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News Release Information

25-678-ATL
Friday, May 02, 2025

Contacts Technical information: Media contact:
  • (404) 893-4220

Occupational Employment and Wages in Florence-Muscle Shoals, AL — May 2024

Workers in the Florence-Muscle Shoals, AL Metropolitan Statistical Area had an average (mean) hourly wage of $23.42 in May 2024, compared to the nationwide average of $32.66, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported today. Regional Commissioner Victoria G. Lee noted that higher paying major occupational groups included management ($50.17), architecture and engineering ($41.95), and healthcare practitioners and technical ($38.65). Lower paying occupational groups included food preparation and serving related ($12.76), personal care and service ($14.14), healthcare support ($15.08), and building and grounds cleaning and maintenance ($15.69). (See table A.)

Occupational groups with the highest employment in the Florence area included sales and related (11.1 percent), food preparation and serving related (10.6 percent), and office and administrative support (10.3 percent). Major occupational groups on the lower end of local employment included life, physical, and social science (0.3 percent); legal (0.4 percent); and arts, design, entertainment, sports, and media (0.7 percent).

Table A. Occupational employment and wages by major occupational group, United States and the Florence metropolitan area, May 2024
Major occupational groupPercent of total employmentMean hourly wage ($)
United StatesFlorenceUnited StatesFlorence

Total, all occupations

100.0100.032.6623.42

Management

7.14.568.1550.17

Business and financial operations

6.74.145.0433.97

Computer and mathematical

3.40.856.1637.87

Architecture and engineering

1.71.449.9941.95

Life, physical, and social science

0.90.343.1236.09

Community and social service

1.70.830.3124.83

Legal

0.80.466.1934.87

Educational instruction and library

5.86.331.6921.67

Arts, design, entertainment, sports, and media

1.40.737.0421.61

Healthcare practitioners and technical

6.27.350.5938.65

Healthcare support

4.84.119.0615.08

Protective service

2.41.629.3322.50

Food preparation and serving related

8.810.617.3212.76

Building and grounds cleaning and maintenance

2.92.819.0115.69

Personal care and service

2.01.918.9514.14

Sales and related

8.711.126.0019.46

Office and administrative support

11.810.324.1219.33

Farming, fishing, and forestry

0.30.320.0619.44

Construction and extraction

4.15.430.7324.50

Installation, maintenance, and repair

3.95.729.6327.09

Production

5.79.924.0821.90

Transportation and material moving

8.99.723.4418.85

One occupational group—production—was chosen to illustrate the diversity of data available for any of the 22 major occupational categories. Florence had 5,520 jobs in production, accounting for 9.9 percent of local area employment, compared to the 5.7-percent share nationally. The average hourly wage for this occupational group locally was $21.90, compared to the national wage of $24.08.

Some of the larger detailed occupations within the production group included first-line supervisors of production and operating workers (680) and miscellaneous assemblers and fabricators (520). Among the higher paying jobs in this group were machinists ($34.60) and first-line supervisors of production and operating workers ($31.33). At the lower end of the wage scale were laundry and dry-cleaning workers ($13.09), production workers' helpers ($14.33), and sewing machine operators ($14.75). (Detailed data for the production occupations are presented in table 1; for a complete listing of detailed occupations available go to https://data.bls.gov/oes/#/area/0022520.)

Location quotients allow us to explore the occupational make-up of a metropolitan area by comparing the composition of jobs in an area relative to the national average. (See table 1.) For example, a location quotient of 2.00 indicates that an occupation accounts for twice the share of employment in the area than it does nationally. In the Florence area, above-average concentrations of employment were found in many of the occupations within the production group. For instance, metal and plastic extruding and drawing machine setters, operators, and tenders were employed at 14.16 times the national rate in Florence, and coating, painting, and spraying machine setters, operators, and tenders at 3.20 times the U.S. average. Miscellaneous assemblers and fabricators had a location quotient of 1.00 in Florence, indicating that this particular occupation’s local and national employment shares were similar.

The statistics in this release are from the Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) survey, a cooperative effort between BLS and the State Workforce Agencies (SWAs). BLS funds the survey and provides the procedures and technical support. State Workforce Agencies collect most of the data: in this case, the Alabama Department of Labor.

