NC BL 09/00/1999 Table: Louisville, KY-IN, Bulletin 3095-65, February 1999 Table A-1. Hourly earnings(1) for selected occupations, all workers(2), all industries, Louisville, KY-IN, February 1999 All industries Occupation(3) Percentiles Mean RSE 10 25 Median 75 90 50 All occupations....................................................... $15.89 2.7% $7.25 $9.33 $14.14 $20.29 $25.64 All occupations excluding sales..................................... 15.83 2.7 7.35 9.57 14.29 20.43 24.84 White-collar occupations............................................ 18.62 3.1 8.13 10.63 15.65 22.50 33.80 White-collar occupations excluding sales.......................... 18.86 3.2 9.00 11.30 16.30 22.50 32.91 Professional specialty and technical occupations.................. 22.42 4.1 12.21 15.36 20.43 26.04 36.26 Professional specialty occupations.............................. 24.85 4.6 14.30 17.95 21.63 31.01 37.79 Engineers, architects, and surveyors.......................... 24.22 6.8 19.04 20.43 21.96 26.86 35.42 Industrial engineers........................................ 25.27 6.5 20.64 21.63 25.50 30.00 30.00 Mechanical engineers........................................ 24.79 12.5 20.43 20.43 20.43 26.97 37.07 Mathematical and computer scientists.......................... 34.00 23.2 16.57 20.00 28.85 50.48 50.48 Natural scientists............................................ - - - - - - - Health related occupations.................................... 19.74 2.7 14.67 16.50 19.50 21.27 25.00 Registered nurses........................................... 18.72 1.7 14.58 16.38 18.97 20.85 22.50 Teachers, college and university.............................. 33.46 11.9 18.29 30.17 33.50 41.86 47.29 Teachers, except college and university....................... 30.74 2.5 19.59 24.11 32.82 36.63 39.48 Elementary school teachers.................................. 30.18 2.5 19.46 24.22 32.10 36.05 38.92 Secondary school teachers................................... 30.91 1.5 21.30 23.81 32.79 36.32 39.11 Teachers, N.E.C............................................. 20.60 10.6 12.59 15.42 18.92 22.56 34.44 Librarians, archivists, and curators.......................... - - - - - - - Social scientists and urban planners.......................... - - - - - - - Social, recreation, and religious workers..................... 14.38 7.4 9.71 10.94 13.62 15.25 22.23 Social workers.............................................. 14.85 8.1 9.43 11.21 14.07 16.66 23.22 Lawyers and judges............................................ 40.88 9.4 23.08 28.98 34.51 44.08 69.46 Lawyers..................................................... 40.88 9.4 23.08 28.98 34.51 44.08 69.46 Writers, authors, entertainers, athletes, and professionals, N.E.C...................................................... 19.12 11.1 10.67 11.80 16.59 23.97 31.20 Technical occupations........................................... 15.40 3.4 10.95 12.28 15.13 18.50 20.88 Clinical laboratory technologists and technicians........... 16.22 4.3 9.85 13.41 17.92 18.50 19.02 Licensed practical nurses................................... 14.46 7.2 10.81 11.53 13.24 16.06 21.50 Health technologists and technicians, N.E.C................. 12.68 9.5 7.69 10.90 11.99 15.23 18.14 Executive, administrative, and managerial occupations............. 26.14 5.0 15.63 18.24 23.68 30.15 42.20 Executives, administrators, and managers...................... 27.97 6.1 16.00 18.61 25.53 34.50 42.93 Administrators and officials, public administration......... 22.48 9.4 17.72 18.17 19.53 26.65 34.50 Financial managers.......................................... 35.81 9.4 24.04 25.86 41.63 42.93 42.93 Managers, marketing, advertising and public relations....... 30.17 19.5 14.42 15.63 19.13 44.21 65.36 Managers and administrators, N.E.C.......................... 26.17 5.8 16.57 19.57 25.53 30.20 39.08 Management related occupations................................ 21.67 6.0 14.50 17.33 20.83 26.78 29.97 Personnel, training, and labor relations specialists........ 23.33 7.1 16.85 21.11 23.68 26.78 29.86 Management related occupations, N.E.C....................... 18.67 7.1 12.53 14.74 19.23 19.71 23.18 Sales occupations................................................. 16.89 10.9 6.10 7.24 9.11 17.80 40.84 Supervisors, sales occupations.............................. 28.11 17.9 12.50 16.09 27.27 47.95 47.95 Cashiers.................................................... 7.58 5.8 5.47 6.09 7.04 8.46 9.90 Administrative support occupations, including clerical............ 12.26 3.8 8.00 9.17 11.00 14.27 17.88 Secretaries................................................. $12.68 4.4% $8.90 $10.50 $12.32 $14.61 $16.30 Receptionists............................................... 8.87 3.9 7.86 8.00 8.54 10.28 10.38 Records clerks, N.E.C....................................... 14.48 13.4 8.31 9.95 14.18 18.43 20.18 Bookkeepers, accounting and auditing clerks................. 11.65 4.3 8.57 9.25 11.58 14.24 14.70 Traffic, shipping and receiving clerks...................... 12.39 7.3 9.25 11.00 13.36 13.72 14.62 Stock and inventory clerks.................................. 10.25 9.6 7.61 8.00 8.93 13.28 13.50 Material recording, scheduling, and distribution clerks, N.E.C.................................................... 12.57 16.0 8.14 8.14 10.83 18.04 21.03 Investigators and adjusters except insurance................ 11.53 8.3 7.64 10.50 10.75 13.33 16.93 General office clerks....................................... 10.41 6.9 6.76 8.01 9.00 12.25 16.15 Teachers' aides............................................. 7.48 7.0 6.16 6.33 7.19 8.44 9.76 Administrative support occupations, N.E.C................... 10.29 7.7 7.50 7.70 9.33 11.76 14.60 Blue-collar occupations............................................. 14.83 4.1 7.35 9.98 14.90 20.29 22.12 Precision production, craft, and repair occupations............... 18.76 3.9 12.30 14.80 20.88 22.16 23.40 Industrial machinery repairers.............................. 20.70 7.1 13.19 19.44 21.37 22.92 26.23 Mechanics and repairers, N.E.C.............................. 20.64 4.4 15.88 20.72 21.20 22.60 22.60 Supervisors, construction trades, N.E.C..................... 19.49 5.9 15.93 16.58 18.14 20.50 25.14 Electricians................................................ 20.62 6.3 17.07 17.07 20.88 24.60 24.60 Supervisors, production occupations......................... 21.78 10.3 13.24 15.23 21.86 24.23 29.38 Butchers and meat cutters................................... 11.06 11.8 6.50 9.73 11.70 14.00 14.00 Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors..................... 14.98 6.5 6.75 9.80 16.45 20.29 21.60 Miscellaneous machine operators, N.E.C...................... 15.73 12.1 7.31 12.14 15.55 20.29 23.14 Welders and cutters......................................... 13.47 11.9 8.00 9.93 13.28 17.85 18.90 Assemblers.................................................. 16.60 5.1 9.57 15.27 17.41 20.93 21.60 Production inspectors, checkers and examiners............... 17.54 10.2 11.14 13.75 21.24 21.24 21.24 Transportation and material moving occupations.................... 13.44 4.7 9.38 10.46 12.75 16.13 17.40 Truck drivers............................................... 13.16 7.9 9.11 10.46 13.08 16.25 17.11 Industrial truck and tractor equipment operators............ 11.05 3.0 9.72 10.06 10.50 12.57 12.57 Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers............... 10.23 6.1 6.30 7.35 8.68 12.50 17.18 Supervisors, handlers, equipment cleaners, and laborers, N.E.C.................................................... 15.76 6.8 12.90 14.22 14.53 18.89 18.89 Machine feeders and offbearers.............................. 9.56 11.8 5.58 6.59 8.18 11.91 17.85 Freight, stock, and material handlers, N.E.C................ 13.56 12.3 8.00 8.40 15.00 17.18 17.88 Vehicle washers and equipment cleaners...................... 14.24 8.5 9.85 12.03 14.30 17.19 17.19 Hand packers and packagers.................................. 9.63 6.8 6.50 8.57 9.75 11.64 11.64 Laborers except construction, N.E.C......................... 8.13 4.4 6.50 6.50 7.35 8.75 10.08 Service occupations................................................. 9.05 4.9 5.24 6.70 8.25 10.07 14.73 Protective service occupations................................ 13.99 6.4 9.35 10.39 13.78 15.83 19.14 Police and detectives, public service....................... 16.15 6.0 13.78 13.78 14.98 17.75 19.95 Food service occupations...................................... 6.50 8.2 2.43 5.21 6.20 7.96 9.27 Waiters and waitresses...................................... 3.93 23.5 2.13 2.43 3.74 5.39 6.55 Cooks....................................................... 7.79 4.6 5.34 6.81 7.55 8.51 9.79 Kitchen workers, food preparation........................... 8.16 6.9 6.15 6.70 7.90 9.26 10.29 Food preparation occupations, N.E.C......................... $6.36 5.2% $5.15 $5.50 $6.29 $7.25 $7.49 Health service occupations.................................... 8.48 3.0 6.76 7.45 8.17 9.28 10.24 Health aides, except nursing................................ 10.18 9.9 6.88 8.37 9.37 10.61 13.30 Nursing aides, orderlies and attendants..................... 8.17 2.2 6.73 7.43 8.00 9.04 9.87 Cleaning and building service occupations..................... 9.94 7.4 6.40 7.20 8.50 11.37 15.46 Janitors and cleaners....................................... 9.42 8.0 6.10 7.02 8.16 10.08 15.37 Personal service occupations.................................. 8.84 3.5 7.00 7.65 8.62 10.07 11.13 Early childhood teachers' assistants........................ 8.93 3.7 7.10 7.96 8.61 9.93 11.28 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. The 10th, 25th, 50th, 75th and 90th percentiles designate position in the earnings distribution. At the 50th percentile, the median, half of the workers receive the same as or more than the rate shown, and half receive the same as or less than the rate shown. At the 25th percentile, one-fourth of the workers earn the same as or less than the rate shown. At the 75th percentile, one-fourth earn the same as or more than the rate shown. The 10th and 90th percentiles follow the same logic. 2 All workers include full-time and part-time workers. 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. Individual occupations are classified into one of nine major occupational groups. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria. Overall occupational groups and occupational levels may include data for categories not shown separately. N.E.C. means "not elsewhere classified." NOTE: Individual and average wage rates were collected in this update survey. A procedure was put into place to "move" the positional statistics where averages were collected. This procedure compares current locality survey data帶t the quote level患ith the same quote from the prior survey. Individual rates from the prior survey are moved by the average change in mean wages for the occupation. Table A-2. Hourly earnings(1) for selected occupations, all workers(2), private industry and State and local government, Louisville, KY-IN, February 1999 Private industry State and local government Occupation(3) Percentiles Percentiles Mean RSE Mean RSE 10 25 Median 75 90 10 25 Median 75 90 50 50 All occupations....................................................... $15.54 3.2% $7.02 $9.00 $13.98 $20.18 $23.72 $17.88 4.2% $8.30 $10.24 $14.92 $22.60 $35.24 All occupations excluding sales..................................... 15.44 3.3 7.23 9.40 14.19 20.23 23.14 17.90 4.2 8.31 10.26 14.94 22.60 35.24 White-collar occupations............................................ 17.90 3.8 8.00 10.28 14.96 20.88 30.55 21.81 3.9 10.14 13.40 19.08 30.83 37.82 White-collar occupations excluding sales.......................... 18.07 3.9 8.80 10.96 15.63 21.01 29.86 21.85 3.9 10.14 13.45 19.08 30.86 37.88 Professional specialty and technical occupations.................. 21.15 6.1 12.28 15.26 19.36 22.50 31.45 25.05 4.3 11.99 15.65 23.97 34.98 38.58 Professional specialty occupations.............................. 23.77 7.4 14.47 17.71 20.85 25.82 36.10 26.56 4.1 13.89 18.91 25.75 35.47 38.92 Engineers, architects, and surveyors.......................... 23.80 6.6 19.04 20.43 21.63 25.50 35.42 - - - - - - - Industrial engineers........................................ 25.27 6.5 20.64 21.63 25.50 30.00 30.00 - - - - - - - Mechanical engineers........................................ 24.79 12.5 20.43 20.43 20.43 26.97 37.07 - - - - - - - Mathematical and computer scientists.......................... - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Natural scientists............................................ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Health related occupations.................................... 19.74 3.0 14.58 16.76 19.50 21.30 24.46 19.69 4.8 14.89 16.08 19.33 20.64 25.95 Registered nurses........................................... 18.73 1.9 14.58 16.44 18.92 20.85 22.50 18.57 2.3 14.73 15.88 19.31 20.64 21.18 Teachers, college and university.............................. