average wages are the same or less, and nine-tenths are in jobs averaging the same or more. The calculations of the 25th, 50th, 75th, 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, holidays, nonproduction bonuses, and tips. 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 A classification system including about 480 individual occupations is used to cover all workers in the civilian economy. See appendix B for more information. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria, and n.e.c. means not elsewhere classified. Overall occupational groups may include data for categories not shown separately. IN THIS SURVEY, THE NONRESPONSE RATE FOR ALL INDUSTRIES AND PRIVATE INDUSTRY EXCEEDED REGULAR SURVEY STANDARDS FOR PUBLICATION. ACCORDINGLY, USERS SHOULD INTERPRET THESE RESULTS WITH THIS LIMITATION IN MIND. Appendix table 1. Number of workers(1) represented by the survey, by occupational group,(2) National Compensation Survey, Milwaukee-Racine, WI, October 2000 Full-time and part-time workers Occupational group Private State and Total industry local government All occupations....................................................... 448,500 366,800 81,700 All excluding sales............................................. 415,300 333,600 81,700 White collar........................................................ 210,300 156,100 54,200 White-collar excluding sales.................................... 177,100 122,900 54,200 Professional specialty and technical.............................. 84,200 48,500 35,700 Professional specialty.......................................... 65,000 31,800 33,200 Technical....................................................... 19,200 16,700 2,500 Executive, administrative, and managerial......................... 33,200 26,900 6,300 Sales............................................................. 33,200 33,200 € Administrative support, including clerical........................ 59,800 47,500 12,300 Blue collar......................................................... 161,200 150,000 11,200 Precision production, craft, and repair........................... 37,500 34,400 3,100 Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors..................... 65,600 65,600 - Transportation and material moving................................ 21,500 19,900 1,700 Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers............... 36,500 30,100 6,400 Service............................................................. 76,900 60,700 16,300 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. Both full-time and part-time workers were included in the survey. 2 A classification system including about 480 individual occupations is used to cover all workers in the civilian economy. See appendix B for more information. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria. IN THIS SURVEY, THE NONRESPONSE RATE FOR ALL INDUSTRIES AND PRIVATE INDUSTRY EXCEEDED REGULAR SURVEY STANDARDS FOR PUBLICATION. ACCORDINGLY, USERS SHOULD INTERPRET THESE RESULTS WITH THIS LIMITATION IN MIND.