Service Description: This feature service contains employment and wage data for select energy occupations by nation, state, and metro/nonmetro areas. Data from Bureau of Labor Statistics' (BLS) Occupation Employment Statistics (OES) series. Data vintage: May 2018.
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Max Record Count: 2000
Supported query Formats: JSON
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Description: This feature service contains employment and wage data for select energy occupations by nation, state, and metropolitan and nonmetropolitan areas. Data from Bureau of Labor Statistics' (BLS) Occupation Employment Statistics (OES) series. Data vintage: May 2018.
- How are "employees" defined by the OES Survey? "Employees" are all part-time and full-time workers who are paid a wage or salary. The survey does not cover the self-employed, owners and partners in unincorporated firms, household workers, or unpaid family workers.
- Do OES wage estimates include benefits? No. OES wage estimates represent wages and salaries only, and do not include nonproduction bonuses or employer costs of nonwage benefits, such as health insurance or employer contributions to retirement plans. Information on cost of benefits, benefit incidence, and detailed plan provisions is available from the National Compensation Survey program.
- Why does the sum of the areas within a state not equal the statewide employment? The sum of the areas may differ from statewide employment for several reasons:
- Rounding.
- The totals include data items that are not released separately due to confidentiality and quality reasons.
- Many States include metropolitan areas that cross State lines. These cross-State metropolitan area estimates include data from each State, which should not be included in a total for a single State.
- A small number of establishments indicate the State in which their employees are located, but do not indicate the specific metropolitan or nonmetropolitan area in which they are located. Data for these establishments are used in the calculation of the statewide estimates, but are not included in the estimates of any individual area.
- Why don't the major group or "all occupations" employment totals equal the sum of the employment estimates for the detailed occupations? The major group and "all occupations" totals may include detailed occupations for which separate employment estimates could not be published. As a result, employment totals at the major group and "all occupations" levels may be greater than the sum of employment estimates for the detailed occupations. Because the major group employment totals include employment for the detailed occupations in that group, summing across both detailed occupations and major groups will result in double counting of occupational employment.
Copyright Text: Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor, Occupational Employment Statistics, data downloaded 8/14/19 from www.bls.gov/oes/
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