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Teachers, except college and university....................... - - - - - - - 31.04 2.3 20.05 24.64 32.91 36.63 39.48 Elementary school teachers.................................. - - - - - - - 30.89 1.1 20.22 25.51 32.37 36.05 38.92 Secondary school teachers................................... - - - - - - - 30.91 1.5 21.30 23.81 32.79 36.32 39.11 Librarians, archivists, and curators.......................... - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Social scientists and urban planners.......................... - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Social, recreation, and religious workers..................... - - - - - - - 14.20 3.6 10.15 12.24 14.05 14.93 17.84 Social workers.............................................. - - - - - - - 14.20 3.6 10.15 12.24 14.05 14.93 17.84 Lawyers and judges............................................ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Writers, authors, entertainers, athletes, and professionals, N.E.C...................................................... 20.42 13.1 11.76 12.70 18.16 26.14 34.19 - - - - - - - Technical occupations........................................... 15.80 3.3 11.44 12.66 15.60 18.50 20.88 12.91 11.5 7.69 9.87 12.23 13.40 19.69 Clinical laboratory technologists and technicians........... 16.19 4.3 9.85 13.39 17.92 18.50 18.86 - - - - - - - Licensed practical nurses................................... 15.04 8.8 10.81 11.51 13.43 19.54 22.50 12.80 3.5 10.82 11.85 13.14 13.40 14.28 Executive, administrative, and managerial occupations............. 27.37 5.4 16.83 19.71 25.85 30.65 42.93 22.25 11.9 14.10 16.04 18.63 25.07 41.99 Executives, administrators, and managers...................... 29.13 6.6 16.57 19.80 26.71 35.77 42.93 24.24 14.4 15.01 16.80 19.11 31.34 43.02 Administrators and officials, public administration......... - - - - - - - 22.48 9.4 17.72 18.17 19.53 26.65 34.50 Financial managers.......................................... 35.81 9.4 24.04 25.86 41.63 42.93 42.93 - - - - - - - Managers, marketing, advertising and public relations....... 30.17 19.5 14.42 15.63 19.13 44.21 65.36 - - - - - - - Managers and administrators, N.E.C.......................... 27.67 5.5 18.50 22.12 27.36 31.25 39.08 - - - - - - - Management related occupations................................ 23.01 6.1 16.85 19.09 23.05 26.78 30.31 17.62 5.5 13.62 14.15 16.06 20.41 22.60 Personnel, training, and labor relations specialists........ 23.75 6.9 16.85 21.11 23.68 26.78 29.86 - - - - - - - Management related occupations, N.E.C....................... 18.64 7.5 12.53 18.46 19.23 19.71 23.05 - - - - - - - Sales occupations................................................. 16.94 10.9 6.10 7.25 9.12 17.80 40.84 - - - - - - - Supervisors, sales occupations.............................. 28.11 17.9 12.50 16.09 27.27 47.95 47.95 - - - - - - - Cashiers.................................................... 7.59 5.9 5.47 6.09 7.04 8.48 10.25 - - - - - - - Administrative support occupations, including clerical............ 12.35 4.2 8.00 9.25 11.00 14.41 17.88 11.38 4.2 7.88 8.89 10.69 13.48 15.70 Secretaries................................................. 12.73 5.4 8.90 10.50 12.19 14.92 16.91 12.47 3.6 9.71 11.12 12.51 14.27 15.10 Receptionists............................................... 8.78 4.3 7.86 8.00 8.22 10.28 10.38 - - - - - - - Records clerks, N.E.C....................................... 14.52 13.5 8.31 10.95 14.18 19.50 20.18 - - - - - - - Bookkeepers, accounting and auditing clerks................. 11.63 4.7 8.57 9.25 11.58 14.26 14.70 - - - - - - - Traffic, shipping and receiving clerks...................... $12.67 8.1% $6.68 $11.00 $13.63 $13.72 $15.12 - - - - - - - Stock and inventory clerks.................................. 10.25 9.6 7.61 8.00 8.93 13.28 13.50 - - - - - - - Investigators and adjusters except insurance................ 11.53 8.3 7.64 10.50 10.75 13.33 16.93 - - - - - - - General office clerks....................................... 10.64 7.6 7.35 8.01 9.00 12.25 16.15 $8.53 6.1% $6.72 $7.75 $8.30 $8.84 $11.20 Teachers' aides............................................. - - - - - - - 8.28 3.7 6.72 7.41 8.13 9.16 10.08 Administrative support occupations, N.E.C................... 10.36 8.3 7.50 7.89 9.33 11.92 14.60 - - - - - - - Blue-collar occupations............................................. 14.89 4.2 7.31 9.98 15.00 20.29 22.12 13.01 7.5 8.72 10.07 12.90 15.05 18.14 Precision production, craft, and repair occupations............... 18.84 4.0 12.30 14.85 20.91 22.16 23.40 16.33 9.1 10.02 14.65 15.60 18.51 22.49 Industrial machinery repairers.............................. 20.70 7.1 13.19 19.44 21.37 22.92 26.23 - - - - - - - Mechanics and repairers, N.E.C.............................. 20.78 4.3 15.88 20.80 21.20 22.60 22.60 - - - - - - - Supervisors, construction trades, N.E.C..................... 19.65 6.5 16.00 16.58 18.60 21.20 25.14 - - - - - - - Electricians................................................ 20.62 6.3 17.07 17.07 20.88 24.60 24.60 - - - - - - - Supervisors, production occupations......................... 21.79 11.0 13.20 14.98 21.25 24.37 29.38 - - - - - - - Butchers and meat cutters................................... 11.06 11.8 6.50 9.73 11.70 14.00 14.00 - - - - - - - Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors..................... 14.98 6.5 6.75 9.80 16.45 20.29 21.60 - - - - - - - Miscellaneous machine operators, N.E.C...................... 15.73 12.1 7.31 12.14 15.55 20.29 23.14 - - - - - - - Welders and cutters......................................... 13.47 11.9 8.00 9.93 13.28 17.85 18.90 - - - - - - - Assemblers.................................................. 16.60 5.1 9.57 15.27 17.41 20.93 21.60 - - - - - - - Production inspectors, checkers and examiners............... 17.54 10.2 11.14 13.75 21.24 21.24 21.24 - - - - - - - Transportation and material moving occupations.................... 13.44 4.9 9.33 10.46 12.75 16.13 17.40 13.52 6.0 11.26 11.75 13.50 15.05 15.05 Truck drivers............................................... 13.19 8.0 9.11 10.46 13.08 16.25 17.11 - - - - - - - Industrial truck and tractor equipment operators............ 11.05 3.0 9.72 10.06 10.50 12.57 12.57 - - - - - - - Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers............... 10.19 6.6 6.30 7.21 8.55 12.37 17.18 10.66 7.2 8.08 9.00 10.10 12.90 14.25 Machine feeders and offbearers.............................. 9.56 11.8 5.58 6.59 8.18 11.91 17.85 - - - - - - - Freight, stock, and material handlers, N.E.C................ 13.56 12.3 8.00 8.40 15.00 17.18 17.88 - - - - - - - Hand packers and packagers.................................. 9.63 6.8 6.50 8.57 9.75 11.64 11.64 - - - - - - - Laborers except construction, N.E.C......................... 7.92 4.6 6.50 6.50 7.35 8.55 9.30 9.42 8.2 5.67 8.60 9.57 10.51 12.75 Service occupations................................................. 7.79 5.7 5.15 6.05 7.45 8.69 10.44 11.47 5.2 7.28 8.61 10.00 13.78 16.64 Protective service occupations................................ - - - - - - - 14.16 6.5 9.35 10.60 13.78 16.13 19.86 Police and detectives, public service....................... - - - - - - - 16.15 6.0 13.78 13.78 14.98 17.75 19.95 Food service occupations...................................... 6.28 8.6 2.43 5.15 6.05 7.38 9.13 8.58 3.3 7.26 7.61 8.29 9.16 9.67 Waiters and waitresses...................................... 3.93 23.5 2.13 2.43 3.74 5.39 6.55 - - - - - - - Cooks....................................................... 7.59 6.4 5.24 5.49 7.38 8.51 10.30 - - - - - - - Kitchen workers, food preparation........................... 8.16 6.9 6.15 6.70 7.90 9.26 10.29 - - - - - - - Food preparation occupations, N.E.C......................... 6.24 5.1 5.15 5.50 6.29 7.25 7.25 - - - - - - - Health service occupations.................................... 8.50 3.4 6.83 7.45 8.12 9.28 10.24 8.39 4.2 6.58 7.09 8.43 9.29 10.13 Health aides, except nursing................................ 10.39 11.1 6.76 8.17 10.10 11.40 14.04 - - - - - - - Nursing aides, orderlies and attendants..................... 8.15 2.4 6.86 7.45 8.00 8.90 9.76 8.33 4.9 6.58 6.91 8.08 9.47 10.40 Cleaning and building service occupations..................... 9.78 10.5 5.98 6.75 8.20 9.70 20.49 10.17 9.7 6.92 7.63 9.54 12.16 15.01 Janitors and cleaners....................................... 9.70 11.9 5.60 6.75 8.00 9.86 20.49 8.95 6.7 6.59 7.26 8.23 10.62 12.04 Personal service occupations.................................. - - - - - - - 9.37 2.3 7.88 8.38 8.79 10.34 11.30 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. The 10th, 25th, 50th, 75th and 90th percentiles designate position in the earnings distribution. At the 50th percentile, the median, half of the workers receive the same as or more than the rate shown, and half receive the same as or less than the rate shown. At the 25th percentile, one-fourth of the workers earn the same as or less than the rate shown. At the 75th percentile, one-fourth earn the same as or more than the rate shown. The 10th and 90th percentiles follow the same logic. 2 All workers include full-time and part-time workers. 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. Individual occupations are classified into one of nine major occupational groups. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria. Overall occupational groups and occupational levels may include data for categories not shown separately. N.E.C. means "not elsewhere classified." 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. NOTE: Individual and average wage rates were collected in this update survey. A procedure was put into place to "move" the positional statistics where averages were collected. This procedure compares current locality survey data帶t the quote level患ith the same quote from the prior survey. Individual rates from the prior survey are moved by the average change in mean wages for the occupation. Table A-3. Hourly earnings(1) for selected occupations, full-time and part-time workers(2), all industries, Louisville, KY-IN, February 1999 All industries Full-time Part-time Occupation(3) Percentiles Percentiles Mean RSE Mean RSE 10 25 Median 75 90 10 25 Median 75 90 50 50 All occupations....................................................... $16.41 2.7% $7.58 $9.83 $14.61 $20.80 $26.44 $9.13 6.8% $5.24 $6.00 $7.63 $9.76 $17.88 All occupations excluding sales..................................... 16.15 2.7 7.58 9.85 14.62 20.50 25.53 9.95 9.0 5.15 5.92 7.90 14.60 18.66 White-collar occupations............................................ 19.37 3.2 8.80 11.28 16.28 23.05 35.01 10.84 9.0 6.00 7.10 8.00 14.60 20.50 White-collar occupations excluding sales.......................... 19.05 3.2 9.00 11.42 16.50 22.52 33.73 14.94 7.3 8.21 9.52 14.70 18.74 23.97 Professional specialty and technical occupations.................. 22.58 4.3 12.12 15.30 20.39 27.33 36.40 19.27 6.8 12.50 15.80 20.85 23.97 23.97 Professional specialty occupations.............................. 25.04 4.7 14.30 17.93 21.65 31.45 37.88 20.50 6.5 14.84 18.10 21.30 23.97 23.97 Engineers, architects, and surveyors.......................... 24.22 6.8 19.04 20.43 21.96 26.86 35.42 - - - - - - - Industrial engineers........................................ 25.27 6.5 20.64 21.63 25.50 30.00 30.00 - - - - - - - Mechanical engineers........................................ 24.79 12.5 20.43 20.43 20.43 26.97 37.07 - - - - - - - Mathematical and computer scientists.......................... 34.00 23.2 16.57 20.00 28.85 50.48 50.48 - - - - - - - Natural scientists............................................ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Health related occupations.................................... 19.79 2.8 14.72 16.63 19.50 21.18 25.00 - - - - - - - Registered nurses........................................... 18.70 1.8 14.58 16.44 18.95 20.85 22.50 - - - - - - - Teachers, college and university.............................. 33.46 11.9 18.29 30.17 33.50 41.86 47.29 - - - - - - - Teachers, except college and university....................... 30.91 2.4 19.84 24.32 32.82 36.63 39.48 - - - - - - - Elementary school teachers.................................. 30.18 2.5 19.46 24.22 32.10 36.05 38.92 - - - - - - - Secondary school teachers................................... 30.91 1.5 21.30 23.81 32.79 36.32 39.11 - - - - - - - Librarians, archivists, and curators.......................... - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Social scientists and urban planners.......................... - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Social, recreation, and religious workers..................... 14.38 7.4 9.71 10.94 13.62 15.25 22.23 - - - - - - - Social workers.............................................. 14.85 8.1 9.43 11.21 14.07 16.66 23.22 - - - - - - - Lawyers and judges............................................ 41.30 9.3 23.08 28.98 34.51 44.08 69.46 - - - - - - - Lawyers..................................................... 41.30 9.3 23.08 28.98 34.51 44.08 69.46 - - - - - - - Writers, authors, entertainers, athletes, and professionals, N.E.C...................................................... 18.40 12.8 10.39 11.78 15.65 24.46 31.45 - - - - - - - Technical occupations........................................... 15.24 3.4 10.97 12.20 14.69 18.14 20.85 17.36 12.3 7.44 12.50 18.03 22.50 22.50 Clinical laboratory technologists and technicians........... 16.19 4.3 9.85 13.39 17.92 18.50 18.86 - - - - - - - Licensed practical nurses................................... 13.32 6.0 10.54 11.21 12.55 14.35 17.23 - - - - - - - Health technologists and technicians, N.E.C................. 12.60 8.7 8.67 11.24 11.90 14.20 18.14 - - - - - - - Executive, administrative, and managerial occupations............. 