Changes to the Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) Data

Effective with the May 2024 OEWS news release, the OEWS program has implemented new metropolitan area definitions based on the 2020 decennial census and delineated by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), Bulletin 23-01. This news release does not include data for Colorado and its areas because of quality concerns with Colorado’s Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages (QCEW) data. See the national OEWS news release for more information.


Technical Note

The Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) survey is a semiannual survey measuring occupational employment and wage rates for wage and salary workers in nonfarm establishments in the United States. The OEWS data available from BLS include cross-industry occupational employment and wage estimates for the nation; over 530 areas, including states and the District of Columbia, metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs), nonmetropolitan areas, and territories; national industry-specific estimates at the NAICS sector, 3-digit, most 4-digit, and selected 5- and 6-digit industry levels; and national estimates by ownership across all industries and for schools and hospitals. Full OEWS data tables are available online.

Additional information about the OEWS estimates and methodology is available in the national Technical Notes. The overall national response rate for the six panels, based on the 50 states and the District of Columbia, is 65.7 percent based on establishments and 65.9 percent based on weighted sampled employment. The sample in the Florence-Muscle Shoals, AL Metropolitan Statistical Area included 942 establishments with a response rate of 62 percent.

Metropolitan area definitions

The substate area data published in this release reflect the standards and definitions established by the U.S. Office of Management and Budget.

The Florence-Muscle Shoals, AL Metropolitan Statistical Area includes Colbert County and Lauderdale County.

For more information

Answers to frequently asked questions about the OEWS data, as well as general program documentation, are available on the OEWS website.

Information in this release will be made available to individuals with sensory impairments upon request. Voice phone: (202) 691-5200; Telecommunications Relay Service: 7-1-1.

Table 1. Employment and wage data for production occupations, Florence metropolitan area, May 2024
Occupation (1)EmploymentMean wages ($)
Level (2)Location quotient (3)HourlyAnnual (4)

Production occupations

5,5201.7521.9045,550

First-line supervisors of production and operating workers

6802.7731.3365,160

Miscellaneous assemblers and fabricators

5201.0016.4634,240

Butchers and meat cutters

601.1715.7532,760

Extruding and drawing machine setters, operators, and tenders, metal and plastic

33014.1622.3846,550

Cutting, punching, and press machine setters, operators, and tenders, metal and plastic

1201.9419.1939,910

Machinists

1501.3834.6071,960

Molding, coremaking, and casting machine setters, operators, and tenders, metal and plastic

3305.9717.4336,240

Tool and die makers

603.0229.9162,210

Welders, cutters, solderers, and brazers

1601.0321.5044,730

Printing press operators

601.1716.2433,780

Laundry and dry-cleaning workers

400.6213.0927,230

Sewing machine operators

401.0714.7530,680

Cabinetmakers and bench carpenters

602.2116.8735,090

Sawing machine setters, operators, and tenders, wood

603.6617.5536,490

Woodworking machine setters, operators, and tenders, except sawing

903.9316.0233,330

Water and wastewater treatment plant and system operators

601.3930.7864,010

Mixing and blending machine setters, operators, and tenders

802.1220.9443,560

Inspectors, testers, sorters, samplers, and weighers

3501.6317.8137,050

Packaging and filling machine operators and tenders

500.3719.2540,040

Coating, painting, and spraying machine setters, operators, and tenders

1803.2019.0739,670

Computer numerically controlled tool operators

1101.6522.3446,480

Helpers--production workers

1001.5914.3329,800

Footnotes:
(1) For a complete listing of all detailed occupations in the Florence-Muscle Shoals, AL Metropolitan Statistical Area, see https://data.bls.gov/oes/#/area/0022520.
(2) Estimates for detailed occupations may not sum to the totals due to rounding, and because the totals may include occupations that are not shown separately. Estimates do not include self-employed workers.
(3) The location quotient is the ratio of the area concentration of occupational employment to the national average concentration. A location quotient greater than one indicates the occupation has a higher share of employment than average, and a location quotient less than one indicates the occupation is less prevalent in the area than average.
(4) Annual wages have been calculated by multiplying the hourly mean wage by a 'year-round, full-time' hours figure of 2,080 hours; for those occupations where there is not an hourly mean wage published, the annual wage has been directly calculated from the reported survey data.

 

Last Modified Date: Friday, May 02, 2025