26.21 5.1 15.63 18.27 23.68 30.20 42.32 - - - - - - - Executives, administrators, and managers...................... 28.08 6.2 16.04 18.63 25.53 34.50 42.93 - - - - - - - Administrators and officials, public administration......... 22.48 9.4 17.72 18.17 19.53 26.65 34.50 - - - - - - - Financial managers.......................................... 35.81 9.4 24.04 25.86 41.63 42.93 42.93 - - - - - - - Managers, marketing, advertising and public relations....... 30.91 19.8 14.42 15.63 19.23 44.21 65.36 - - - - - - - Managers and administrators, N.E.C.......................... 26.17 5.8 16.57 19.57 25.53 30.20 39.08 - - - - - - - Management related occupations................................ 21.67 6.0 14.50 17.33 20.83 26.78 29.97 - - - - - - - Personnel, training, and labor relations specialists........ 23.33 7.1 16.85 21.11 23.68 26.78 29.86 - - - - - - - Management related occupations, N.E.C....................... 18.67 7.1 12.53 14.74 19.23 19.71 23.18 - - - - - - - Sales occupations................................................. 23.04 8.0 7.57 9.65 14.35 29.78 47.95 7.33 3.3 6.00 6.20 7.19 7.73 8.48 Supervisors, sales occupations.............................. 28.18 17.8 12.50 16.09 27.27 47.95 47.95 - - - - - - - Cashiers.................................................... 8.84 6.7 6.09 7.29 8.59 9.80 12.37 6.48 4.0 5.36 5.62 6.30 6.99 7.90 Administrative support occupations, including clerical............ $12.30 3.9% $8.00 $9.25 $11.00 $14.25 $17.88 $11.60 7.5% $7.73 $8.95 $10.50 $14.70 $17.88 Secretaries................................................. 12.84 4.5 8.91 10.63 12.49 14.76 16.60 - - - - - - - Receptionists............................................... 8.97 3.7 8.00 8.00 8.54 10.28 10.38 - - - - - - - Records clerks, N.E.C....................................... 14.48 13.4 8.31 9.95 14.18 18.43 20.18 - - - - - - - Bookkeepers, accounting and auditing clerks................. 11.33 4.1 8.57 9.25 11.00 13.23 14.26 - - - - - - - Traffic, shipping and receiving clerks...................... 12.49 7.4 9.93 11.00 13.36 13.72 15.12 - - - - - - - Stock and inventory clerks.................................. 10.25 9.6 7.61 8.00 8.93 13.28 13.50 - - - - - - - Material recording, scheduling, and distribution clerks, N.E.C.................................................... 12.57 16.0 8.14 8.14 10.83 18.04 21.03 - - - - - - - Investigators and adjusters except insurance................ 11.98 8.6 8.82 10.50 11.00 13.33 16.93 - - - - - - - General office clerks....................................... 10.42 6.9 6.76 8.01 9.00 12.25 16.15 - - - - - - - Administrative support occupations, N.E.C................... 9.86 6.2 7.50 7.69 9.03 11.63 13.20 - - - - - - - Blue-collar occupations............................................. 14.98 4.1 7.44 10.10 15.00 20.29 22.16 8.43 9.2 6.00 6.10 7.00 8.25 14.92 Precision production, craft, and repair occupations............... 18.81 3.9 12.30 14.85 20.88 22.16 23.40 - - - - - - - Industrial machinery repairers.............................. 20.70 7.1 13.19 19.44 21.37 22.92 26.23 - - - - - - - Mechanics and repairers, N.E.C.............................. 20.64 4.4 15.88 20.72 21.20 22.60 22.60 - - - - - - - Supervisors, construction trades, N.E.C..................... 19.49 5.9 15.93 16.58 18.14 20.50 25.14 - - - - - - - Electricians................................................ 20.62 6.3 17.07 17.07 20.88 24.60 24.60 - - - - - - - Supervisors, production occupations......................... 21.78 10.3 13.24 15.23 21.86 24.23 29.38 - - - - - - - Butchers and meat cutters................................... 11.06 11.8 6.50 9.73 11.70 14.00 14.00 - - - - - - - Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors..................... 15.02 6.5 6.75 9.85 16.45 20.29 21.60 - - - - - - - Miscellaneous machine operators, N.E.C...................... 15.73 12.1 7.31 12.14 15.55 20.29 23.14 - - - - - - - Welders and cutters......................................... 13.47 11.9 8.00 9.93 13.28 17.85 18.90 - - - - - - - Assemblers.................................................. 16.60 5.1 9.57 15.27 17.41 20.93 21.60 - - - - - - - Production inspectors, checkers and examiners............... 17.54 10.2 11.14 13.75 21.24 21.24 21.24 - - - - - - - Transportation and material moving occupations.................... 13.44 4.7 9.38 10.46 12.75 16.13 17.40 - - - - - - - Truck drivers............................................... 13.16 7.9 9.11 10.46 13.08 16.25 17.11 - - - - - - - Industrial truck and tractor equipment operators............ 11.05 3.0 9.72 10.06 10.50 12.57 12.57 - - - - - - - Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers............... 10.46 6.3 6.50 7.35 9.00 12.90 17.18 - - - - - - - Supervisors, handlers, equipment cleaners, and laborers, N.E.C.................................................... 15.76 6.8 12.90 14.22 14.53 18.89 18.89 - - - - - - - Machine feeders and offbearers.............................. 9.67 13.0 5.58 6.59 7.85 12.18 17.85 - - - - - - - Freight, stock, and material handlers, N.E.C................ 13.77 12.6 7.50 8.40 16.35 17.18 17.73 - - - - - - - Hand packers and packagers.................................. 9.75 6.8 7.03 9.51 9.75 11.64 11.64 - - - - - - - Laborers except construction, N.E.C......................... 8.13 4.4 6.50 6.50 7.35 8.75 10.08 - - - - - - - Service occupations................................................. 9.62 4.3 6.05 7.27 8.56 10.69 15.05 5.98 5.7 3.74 5.15 5.50 7.33 8.50 Protective service occupations................................ 14.07 6.5 9.35 10.60 13.78 15.83 19.47 - - - - - - - Police and detectives, public service....................... 16.15 6.0 13.78 13.78 14.98 17.75 19.95 - - - - - - - Food service occupations...................................... 7.20 8.5 2.43 6.00 7.25 8.51 10.00 5.17 6.3 2.75 5.15 5.24 5.65 6.67 Cooks....................................................... 8.51 3.8 7.26 7.38 8.10 9.27 10.17 - - - - - - - Kitchen workers, food preparation........................... 8.63 8.1 6.70 7.09 8.56 9.90 11.43 - - - - - - - Health service occupations.................................... $8.49 3.3% $6.73 $7.45 $8.18 $9.28 $10.14 $8.42 5.5% $6.78 $7.45 $8.17 $9.00 $10.61 Health aides, except nursing................................ 10.16 11.3 6.76 8.17 8.88 11.40 14.04 - - - - - - - Nursing aides, orderlies and attendants..................... 8.20 2.5 6.58 7.43 8.00 9.09 9.94 7.98 3.2 6.78 7.45 8.00 8.61 9.30 Cleaning and building service occupations..................... 10.09 7.5 6.40 7.20 8.70 11.77 15.87 - - - - - - - Janitors and cleaners....................................... 9.59 8.3 6.27 7.15 8.24 10.66 15.37 - - - - - - - Personal service occupations.................................. 9.09 3.1 7.44 7.96 8.63 10.07 11.13 - - - - - - - 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. The 10th, 25th, 50th, 75th and 90th percentiles designate position in the earnings distribution. At the 50th percentile, the median, half of the workers receive the same as or more than the rate shown, and half receive the same as or less than the rate shown. At the 25th percentile, one-fourth of the workers earn the same as or less than the rate shown. At the 75th percentile, one-fourth earn the same as or more than the rate shown. The 10th and 90th percentiles follow the same logic. 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. Individual occupations are classified into one of nine major occupational groups. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria. Overall occupational groups and occupational levels may include data for categories not shown separately. N.E.C. means "not elsewhere classified." NOTE: Individual and average wage rates were collected in this update survey. A procedure was put into place to "move" the positional statistics where averages were collected. This procedure compares current locality survey data帶t the quote level患ith the same quote from the prior survey. Individual rates from the prior survey are moved by the average change in mean wages for the occupation. Table A-4. Weekly and annual earnings(1) and hours for selected occupations, full-time workers only(2), all industries, Louisville, KY-IN, February 1999 All industries Occupation(3) Mean Weekly earnings Mean Annual earnings weekly annual hours(4) hours Mean RSE Median Mean Median All occupations....................................................... 39.6 $649 2.8% $574 2,021 $33,164 $29,640 All occupations excluding sales..................................... 39.6 639 2.8 574 2,019 32,609 29,640 White-collar occupations............................................ 39.4 763 3.3 628 1,990 38,540 32,312 White-collar occupations excluding sales.......................... 39.3 749 3.4 630 1,984 37,783 32,323 Professional specialty and technical occupations.................. 39.0 881 4.9 789 1,883 42,524 39,250 Professional specialty occupations.............................. 38.9 974 5.5 834 1,834 45,915 42,471 Engineers, architects, and surveyors.......................... 42.1 1,020 5.6 952 2,190 53,028 49,504 Industrial engineers........................................ 40.0 1,011 6.5 1,020 2,080 52,555 53,040 Mechanical engineers........................................ 40.0 992 12.5 817 2,080 51,560 42,494 Mathematical and computer scientists.......................... 39.5 1,342 23.8 1,154 2,052 69,777 60,008 Natural scientists............................................ - - - - - - - Health related occupations.................................... 38.1 754 3.2 751 1,974 39,078 39,000 Registered nurses........................................... 37.9 709 2.3 725 1,962 36,697 37,624 Teachers, college and university.............................. 35.8 1,199 14.5 1,217 1,388 46,459 48,545 Teachers, except college and university....................... 36.0 1,112 3.3 1,185 1,386 42,838 45,030 Elementary school teachers.................................. 35.4 1,069 2.2 1,161 1,324 39,973 42,944 Secondary school teachers................................... 35.1 1,084 1.4 1,161 1,321 40,828 42,957 Librarians, archivists, and curators.......................... - - - - - - - Social scientists and urban planners.......................... - - - - - - - Social, recreation, and religious workers..................... 39.2 564 8.6 513 2,041 29,351 26,657 Social workers.............................................. 39.1 581 9.7 527 2,033 30,190 27,398 Lawyers and judges............................................ 48.4 1,999 10.7 1,647 2,517 103,942 85,636 Lawyers..................................................... 48.4 1,999 10.7 1,647 2,517 103,942 85,636 Writers, authors, entertainers, athletes, and professionals, N.E.C...................................................... 40.2 740 14.4 587 2,090 38,464 30,518 Technical occupations........................................... 39.4 600 3.5 584 2,047 31,201 30,389 Clinical laboratory technologists and technicians........... 39.2 635 4.4 696 2,040 33,017 36,213 Licensed practical nurses................................... 39.6 527 6.2 498 2,058 27,410 25,896 Health technologists and technicians, N.E.C................. 40.0 504 8.7 476 2,080 26,211 24,752 Executive, administrative, and managerial occupations............. 39.7 1,041 5.3 947 2,063 54,053 49,261 Executives, administrators, and managers...................... 39.9 1,120 6.4 1,058 2,069 58,097 55,016 Administrators and officials, public administration......... 38.3 860 10.5 732 1,990 44,741 38,084 Financial managers.......................................... 39.6 1,419 9.8 1,665 2,061 73,795 86,590 Managers, marketing, advertising and public relations....... 39.9 1,232 20.4 769 2,073 64,076 39,998 Managers and administrators, N.E.C.......................... 40.1 1,050 6.4 1,076 2,087 54,612 55,931 Management related occupations................................ 39.4 854 6.5 822 2,048 44,388 42,764 Personnel, training, and labor relations specialists........ 39.7 925 7.5 947 2,062 48,109 49,261 Management related occupations, N.E.C....................... 40.0 746 7.1 769 2,078 38,796 39,998 Sales occupations................................................. 39.7 916 8.2 573 2,066 47,610 29,806 Supervisors, sales occupations.............................. 39.8 1,120 18.3 1,091 2,067 58,259 56,722 Cashiers.................................................... 39.0 345 7.3 334 2,027 17,922 17,372 Administrative support occupations, including clerical............ 39.5 485 3.9 439 2,043 25,129 22,797 Secretaries................................................. 38.9 499 4.1 491 2,020 25,938 25,460 Receptionists............................................... 39.5 355 3.7 341 2,056 18,444 17,746 Records clerks, N.E.C....................................... 39.6 $573 13.4% $567 2,059 $29,816 $29,494 Bookkeepers, accounting and auditing clerks................. 39.3 445 4.0 440 2,044 23,152 22,880 Traffic, shipping and receiving clerks...................... 41.0 512 8.0 545 2,132 26,632 28,350 Stock and inventory clerks.................................. 40.0 410 9.6 357 2,080 21,320 18,574 Material recording, scheduling, and distribution clerks, N.E.C.................................................... 39.0 490 16.1 379 2,028 25,486 19,711 Investigators and adjusters except insurance................ 39.9 478 8.6 440 2,072 24,836 22,880 General office clerks....................................... 39.1 408 6.9 360 2,025 21,106 18,366 Administrative support occupations, N.E.C................... 39.3 387 5.1 360 2,045 20,150 18,720 Blue-collar occupations............................................. 40.1 600 3.9 611 2,082 31,195 31,720 Precision production, craft, and repair occupations............... 40.2 756 3.7 836 2,089 39,289 43,493 Industrial machinery repairers.............................. 39.3 814 6.4 855 2,044 42,306 44,450 Mechanics and repairers, N.E.C.............................. 40.0 825 4.4 848 2,080 42,926 44,096 Supervisors, construction trades, N.E.C..................... 45.6 889 5.4 900 2,370 46,203 46,800 Electricians................................................ 40.0 825 6.3 835 2,080 42,888 43,430 Supervisors, production occupations......................... 39.9 868 10.4 874 2,073 45,158 45,468 Butchers and meat cutters................................... 40.0 442 11.8 468 2,080 23,002 24,336 Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors..................... 39.7 596 6.3 659 2,064 30,991 34,254 Miscellaneous machine operators, N.E.C...................... 39.2 617 10.9 658 2,039 32,066 34,216 Welders and cutters......................................... 40.0 539 11.9 531 2,080 28,025 27,622 Assemblers.................................................. 40.0 664 5.1 697 2,080 34,519 36,219 Production inspectors, checkers and examiners............... 40.0 702 10.2 850 2,080 36,478 44,179 Transportation and material moving occupations.................... 40.9 550 4.1 522 2,118 28,452 27,144 Truck drivers............................................... 42.6 561 5.9 531 2,216 29,168 27,602 Industrial truck and tractor equipment operators............ 40.0 442 3.0 420 2,080 22,980 21,840 Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers............... 40.0 418 6.3 360 2,080 21,754 18,720 Supervisors, handlers, equipment cleaners, and laborers, N.E.C.................................................... 41.3 651 5.9 640 2,149 33,854 33,275 Machine feeders and offbearers.............................. 40.0 387 13.0 314 2,080 20,115 16,328 Freight, stock, and material handlers, N.E.C................ 40.0 551 12.6 654 2,080 28,651 34,000 Hand packers and packagers.................................. 40.0 390 6.8 390 2,080 20,276 20,280 Laborers except construction, N.E.C......................... 40.0 325 4.4 294 2,080 16,905 15,288 Service occupations................................................. 38.6 372 5.0 332 1,948 18,747 16,640 Protective service occupations................................ 40.2 566 6.0 551 2,091 29,426 28,666 Police and detectives, public service....................... 38.7 626 5.5 574 2,015 32,540 29,835 Food service occupations...................................... 37.2 268 11.7 266 1,834 13,208 12,397 Cooks....................................................... 36.9 314 4.9 302 1,657 14,098 13,287 Kitchen workers, food preparation........................... 40.0 345 8.1 343 2,080 17,948 17,814 Health service occupations.................................... 38.7 328 3.7 314 2,010 17,065 16,307 Health aides, except nursing................................ 39.9 405 11.3 354 2,075 21,082 18,429 Nursing aides, orderlies and attendants..................... 38.4 315 2.8 303 1,999 16,382 15,766 Cleaning and building service occupations..................... 39.4 397 7.7 346 2,023 20,417 17,879 Janitors and cleaners....................................... 39.3 377 8.5 320 2,012 19,302 16,640 Personal service occupations.................................. 37.0 337 3.0 321 1,557 14,159 13,210 1 Earnings 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. The mean is computed by totaling the pay of all workers and dividing by the number of workers, weighted by hours. The median designates position--one-half of the workers receive the same as or more, and one-half receive the same as or less than the rate shown. 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. Individual occupations are classified into one of nine major occupational groups. 4 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. Overall occupational groups and occupational levels may include data for categories not shown separately. N.E.C. means "not elsewhere classified." NOTE: Individual and average wage rates were collected in this update survey. A procedure was put into place to "move" the positional statistics where averages were collected. This procedure compares current locality survey data帶t the quote level患ith the same quote from the prior survey. Individual rates from the prior survey are moved by the average change in mean wages for the occupation. Table B-1. Mean hourly earnings(1) by occupational group and levels(2), all industries, private industry, State and local government, full-time and part-time workers, Louisville, KY-IN, February 1999 All workers (4) All industries Occupational group(3) and level All industries Private industry State and local Full-time workers Part-time workers government Mean RSE Mean RSE Mean RSE Mean RSE Mean RSE All occupations....................................................... $15.89 2.7% $15.54 3.2% $17.88 4.2% $16.41 2.7% $9.13 6.8% All occupations excluding sales..................................... 15.83 2.7 15.44 3.3 17.90 4.2 16.15 2.7 9.95 9.0 White-collar occupations............................................ 18.62 3.1 17.90 3.8 21.81 3.9 19.37 3.2 10.84 9.0 Level 2................................................... 8.13 2.4 8.16 2.5 7.55 7.2 8.25 3.2 7.78 4.5 Level 3................................................... 9.56 5.2 9.58 5.6 9.37 3.0 10.03 4.6 7.86 4.9 Level 4................................................... 11.09 4.7 11.17 5.1 10.27 4.8 11.46 4.0 - - Level 5................................................... 15.27 8.4 15.38 9.6 14.69 12.7 15.11 9.1 17.35 16.3 Level 6................................................... 14.60 3.4 14.77 4.2 14.07 4.5 14.57 3.4 - - Level 7................................................... 20.75 3.4 17.66 2.3 26.18 5.0 20.88 3.5 17.56 3.2 Level 8................................................... 21.13 5.2 19.95 4.1 23.35 11.4 21.14 5.4 - - Level 9................................................... 24.75 5.2 24.63 6.5 25.15 6.4 24.77 5.2 - - Level 10.................................................. 26.59 9.4 24.17 5.0 - - 26.61 9.5 - - Level 11.................................................. 37.40 5.5 37.60 5.8 - - 37.40 5.5 - - Level 12.................................................. 36.00 8.5 35.87 9.0 - - 36.00 8.5 - - White-collar occupations excluding sales.......................... 18.86 3.2 18.07 3.9 21.85 3.9 19.05 3.2 14.94 7.3 Level 2................................................... 8.18 2.9 8.20 3.0 - - 8.08 3.1 8.69 4.8 Level 3................................................... 10.22 4.2 10.31 4.4 9.37 3.0 10.19 4.4 - - Level 4................................................... 11.76 4.3 11.93 4.6 10.27 4.8 11.65 3.8 13.23 11.4 Level 5................................................... 13.77 3.9 13.54 3.3 14.69 12.7 13.41 3.0 17.35 16.3 Level 6................................................... 14.64 3.5 14.82 4.4 14.07 4.5 14.60 3.6 - - Level 7................................................... 20.74 3.4 17.63 2.3 26.18 5.0 20.88 3.5 17.56 3.2 Level 8................................................... 21.09 5.3 19.86 4.2 23.35 11.4 21.10 5.5 - - Level 9................................................... 23.52 2.8 22.97 3.3 25.15 6.4 23.52 2.9 - - Level 10.................................................. 26.64 11.2 23.62 5.4 - - 26.67 11.4 - - Level 11.................................................. 35.32 7.6 35.42 8.2 - - 35.32 7.6 - - Level 12.................................................. 36.00 8.5 35.87 9.0 - - 36.00 8.5 - - Professional specialty and technical occupations.................. 22.42 4.1 21.15 6.1 25.05 4.3 22.58 4.3 19.27 6.8 Professional specialty occupations.............................. 24.85 4.6 23.77 7.4 26.56 4.1 25.04 4.7 20.50 6.5 Level 5................................................... 16.12 14.4 13.69 4.1 - - 13.23 4.5 - - Level 6................................................... 13.76 6.2 13.60 9.6 - - 13.69 6.2 - - Level 7................................................... 23.48 3.9 18.64 1.6 27.13 5.1 23.80 4.1 17.97 3.1 Level 8................................................... 24.25 10.2 19.76 4.8 29.18 10.5 24.27 10.2 - - Level 9................................................... 24.25 3.5 22.42 4.1 29.64 4.5 24.27 3.5 - - Level 10.................................................. 24.70 4.6 24.68 5.0 - - 24.72 4.8 - - Level 11.................................................. 41.03 11.8 42.60 12.3 - - 41.03 11.8 - - Level 12.................................................. 38.93 13.3 39.12 14.2 - - 38.93 13.3 - - Engineers, architects, and surveyors.......................... 24.22 6.8 23.80 6.6 - - 24.22 6.8 - - Level 9................................................... 24.36 11.9 24.36 11.9 - - 24.36 11.9 - - Mathematical and computer scientists.......................... 34.00 23.2 - - - - 34.00 23.2 - - Natural scientists............................................ - - - - - - - - - - Health related occupations.................................... 19.74 2.7 19.74 3.0 19.69 4.8 19.79 2.8 - - Level 7................................................... 18.39 1.5 18.46 1.5 - - 18.46 1.6 - - Level 8................................................... 19.51 4.8 19.90 7.2 - - 19.51 4.9 - - Level 9................................................... $20.58 3.7% - - - - $20.45 3.9% - - Teachers, college and university.............................. 33.46 11.9 - - - - 33.46 11.9 - - Teachers, except college and university....................... 30.74 2.5 - - $31.04 2.3% 30.91 2.4 - - Level 7................................................... 29.97 0.8 - - 29.97 0.8 30.12 0.6 - - Level 8................................................... 35.45 4.9 - - 35.45 4.9 35.45 4.9 - - Level 9................................................... 31.71 3.3 - - 31.71 3.3 31.71 3.3 - - Librarians, archivists, and curators.......................... - - - - - - - - - - Social scientists and urban planners.......................... - - - - - - - - - - Social, religious, and recreation workers..................... 14.38 7.4 - - 14.20 3.6 14.38 7.4 - - Lawyers and judges............................................ 40.88 9.4 - - - - 41.30 9.3 - - Writers, authors, entertainers, athletes, and professionals, N.E.C...................................................... 19.12 11.1 $20.42 13.1% - - 18.40 12.8 - - Level 9................................................... 24.22 0.5 24.22 0.5 - - 24.22 0.5 - - Technical occupations........................................... 15.40 3.4 15.80 3.3 12.91 11.5 15.24 3.4 $17.36 12.3% Level 4................................................... 11.37 3.8 11.96 2.4 - - 11.49 3.0 - - Level 5................................................... 14.39 4.0 14.39 4.3 - - 14.41 4.1 - - Level 6................................................... 14.51 2.5 14.64 2.6 - - 14.46 2.5 - - Level 7................................................... 16.48 11.3 - - - - 16.48 11.3 - - Level 8................................................... 18.74 3.6 19.14 3.2 - - 17.83 2.7 - - Executive, administrative, and managerial occupations............. 26.14 5.0 27.37 5.4 22.25 11.9 26.21 5.1 - - Level 7................................................... 19.10 5.7 19.07 6.7 - - 19.36 6.1 - - Level 8................................................... 19.60 5.9 20.36 7.8 18.28 6.2 19.60 5.9 - - Level 9................................................... 23.10 5.6 24.74 6.2 19.58 2.3 23.10 5.6 - - Level 10.................................................. 27.83 16.5 22.97 7.6 - - 27.83 16.5 - - Level 11.................................................. 33.59 11.2 33.66 11.5 - - 33.59 11.2 - - Executives, administrators, and managers...................... 27.97 6.1 29.13 6.6 24.24 14.4 28.08 6.2 - - Level 7................................................... 19.86 6.4 20.03 7.9 - - 20.33 6.6 - - Level 8................................................... 18.76 4.8 18.45 5.9 - - 18.76 4.8 - - Level 9................................................... 24.78 7.5 26.32 7.1 - - 24.78 7.5 - - Level 11.................................................. 33.59 11.2 33.66 11.5 - - 33.59 11.2 - - Level 12.................................................. 33.76 7.4 33.42 7.4 - - 33.76 7.4 - - Management related occupations................................ 21.67 6.0 23.01 6.1 17.62 5.5 21.67 6.0 - - Level 8................................................... 20.85 11.1 23.11 10.4 - - 20.85 11.1 - - Level 9................................................... 20.91 5.4 22.28 7.4 - - 20.91 5.4 - - Sales occupations................................................. 16.89 10.9 16.94 10.9 - - 23.04 8.0 7.33 3.3 Level 3................................................... 7.52 5.5 7.52 5.5 - - 8.04 8.1 7.36 6.6 Level 4................................................... - - - - - - 9.59 10.5 - - Level 6................................................... 14.05 5.0 14.05 5.0 - - 14.05 5.0 - - Administrative support occupations, including clerical............ 12.26 3.8 12.35 4.2 11.38 4.2 12.30 3.9 11.60 7.5 Level 2................................................... 8.18 2.9 8.20 3.0 - - 8.08 3.1 8.69 4.8 Level 3................................................... 10.22 4.2 10.31 4.4 9.37 3.0 10.19 4.4 - - Level 4................................................... 11.83 4.9 11.93 5.3 10.69 5.1 11.68 4.4 13.98 11.8 Level 5................................................... 13.13 3.7 13.24 4.4 12.63 5.7 13.13 4.0 - - Level 6................................................... 15.32 7.1 15.40 8.5 - - 15.32 7.1 - - Level 7................................................... 16.17 4.3 16.15 4.5 - - 16.17 4.3 - - Blue-collar occupations............................................... $14.83 4.1% $14.89 4.2% $13.01 7.5% $14.98 4.1% $8.43 9.2% Level 1................................................... 6.80 4.3 6.81 4.3 - - 6.85 5.2 - - Level 2................................................... 9.17 5.6 9.17 5.6 - - 9.06 4.9 - - Level 3................................................... 14.58 6.7 14.81 6.9 10.32 4.4 14.57 6.7 - - Level 4................................................... 12.63 7.8 12.67 8.1 - - 12.64 8.0 - - Level 5................................................... 15.67 4.9 15.70 5.0 - - 15.67 4.9 - - Level 6................................................... 15.75 6.4 15.96 7.2 14.26 3.5 15.76 6.4 - - Level 7................................................... 19.51 4.2 19.63 4.3 - - 19.51 4.2 - - Level 8................................................... 20.86 8.1 20.86 8.1 - - 20.86 8.1 - - Precision production, craft, and repair occupations............... 18.76 3.9 18.84 4.0 16.33 9.1 18.81 3.9 - - Level 4................................................... 12.03 5.6 12.04 5.5 - - 11.74 5.4 - - Level 5................................................... 15.40 6.8 15.42 7.0 - - 15.40 6.8 - - Level 6................................................... 14.16 8.6 14.02 9.6 - - 14.15 8.8 - - Level 7................................................... 20.12 5.0 20.17 5.1 - - 20.12 5.0 - - Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors..................... 14.98 6.5 14.98 6.5 - - 15.02 6.5 - - Level 1................................................... 5.97 3.9 5.97 3.9 - - 5.99 4.1 - - Level 2................................................... 8.69 7.1 8.69 7.1 - - 8.69 7.1 - - Level 3................................................... 16.59 7.9 16.59 7.9 - - 16.59 7.9 - - Level 4................................................... 12.46 17.0 12.46 17.0 - - 12.46 17.0 - - Level 5................................................... 16.72 5.0 16.72 5.0 - - 16.72 5.0 - - Level 6................................................... 18.90 5.4 18.90 5.4 - - 18.90 5.4 - - Level 7................................................... 18.27 6.3 18.27 6.3 - - 18.27 6.3 - - Transportation and material moving occupations.................... 13.44 4.7 13.44 4.9 13.52 6.0 13.44 4.7 - - Level 3................................................... 11.41 6.3 11.36 7.0 - - 11.35 6.5 - - Level 4................................................... 13.29 10.2 13.30 10.3 - - 13.29 10.2 - - Level 5................................................... 13.33 6.5 13.26 6.9 - - 13.33 6.5 - - Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers.............. 10.23 6.1 10.19 6.6 10.66 7.2 10.46 6.3 - - Level 1................................................... 7.25 2.9 7.29 2.9 - - 7.47 3.6 - - Level 2................................................... 9.22 7.8 9.22 7.8 - - 9.05 6.7 - - Level 3................................................... 13.31 9.6 14.03 9.4 9.80 3.9 13.31 9.6 - - Level 4................................................... 11.51 11.7 11.56 13.2 - - 11.60 12.9 - - Level 5................................................... 12.60 12.3 12.48 13.1 - - 12.34 13.5 - - Service occupations................................................. 9.05 4.9 7.79 5.7 11.47 5.2 9.62 4.3 5.98 5.7 Level 1................................................... 6.24 3.8 6.13 3.9 7.21 3.5 6.85 4.1 5.56 2.8 Level 2................................................... 7.41 13.1 7.21 17.5 - - 7.81 11.8 - - Level 3................................................... 8.11 2.7 7.74 2.4 9.38 2.6 8.34 2.9 6.64 9.8 Level 4................................................... 10.27 3.5 10.31 6.2 10.24 3.2 10.32 3.6 - - Level 5................................................... 12.03 6.9 10.43 5.6 12.80 8.0 12.16 7.2 - - Level 6................................................... 13.83 8.4 - - 13.55 10.1 13.83 8.4 - - Protective service occupations.............................. 13.99 6.4 - - 14.16 6.5 14.07 6.5 - - Level 6................................................... 13.55 10.1 - - 13.55 10.1 13.55 10.1 - - Food service occupations..................................... 6.50 8.2 6.28 8.6 8.58 3.3 7.20 8.5 5.17 6.3 Level 1................................................... 5.84 3.5 5.84 3.6 - - 6.71 5.1 5.45 2.4 Level 2................................................... $5.07 24.9% - - - - - - - - Level 3................................................... 7.24 3.8 $7.22 3.8% - - $7.65 5.6% - - Health service occupations.................................. 8.48 3.0 8.50 3.4 $8.39 4.2% 8.49 3.3 $8.42 5.5% Level 2................................................... 7.49 3.7 7.49 3.7 - - 7.47 3.8 - - Level 3................................................... 8.26 2.1 8.21 2.1 - - 8.34 2.3 - - Level 4................................................... 9.10 2.1 9.13 2.8 - - 9.12 2.2 - - Cleaning and building service occupations................... 9.94 7.4 9.78 10.5 10.17 9.7 10.09 7.5 - - Level 1................................................... 6.85 6.9 6.73 7.5 7.66 7.4 6.93 6.8 - - Level 2................................................... 11.32 20.7 - - - - 11.32 20.7 - - Level 3................................................... 8.80 4.1 8.21 3.7 9.59 3.8 8.88 4.3 - - Personal service occupations................................ 8.84 3.5 - - 9.37 2.3 9.09 3.1 - - 1 Earnings are the straight-time hourly wages or salaries paid to employees. They include incentive pay, cost-of-living adjustments, and hazard pay. Excluded are premium pay for overtime, vacations, holidays, nonproduction bonuses, and tips. The mean is computed by totaling the pay of all workers and dividing by the number of workers, weighted by hours. 2 Each occupation for which wage 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 ranking within each factor. The points are summed to determine the overall level of the occupation. See technical note for more information. 3 A classification system including about 480 individual occupations is used to cover all workers in the civilian economy. Individual occupations are classified into one of nine major occupational groups. 4 All workers include full-time and part-time workers. 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. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria. Overall occupational groups and occupational levels may include data for categories not shown separately. N.E.C. means "not elsewhere classified." 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. NOTE: Individual and average wage rates were collected in this update survey. A procedure was put into place to "move" the positional statistics where averages were collected. This procedure compares current locality survey data帶t the quote level患ith the same quote from the prior survey. Individual rates from the prior survey are moved by the average change in mean wages for the occupation. Table B-2. Mean hourly earnings(1) for selected occupations and levels(2), all industries, private industry, State and local government, full-time and part-time workers, Louisville, KY-IN, February 1999 All workers(4) All industries Occupation(3) and level All industries Private industry State and local Full-time workers Part-time workers government Mean RSE Mean RSE Mean RSE Mean RSE Mean RSE White-collar occupations: Professional specialty and technical occupations: Professional specialty occupations: Industrial engineers........................................ $25.27 6.5% $25.27 6.5% - - $25.27 6.5% - - Level 9................................................... 24.02 7.6 24.02 7.6 - - 24.02 7.6 - - Mechanical engineers........................................ 24.79 12.5 24.79 12.5 - - 24.79 12.5 - - Registered nurses........................................... 18.72 1.7 18.73 1.9 $18.57 2.3% 18.70 1.8 - - Level 7................................................... 18.39 1.5 18.46 1.5 - - 18.46 1.6 - - Level 8................................................... 18.93 4.1 - - - - 18.92 4.2 - - Elementary school teachers.................................. 30.18 2.5 - - 30.89 1.1 30.18 2.5 - - Level 9................................................... 32.17 2.9 - - 32.17 2.9 32.17 2.9 - - Secondary school teachers................................... 30.91 1.5 - - 30.91 1.5 30.91 1.5 - - Level 9................................................... 33.12 4.5 - - 33.12 4.5 33.12 4.5 - - Teachers, N.E.C............................................. 20.60 10.6 - - - - - - - - Social workers.............................................. 14.85 8.1 - - 14.20 3.6 14.85 8.1 - - Lawyers..................................................... 40.88 9.4 - - - - 41.30 9.3 - - Technical occupations: Clinical laboratory technologists and technicians........... 16.22 4.3 16.19 4.3 - - 16.19 4.3 - - Licensed practical nurses................................... 14.46 7.2 15.04 8.8 12.80 3.5 13.32 6.0 - - Level 4................................................... 12.05 3.6 12.21 4.5 - - 12.00 4.0 - - Level 5................................................... 13.12 3.2 - - - - - - - - Health technologists and technicians, N.E.C................. 12.68 9.5 - - - - 12.60 8.7 - - Executive, administrative, and managerial occupations: Administrators and officials, public administration......... 22.48 9.4 - - 22.48 9.4 22.48 9.4 - - Financial managers.......................................... 35.81 9.4 35.81 9.4 - - 35.81 9.4 - - Managers, marketing, advertising and public relations....... 30.17 19.5 30.17 19.5 - - 30.91 19.8 - - Managers and administrators, N.E.C.......................... 26.17 5.8 27.67 5.5 - - 26.17 5.8 - - Personnel, training, and labor relations specialists........ 23.33 7.1 23.75 6.9 - - 23.33 7.1 - - Management related occupations, N.E.C....................... 18.67 7.1 18.64 7.5 - - 18.67 7.1 - - Sales occupations: Supervisors, sales occupations.............................. 28.11 17.9 28.11 17.9 - - 28.18 17.8 - - Cashiers.................................................... 7.58 5.8 7.59 5.9 - - 8.84 6.7 $6.48 4.0% Level 3................................................... 7.11 8.1 7.11 8.1 - - 8.04 8.1 - - Administrative support occupations, including clerical: Secretaries................................................. 12.68 4.4 12.73 5.4 12.47 3.6 12.84 4.5 - - Level 4................................................... 12.68 7.1 12.79 8.0 - - 12.95 6.9 - - Level 5................................................... 12.29 4.6 12.28 6.6 - - 12.35 4.1 - - Receptionists............................................... 8.87 3.9 8.78 4.3 - - 8.97 3.7 - - Records clerks, N.E.C....................................... 14.48 13.4 14.52 13.5 - - 14.48 13.4 - - Bookkeepers, accounting and auditing clerks................. 11.65 4.3 11.63 4.7 - - 11.33 4.1 - - Level 4................................................... 9.90 4.3 9.88 4.8 - - 9.90 4.3 - - Traffic, shipping and receiving clerks...................... 12.39 7.3 12.67 8.1 - - 12.49 7.4 - - Stock and inventory clerks.................................. 10.25 9.6 10.25 9.6 - - 10.25 9.6 - - Material recording, scheduling, and distribution clerks, N.E.C.................................................... 12.57 16.0 - - - - 12.57 16.0 - - Investigators and adjusters except insurance................ $11.53 8.3% $11.53 8.3% - - $11.98 8.6% - - General office clerks....................................... 10.41 6.9 10.64 7.6 $8.53 6.1% 10.42 6.9 - - Level 3................................................... 8.94 5.3 - - - - 8.94 5.3 - - Level 4................................................... 10.69 5.3 - - - - 10.69 5.3 - - Teachers' aides............................................. 7.48 7.0 - - 8.28 3.7 - - - - Administrative support occupations, N.E.C................... 10.29 7.7 10.36 8.3 - - 9.86 6.2 - - Level 4................................................... 11.41 6.5 11.73 6.7 - - 10.65 4.1 - - Blue-collar occupations: Precision production, craft, and repair occupations: Industrial machinery repairers.............................. 20.70 7.1 20.70 7.1 - - 20.70 7.1 - - Level 7................................................... 21.73 7.6 21.73 7.6 - - 21.73 7.6 - - Mechanics and repairers, N.E.C.............................. 20.64 4.4 20.78 4.3 - - 20.64 4.4 - - Supervisors, construction trades, N.E.C..................... 19.49 5.9 19.65 6.5 - - 19.49 5.9 - - Electricians................................................ 20.62 6.3 20.62 6.3 - - 20.62 6.3 - - Supervisors, production occupations......................... 21.78 10.3 21.79 11.0 - - 21.78 10.3 - - Butchers and meat cutters................................... 11.06 11.8 11.06 11.8 - - 11.06 11.8 - - Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors: Miscellaneous machine operators, N.E.C...................... 15.73 12.1 15.73 12.1 - - 15.73 12.1 - - Level 3................................................... 11.75 17.9 11.75 17.9 - - 11.75 17.9 - - Level 5................................................... 16.80 10.2 16.80 10.2 - - 16.80 10.2 - - Welders and cutters......................................... 13.47 11.9 13.47 11.9 - - 13.47 11.9 - - Assemblers.................................................. 16.60 5.1 16.60 5.1 - - 16.60 5.1 - - Production inspectors, checkers and examiners............... 17.54 10.2 17.54 10.2 - - 17.54 10.2 - - Transportation and material moving occupations: Truck drivers............................................... 13.16 7.9 13.19 8.0 - - 13.16 7.9 - - Level 4................................................... 13.69 12.8 13.69 12.8 - - 13.69 12.8 - - Industrial truck and tractor equipment operators............ 11.05 3.0 11.05 3.0 - - 11.05 3.0 - - Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers: Supervisors, handlers, equipment cleaners, and laborers, N.E.C.................................................... 15.76 6.8 - - - - 15.76 6.8 - - Machine feeders and offbearers.............................. 9.56 11.8 9.56 11.8 - - 9.67 13.0 - - Freight, stock, and material handlers, N.E.C................ 13.56 12.3 13.56 12.3 - - 13.77 12.6 - - Vehicle washers and equipment cleaners...................... 14.24 8.5 - - - - - - - - Hand packers and packagers.................................. 9.63 6.8 9.63 6.8 - - 9.75 6.8 - - Laborers except construction, N.E.C......................... 8.13 4.4 7.92 4.6 9.42 8.2 8.13 4.4 - - Level 2................................................... 7.87 7.1 7.87 7.1 - - 7.87 7.1 - - Level 4................................................... 9.90 6.5 - - - - 9.90 6.5 - - Service occupations: Protective service occupations: Police and detectives, public service....................... 16.15 6.0 - - 16.15 6.0 16.15 6.0 - - Food service occupations: Waiters and waitresses...................................... 3.93 23.5 3.93 23.5 - - - - - - Cooks....................................................... 7.79 4.6 7.59 6.4 - - 8.51 3.8 - - Level 3................................................... $7.58 4.1% $7.58 4.2% - - - - - - Kitchen workers, food preparation........................... 8.16 6.9 8.16 6.9 - - $8.63 8.1% - - Food preparation occupations, N.E.C......................... 6.36 5.2 6.24 5.1 - - - - - - Level 1................................................... 5.88 4.5 5.88 4.5 - - - - - - Health service occupations: Health aides, except nursing................................ 10.18 9.9 10.39 11.1 - - 10.16 11.3 - - Level 4................................................... 9.28 4.0 - - - - - - - - Nursing aides, orderlies and attendants..................... 8.17 2.2 8.15 2.4 $8.33 4.9% 8.20 2.5 $7.98 3.2% Level 2................................................... 7.44 4.1 7.44 4.1 - - - - - - Level 3................................................... 8.26 2.1 8.21 2.1 - - 8.34 2.3 - - Level 4................................................... 9.05 2.2 9.01 2.7 - - 9.07 2.3 - - Cleaning and building service occupations: Janitors and cleaners....................................... 9.42 8.0 9.70 11.9 8.95 6.7 9.59 8.3 - - Level 1................................................... 6.89 9.1 6.74 10.3 7.66 7.4 7.01 9.1 - - Level 2................................................... 11.32 20.7 - - - - 11.32 20.7 - - Level 3................................................... 8.71 5.5 8.14 4.7 9.61 5.6 8.81 6.0 - - Personal service occupations: Early childhood teachers' assistants........................ 8.93 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 Each occupation for which wage 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 ranking within each factor. The points are summed to determine the overall level of the occupation. See technical note for more information. 3 A classification system including about 480 individual occupations is used to cover all workers in the civilian economy. Individual occupations are classified into one of nine major occupational groups. 4 All workers include full-time and part-time workers. 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. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria. Overall occupational groups and occupational levels may include data for categories not shown separately. N.E.C. means "not elsewhere classified." 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. NOTE: Individual and average wage rates were collected in this update survey. A procedure was put into place to "move" the positional statistics where averages were collected. This procedure compares current locality survey data帶t the quote level患ith the same quote from the prior survey. Individual rates from the prior survey are moved by the average change in mean wages for the occupation. Table C-1. Mean hourly earnings(1) by occupational group and selected characteristics, all industries, Louisville, KY-IN, February 1999 Full-time Part-time Nonunion- Incen- Full-time Part-time Nonunion- Incen- workers(- workers(- Union(4) (4) Time(5) tive(5) workers(- workers(- Union(4) (4) Time(5) tive(5) Occupational group(2) 3) 3) 3) 3) Mean RSE All occupations....................................................... $16.41 $9.13 $17.75 $15.36 $15.72 $18.97 2.7% 6.8% 4.5% 3.2% 2.7% 9.8% All occupations excluding sales..................................... 16.15 9.95 17.96 15.20 15.89 13.55 2.7 9.0 4.5 3.3 2.7 11.3 White-collar occupations............................................ 19.37 10.84 21.94 18.26 18.27 23.67 3.2 9.0 4.4 3.5 3.1 14.2 White-collar excluding sales...................................... 19.05 14.94 23.51 18.34 18.83 - 3.2 7.3 4.1 3.6 3.1 - Professional specialty and technical occupations.................. 22.58 19.27 26.93 21.41 22.38 - 4.3 6.8 3.6 5.3 4.1 - Professional specialty occupations.............................. 25.04 20.50 29.28 23.82 24.87 - 4.7 6.5 2.3 6.0 4.7 - Technical occupations........................................... 15.24 17.36 18.96 14.72 15.40 - 3.4 12.3 6.2 3.1 3.4 - Executive, administrative, and managerial occupations............. 26.21 - - 26.14 26.28 - 5.1 - - 5.0 5.0 - Sales occupations................................................. 23.04 7.33 - 17.69 10.59 23.97 8.0 3.3 - 11.5 9.2 16.0 Administrative support including clerical occupations............. 12.30 11.60 16.13 11.94 12.26 - 3.9 7.5 6.7 3.9 3.8 - Blue-collar occupations............................................. 14.98 8.43 17.30 13.25 15.00 11.79 4.1 9.2 6.0 5.3 4.1 8.0 Precision production, craft, and repair occupations............... 18.81 - 20.46 16.87 18.84 - 3.9 - 2.8 5.7 3.9 - Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors..................... 15.02 - 17.69 13.07 15.29 10.85 6.5 - 9.5 9.3 6.5 10.4 Transportation and material moving occupations.................... 13.44 - 13.92 13.27 13.44 - 4.7 - 8.2 5.4 5.1 - Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers.............. 10.46 - 9.85 10.35 10.28 - 6.3 - 7.1 7.4 6.4 - Service occupations................................................. 9.62 5.98 11.67 8.54 9.05 - 4.3 5.7 6.2 5.6 4.9 - 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 A classification system including about 480 individual occupations is used to cover all workers in the civilian economy. Individual occupations are classified into one of nine major occupational groups. 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. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria. Overall occupational groups and occupational levels may include data for categories not shown separately. N.E.C. means "not elsewhere classified." NOTE: Individual and average wage rates were collected in this update survey. A procedure was put into place to "move" the positional statistics where averages were collected. This procedure compares current locality survey data帶t the quote level患ith the same quote from the prior survey. Individual rates from the prior survey are moved by the average change in mean wages for the occupation. Table C-2. Mean hourly earnings(1) by occupational group and industry division, private industry, all workers(2), Louisville, KY-IN, February 1999 All All private Goods-producing indust- pri- Goods-producing indust- industries ries(4) Service-producing industries(5) vate ries(4) Service-producing industries(5) indus- tries Trans- Fin- Trans- Fin- Occupational group(3) port- Whole- ance, port- Whole- ance, Con- Manu- ation sale in- Con- Manu- ation sale in- Total Mining struc- fac- Total and and sur- Serv- Total Mining struc- fac- Total and and sur- Serv- tion turing public retail ance, ices tion turing public retail ance, ices Mean util- trade and RSE util- trade and ities real ities real estate estate Mean RSE All occupations....................................................... $15.54 $17.33 - - $17.23 - - - - $14.36 3.2% 3.7% - - 4.0% - - - - 7.5% All occupations excluding sales..................................... 15.44 17.30 - - 17.20 - - - - 14.42 3.3 3.8 - - 4.1 - - - - 7.5 White-collar occupations............................................ 17.90 20.23 - - 20.38 - - - - 17.68 3.8 5.5 - - 6.1 - - - - 6.7 White-collar excluding sales...................................... 18.07 20.28 - - 20.45 - - - - 17.83 3.9 5.8 - - 6.4 - - - - 6.7 Professional specialty and technical occupations.................. 21.15 22.88 - - 23.25 - - - - 20.40 6.1 9.8 - - 11.1 - - - - 8.7 Professional specialty occupations.............................. 23.77 26.31 - - 27.79 - - - - 22.89 7.4 11.2 - - 12.1 - - - - 10.4 Technical occupations........................................... 15.80 15.49 - - 15.49 - - - - 14.88 3.3 2.9 - - 2.9 - - - - 3.6 Executive, administrative, and managerial occupations............. 27.37 27.33 - - 27.70 - - - - 27.85 5.4 6.6 - - 6.9 - - - - 12.9 Sales occupations................................................. 16.94 19.39 - - 19.39 - - - - - 10.9 10.2 - - 10.2 - - - - - Administrative support, including clerical occupations............ 12.35 12.74 - - 12.69 - - - - 11.15 4.2 4.8 - - 5.1 - - - - 5.3 Blue-collar occupations............................................. 14.89 16.22 - - 16.02 - - - - 8.00 4.2 4.7 - - 5.1 - - - - 3.7 Precision production, craft, and repair occupations............... 18.84 20.85 - - 20.94 - - - - - 4.0 3.4 - - 3.4 - - - - - Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors..................... 14.98 15.61 - - 15.61 - - - - - 6.5 5.8 - - 5.8 - - - - - Transportation and material moving occupations.................... 13.44 15.74 - - 15.58 - - - - 10.21 4.9 6.9 - - 11.4 - - - - 1.6 Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers.............. 10.19 11.35 - - 11.38 - - - - 6.94 6.6 8.6 - - 9.9 - - - - 5.1 Service occupations................................................. 7.79 16.82 - - 16.82 - - - - 8.32 5.7 11.2 - - 11.2 - - - - 3.3 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 All workers include full-time and part-time workers. 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. Individual occupations are classified into one of nine major occupational groups. 4 Goods-producing industries include mining, construction, and manufacturing. 5 Service-producing industries include transportation and public utilities; wholesale and retail trade; finance, insurance, and real estate; and services. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria. Overall occupational groups and occupational levels may include data for categories not shown separately. N.E.C. means "not elsewhere classified." 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. NOTE: Individual and average wage rates were collected in this update survey. A procedure was put into place to "move" the positional statistics where averages were collected. This procedure compares current locality survey data帶t the quote level患ith the same quote from the prior survey. Individual rates from the prior survey are moved by the average change in mean wages for the occupation. Table C-3. Mean hourly earnings(1) by occupational group and establishment employment size, private industry, all workers(2), Louisville, KY-IN, February 1999 All All private Mean private RSE industry industry workers workers Occupational group(3) 100 workers or more 100 workers or more Mean 50 - 99 RSE 50 - 99 workers 100 - 499 500 workers 100 - 499 500 Total workers workers Total workers workers or more or more All occupations....................................................... $15.54 $14.17 $15.96 $14.56 $17.78 3.2% 6.5% 3.5% 5.4% 3.6% All occupations excluding sales..................................... 15.44 12.71 16.12 14.72 17.91 3.3 7.7 3.5 5.5 3.5 White-collar occupations............................................ 17.90 18.04 17.86 18.04 17.66 3.8 6.6 4.2 5.8 5.9 White-collar excluding sales...................................... 18.07 16.57 18.35 18.81 17.90 3.9 12.4 4.2 5.6 5.9 Professional specialty and technical occupations.................. 21.15 16.07 21.72 24.50 19.07 6.1 10.2 6.3 10.2 3.7 Professional specialty occupations.............................. 23.77 16.18 24.93 29.24 20.71 7.4 10.6 7.5 10.6 4.0 Technical occupations........................................... 15.80 - 15.82 15.43 16.18 3.3 - 3.4 4.3 5.1 Executive, administrative, and managerial occupations............. 27.37 29.11 26.93 24.48 28.54 5.4 20.6 4.0 5.2 4.9 Sales occupations................................................. 16.94 20.06 10.20 10.63 - 10.9 12.1 10.6 12.3 - Administrative support, including clerical occupations............ 12.35 11.42 12.56 13.46 11.48 4.2 9.4 4.9 5.8 4.9 Blue-collar occupations............................................. 14.89 11.92 15.68 13.30 19.09 4.2 5.3 4.6 6.4 4.1 Precision production, craft, and repair occupations............... 18.84 14.06 20.22 19.31 21.36 4.0 7.0 2.8 4.8 3.2 Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors..................... 14.98 9.81 15.56 11.75 19.05 6.5 10.1 6.6 9.6 4.4 Transportation and material moving occupations.................... 13.44 12.81 13.76 13.08 - 4.9 6.9 6.0 6.6 - Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers.............. 10.19 10.32 10.13 9.25 - 6.6 10.3 8.4 5.6 - Service occupations................................................. 7.79 6.81 8.18 7.17 10.45 5.7 5.4 8.4 9.1 8.1 1 Earnings are the straight-time hourly wages or salaries paid to employees. They include incentive pay, cost-of-living adjustments, and hazard pay. Excluded are premium pay for overtime, vacations, holidays, nonproduction bonuses, and tips. The mean is computed by totaling the pay of all workers and dividing by the number of workers, weighted by hours. 2 All workers include full-time and part-time workers. 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. Individual occupations are classified into one of nine major occupational groups. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria. Overall occupational groups and occupational levels may include data for categories not shown separately. N.E.C. means "not elsewhere classified." 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. NOTE: Individual and average wage rates were collected in this update survey. A procedure was put into place to "move" the positional statistics where averages were collected. This procedure compares current locality survey data帶t the quote level患ith the same quote from the prior survey. Individual rates from the prior survey are moved by the average change in mean wages for the occupation. Table C-4. Number of workers(1) represented by occupational group, Louisville, KY-IN, February 1999 All workers All indus- Private State and All indus- Private State and Occupational group(2) tries industry local tries industry local government government Workers RSE All occupations....................................................... 289,680 243,611 46,069 4.9% 5.8% 4.4% All occupations excluding sales..................................... 267,878 221,899 45,979 5.2 6.2 4.4 White-collar occupations............................................ 142,611 113,687 28,924 7.3 9.0 7.7 White-collar excluding sales...................................... 120,809 91,975 28,834 7.4 9.5 7.7 Professional specialty and technical occupations.................. 47,884 29,615 18,269 7.3 9.7 10.7 Professional specialty occupations.............................. 36,222 19,768 16,455 8.7 12.7 11.5 Technical occupations........................................... 11,662 9,847 1,815 15.0 16.9 30.0 Executive, administrative, and managerial occupations............. 22,429 16,798 5,631 15.2 18.2 26.6 Sales occupations................................................. 21,802 21,712 - 25.9 26.0 - Administrative support including clerical occupations............. 50,496 45,562 4,934 12.6 13.9 16.7 Blue-collar occupations............................................. 104,107 100,626 3,481 9.8 10.1 29.5 Precision production, craft, and repair occupations............... 27,365 26,329 - 14.5 14.9 - Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors..................... 39,132 39,132 - 17.5 17.5 - Transportation and material moving occupations.................... 16,007 14,972 1,035 23.2 24.6 46.6 Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers.............. 21,602 20,192 1,410 15.8 16.8 30.0 Service occupations................................................. 42,962 29,298 13,664 12.0 16.2 14.3 1 Both full-time and part-time workers were included in the survey. 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 establishment, where a 40-hour week is the minimum full-time schedule. 2 A classification system including about 480 individual occupations is used to cover all workers in the civilian economy. Individual occupations are classified into one of nine major occupational groups. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria. Overall occupational groups and occupational levels may include data for categories not shown separately. N.E.C. means "not elsewhere classified." 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. NOTE: Individual and average wage rates were collected in this update survey. A procedure was put into place to "move" the positional statistics where averages were collected. This procedure compares current locality survey data帶t the quote level患ith the same quote from the prior survey. Individual rates from the prior survey are moved by the average change in mean wages for the occupation. Appendix table 1. Number of establishments studied by industry division and establishment employment size, and number of establishments represented, Louisville, KY-IN, February 1999 Number of establishments studied Number of Industry establish- 100 workers or more ments rep- Total 50 - 99 resented studied workers Total 100 - 499 500 workers workers or more All industries........................................................ 1,759 142 36 106 71 35 Private industry.................................................... 1,711 116 34 82 61 21 Goods-producing industries........................................ 439 44 9 35 28 7 Construction.................................................... 102 3 1 2 2 - Manufacturing................................................... 337 41 8 33 26 7 Service-producing industries...................................... 1,273 72 25 47 33 14 Tranportation and public utilities.............................. 194 9 4 5 3 2 Wholesale and retail trade...................................... 573 18 10 8 7 1 Finance, insurance and real estate.............................. 98 5 1 4 2 2 Services........................................................ 407 40 10 30 21 9 State and local government.......................................... 48 26 2 24 10 14 NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported. Overall industry and industry groups may include data for categories not shown separately. Appendix table 2. Relative standard errors of mean hourly earnings(1) for selected occupations, all industries, private industry, and State and local government, all workers(2), Louisville, KY-IN, February 1999 All State and Occupation(3) indus- Private local tries industry govern- ment All occupations....................................................... 2.7 3.2 4.2 All occupations excluding sales..................................... 2.7 3.3 4.2 White-collar occupations............................................ 3.1 3.8 3.9 White-collar occupations excluding sales.......................... 3.2 3.9 3.9 Professional specialty and technical occupations.................. 4.1 6.1 4.3 Professional specialty occupations.............................. 4.6 7.4 4.1 Engineers, architects, and surveyors.......................... 6.8 6.6 - Industrial engineers........................................ 6.5 6.5 - Mechanical engineers........................................ 12.5 12.5 - Mathematical and computer scientists.......................... 23.2 - - Natural scientists............................................ - - - Health related occupations.................................... 2.7 3.0 4.8 Registered nurses........................................... 1.7 1.9 2.3 Teachers, college and university.............................. 11.9 - - Teachers, except college and university....................... 2.5 - 2.3 Elementary school teachers.................................. 2.5 - 1.1 Secondary school teachers................................... 1.5 - 1.5 Teachers, N.E.C............................................. 10.6 - - Librarians, archivists, and curators.......................... - - - Social scientists and urban planners.......................... - - - Social, recreation, and religious workers..................... 7.4 - 3.6 Social workers.............................................. 8.1 - 3.6 Lawyers and judges............................................ 9.4 - - Lawyers..................................................... 9.4 - - Writers, authors, entertainers, athletes, and professionals, N.E.C...................................................... 11.1 13.1 - Technical occupations........................................... 3.4 3.3 11.5 Clinical laboratory technologists and technicians........... 4.3 4.3 - Licensed practical nurses................................... 7.2 8.8 3.5 Health technologists and technicians, N.E.C................. 9.5 - - Executive, administrative, and managerial occupations............. 5.0 5.4 11.9 Executives, administrators, and managers...................... 6.1 6.6 14.4 Administrators and officials, public administration......... 9.4 - 9.4 Financial managers.......................................... 9.4 9.4 - Managers, marketing, advertising and public relations....... 19.5 19.5 - Managers and administrators, N.E.C.......................... 5.8 5.5 - Management related occupations................................ 6.0 6.1 5.5 Personnel, training, and labor relations specialists........ 7.1 6.9 - Management related occupations, N.E.C....................... 7.1 7.5 - Sales occupations................................................. 10.9 10.9 - Supervisors, sales occupations.............................. 17.9 17.9 - Cashiers.................................................... 5.8 5.9 - Administrative support occupations, including clerical............ 3.8 4.2 4.2 Secretaries................................................. 4.4 5.4 3.6 Receptionists............................................... 3.9 4.3 - Records clerks, N.E.C....................................... 13.4 13.5 - Bookkeepers, accounting and auditing clerks................. 4.3 4.7 - Traffic, shipping and receiving clerks...................... 7.3 8.1 - Stock and inventory clerks.................................. 9.6 9.6 - Material recording, scheduling, and distribution clerks, N.E.C.................................................... 16.0 - - Investigators and adjusters except insurance................ 8.3 8.3 - General office clerks....................................... 6.9 7.6 6.1 Teachers' aides............................................. 7.0 - 3.7 Administrative support occupations, N.E.C................... 7.7 8.3 - Blue-collar occupations............................................. 4.1 4.2 7.5 Precision production, craft, and repair occupations............... 3.9 4.0 9.1 Industrial machinery repairers.............................. 7.1 7.1 - Mechanics and repairers, N.E.C.............................. 4.4 4.3 - Supervisors, construction trades, N.E.C..................... 5.9 6.5 - Electricians................................................ 6.3 6.3 - Supervisors, production occupations......................... 10.3 11.0 - Butchers and meat cutters................................... 11.8 11.8 - Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors..................... 6.5 6.5 - Miscellaneous machine operators, N.E.C...................... 12.1 12.1 - Welders and cutters......................................... 11.9 11.9 - Assemblers.................................................. 5.1 5.1 - Production inspectors, checkers and examiners............... 10.2 10.2 - Transportation and material moving occupations.................... 4.7 4.9 6.0 Truck drivers............................................... 7.9 8.0 - Industrial truck and tractor equipment operators............ 3.0 3.0 - Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers............... 6.1 6.6 7.2 Supervisors, handlers, equipment cleaners, and laborers, N.E.C.................................................... 6.8 - - Machine feeders and offbearers.............................. 11.8 11.8 - Freight, stock, and material handlers, N.E.C................ 12.3 12.3 - Vehicle washers and equipment cleaners...................... 8.5 - - Hand packers and packagers.................................. 6.8 6.8 - Laborers except construction, N.E.C......................... 4.4 4.6 8.2 Service occupations................................................. 4.9 5.7 5.2 Protective service occupations................................ 6.4 - 6.5 Police and detectives, public service....................... 6.0 - 6.0 Food service occupations...................................... 8.2 8.6 3.3 Waiters and waitresses...................................... 23.5 23.5 - Cooks....................................................... 4.6 6.4 - Kitchen workers, food preparation........................... 6.9 6.9 - Food preparation occupations, N.E.C......................... 5.2 5.1 - Health service occupations.................................... 3.0 3.4 4.2 Health aides, except nursing................................ 9.9 11.1 - Nursing aides, orderlies and attendants..................... 2.2 2.4 4.9 Cleaning and building service occupations..................... 7.4 10.5 9.7 Janitors and cleaners....................................... 8.0 11.9 6.7 Personal service occupations.................................. 3.5 - 2.3 Early childhood teachers' assistants........................ 3.7 - - 1 The relative standard error is the standard error expressed as a percent of the estimate. Hourly earnings for these occupations are presented in Tables A-1 and A-2. Reliable relative standard errors could not be determined for all occupations. 2 All workers include full-time and part-time workers. 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. Individual occupations are classified into one of nine major occupational groups. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria. Overall occupational groups and occupational levels may include data for categories not shown separately. N.E.C. means "not elsewhere classified." 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. NOTE: Individual and average wage rates were collected in this update survey. A procedure was put into place to "move" the positional statistics where averages were collected. This procedure compares current locality survey data帶t the quote level患ith the same quote from the prior survey. Individual rates from the prior survey are moved by the average change in mean wages for the occupation. Appendix table 3. Average work levels for selected occupations, all workers, full-time and part-time workers, Louisville, KY-IN, February 1999 All Full-t- Part-ti- Occupation(1) workers ime me workers workers All occupations....................................................... 5 6 3 All occupations excluding sales..................................... 5 6 3 White-collar occupations............................................ 6 7 4 White-collar occupations excluding sales.......................... 7 7 5 Professional specialty and technical occupations.................. 8 8 7 Professional specialty occupations.............................. 8 8 7 Engineers, architects, and surveyors.......................... 9 9 - Industrial engineers........................................ 9 9 - Mechanical engineers........................................ 8 8 - Mathematical and computer scientists.......................... 9 9 - Natural scientists............................................ - - - Health related occupations.................................... 8 8 - Registered nurses........................................... 8 8 - Teachers, college and university.............................. 11 11 - Teachers, except college and university....................... 7 7 - Elementary school teachers.................................. 8 8 - Secondary school teachers................................... 7 7 - Teachers, N.E.C............................................. 7 - - Librarians, archivists, and curators.......................... - - - Social scientists and urban planners.......................... - - - Social, recreation, and religious workers..................... 6 6 - Social workers.............................................. 7 7 - Lawyers and judges............................................ 12 12 - Lawyers..................................................... 12 12 - Writers, authors, entertainers, athletes, and professionals, N.E.C...................................................... 7 7 - Technical occupations........................................... 6 6 6 Clinical laboratory technologists and technicians........... 7 7 - Licensed practical nurses................................... 6 5 - Health technologists and technicians, N.E.C................. 5 5 - Executive, administrative, and managerial occupations............. 9 10 - Executives, administrators, and managers...................... 10 10 - Administrators and officials, public administration......... 8 8 - Financial managers.......................................... 10 10 - Managers, marketing, advertising and public relations....... 10 10 - Managers and administrators, N.E.C.......................... 10 10 - Management related occupations................................ 9 9 - Personnel, training, and labor relations specialists........ 8 8 - Management related occupations, N.E.C....................... 8 8 - Sales occupations................................................. 5 6 3 Supervisors, sales occupations.............................. 8 8 - Cashiers.................................................... 3 3 3 Administrative support occupations, including clerical............ 4 4 3 Secretaries................................................. 5 5 - Receptionists............................................... 3 3 - Records clerks, N.E.C....................................... 6 6 - Bookkeepers, accounting and auditing clerks................. 4 4 - Traffic, shipping and receiving clerks...................... 5 5 - Stock and inventory clerks.................................. 4 4 - Material recording, scheduling, and distribution clerks, N.E.C.................................................... 4 4 - Investigators and adjusters except insurance................ 4 4 - General office clerks....................................... 3 3 - Teachers' aides............................................. 3 - - Administrative support occupations, N.E.C................... 3 3 - Blue-collar occupations............................................. 5 5 2 Precision production, craft, and repair occupations............... 7 7 - Industrial machinery repairers.............................. 7 7 - Mechanics and repairers, N.E.C.............................. 7 7 - Supervisors, construction trades, N.E.C..................... 8 8 - Electricians................................................ 7 7 - Supervisors, production occupations......................... 8 8 - Butchers and meat cutters................................... 4 4 - Machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors..................... 4 4 - Miscellaneous machine operators, N.E.C...................... 4 4 - Welders and cutters......................................... 5 5 - Assemblers.................................................. 4 4 - Production inspectors, checkers and examiners............... 4 4 - Transportation and material moving occupations.................... 4 4 - Truck drivers............................................... 4 4 - Industrial truck and tractor equipment operators............ 4 4 - Handlers, equipment cleaners, helpers, and laborers............... 3 3 - Supervisors, handlers, equipment cleaners, and laborers, N.E.C.................................................... 6 6 - Machine feeders and offbearers.............................. 3 3 - Freight, stock, and material handlers, N.E.C................ 3 3 - Vehicle washers and equipment cleaners...................... 3 - - Hand packers and packagers.................................. 3 3 - Laborers except construction, N.E.C......................... 2 2 - Service occupations................................................. 3 4 2 Protective service occupations................................ 6 6 - Police and detectives, public service....................... 7 7 - Food service occupations...................................... 2 3 2 Waiters and waitresses...................................... 2 - - Cooks....................................................... 3 3 - Kitchen workers, food preparation........................... 2 3 - Food preparation occupations, N.E.C......................... 2 - - Health service occupations.................................... 3 3 3 Health aides, except nursing................................ 4 4 - Nursing aides, orderlies and attendants..................... 3 3 3 Cleaning and building service occupations..................... 3 3 - Janitors and cleaners....................................... 2 2 - Personal service occupations.................................. 3 3 - Early childhood teachers' assistants........................ 3 - - 1 A classification system including about 480 individual occupations is used to cover all workers in the civilian economy. Individual occupations are classified into one of nine major occupational groups. The occupations titled authors, musicians, actors, painters, photographers, dancers, artists, athletes, and legislators cannot be assigned a work level. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria. Overall occupational groups and occupational levels may include data for categories not shown separately. N.E.C. means "not elsewhere classified." NOTE: Individual and average wage rates were collected in this update survey. A procedure was put into place to "move" the positional statistics where averages were collected. This procedure compares current locality survey data帶t the quote level患ith the same quote from the prior survey. Individual rates from the prior survey are moved by the average change in mean wages for the occupation. Supplemental Table 2. Hourly earnings(1) for construction trades occupations in non-construction industries(2), Louisville, KY-IN, February 1999 All workers(4) Full-time workers Part-time workers Occupational group(3) and level Middle Range Middle Range Middle Range Mean RSE Median Mean RSE Median Mean RSE Median 25 75 25 75 25 75 Construction trades occupations....................................... $17.70 11.3% $19.11 $14.75 $21.37 $17.70 11.3% $19.11 $14.75 $21.37 - - - - - Electricians.................................................... 20.62 6.3 20.88 17.07 24.60 20.62 6.3 20.88 17.07 24.60 - - - - - Craft workers and helpers............................................. 12.15 14.0 10.49 7.91 17.25 12.15 14.0 10.49 7.91 17.25 - - - - - Welders and cutters............................................. 13.47 11.9 13.28 9.93 17.85 13.47 11.9 13.28 9.93 17.85 - - - - - 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. At the median, half of the workers receive the same as or more than the rate shown, and half receive the same as or less than the rate shown. The middle range is defined by two rates of pay; at the 25th percentile, one-fourth of the workers earn the same as or less than the rate shown; at the 75th percentile, one-fourth earn the same as or more than the rate shown. 2 The Standard Industrial Classification Manual was used in classifying establishments by industry. 3 A classification system including about 480 individual occupations is used to cover all workers in the civilian economy. Individual occupations are classified into one of nine major occupational groups. 4 All workers include full-time and part-time workers. 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. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria. Overall occupational groups and occupational levels may include data for categories not shown separately. N.E.C. means "not elsewhere classified." NOTE: Individual and average wage rates were collected in this update survey. A procedure was put into place to "move" the positional statistics where averages were collected. This procedure compares current locality survey data帶t the quote level患ith the same quote from the prior survey. Individual rates from the prior survey are moved by the average change in mean wages for the occupation. Supplemental Table 3. Number of workers in construction trades occupations, Louisville, KY-IN, February 1999 Workers RSE Construction industries(2) Non-construction Construction industries(2) Non-construction Occupational group(1) and level industries(2) industries(2) All Full-time Part-time All Full-time Part-time All Full-time Part-time All Full-time Part-time workers(- workers workers workers(- workers workers workers(- workers workers workers(- workers workers 3) 3) 3) 3) Construction trades occupations....................................... - - - 4,775 4,775 - - - - 39.8% 39.8% - Electricians.................................................... - - - 818 818 - - - - 45.5 45.5 - Craft workers and helpers............................................. - - - 2,059 2,059 - - - - 34.2 34.2 - Welders and cutters............................................. - - - 1,500 1,500 - - - - 37.1 37.1 - 1 A classification system including about 480 individual occupations is used to cover all workers in the civilian economy. Individual occupations are classified into one of nine major occupational groups. 2 The Standard Industrial Classification Manual was used in classifying establishments by industry. 3 All workers include full-time and part-time workers. 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. NOTE: Dashes indicate that no data were reported or that data did not meet publication criteria. Overall occupational groups and occupational levels may include data for categories not shown separately. N.E.C. means "not elsewhere classified." NOTE: Individual and average wage rates were collected in this update survey. A procedure was put into place to "move" the positional statistics where averages were collected. This procedure compares current locality survey data帶t the quote level患ith the same quote from the prior survey. Individual rates from the prior survey are moved by the average change in mean wages for the occupation.