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Friday, June 24, 2016
Workers in the Beaumont-Port Arthur Metropolitan Statistical Area had an average (mean) hourly wage of $21.51 in May 2015, about 7 percent below the nationwide average of $23.23, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Regional Commissioner Stanley W. Suchman noted that, after testing for statistical significance, wages in the local area were lower than their respective national averages in 15 of the 22 major occupational groups, including personal care and service; education, training, and library; and computer and mathematical. Three groups had wages that were measurably higher than their respective national averages; included in this grouping were production and architecture and engineering. Wage levels in the four remaining occupational groups were not statistically different from their respective national averages.
When compared to the nationwide distribution, Beaumont employment was more highly concentrated in 6 of the 22 occupational groups, including construction and extraction; production; and installation, maintenance, and repair. Conversely, 11 groups had employment shares significantly below their national representation, including business and financial operations; computer and mathematical; and office and administrative support. (See table A and box note at end of release.)
Major occupational group | Percent of total employment | Mean hourly wage | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
United States | Beaumont- Port Arthur | United States | Beaumont- Port Arthur | Percent difference(1) | |||
Total, all occupations | 100.0% | 100.0% | $23.23 | $21.51 | * | -7 | |
Management | 5.0 | 3.6 | * | 55.30 | 50.80 | * | -8 |
Business and financial operations | 5.1 | 2.7 | * | 35.48 | 33.71 | * | -5 |
Computer and mathematical | 2.9 | 0.7 | * | 41.43 | 32.84 | * | -21 |
Architecture and engineering | 1.8 | 2.5 | * | 39.89 | 46.59 | * | 17 |
Life, physical, and social science | 0.8 | 0.8 | 34.24 | 31.50 | * | -8 | |
Community and social service | 1.4 | 0.9 | * | 22.19 | 20.21 | * | -9 |
Legal | 0.8 | 0.5 | * | 49.74 | 43.94 | * | -12 |
Education, training, and library | 6.2 | 5.3 | * | 25.48 | 19.97 | * | -22 |
Arts, design, entertainment, sports, and media | 1.3 | 0.5 | * | 27.39 | 23.51 | * | -14 |
Healthcare practitioners and technical | 5.8 | 5.5 | 37.40 | 34.58 | * | -8 | |
Healthcare support | 2.9 | 1.9 | * | 14.19 | 13.18 | * | -7 |
Protective service | 2.4 | 2.8 | * | 21.45 | 21.61 | 1 | |
Food preparation and serving related | 9.1 | 8.9 | 10.98 | 9.55 | * | -13 | |
Building and grounds cleaning and maintenance | 3.2 | 2.5 | * | 13.02 | 11.10 | * | -15 |
Personal care and service | 3.1 | 4.2 | * | 12.33 | 9.36 | * | -24 |
Sales and related | 10.5 | 10.5 | 18.90 | 18.49 | -2 | ||
Office and administrative support | 15.8 | 14.3 | * | 17.47 | 16.19 | * | -7 |
Farming, fishing, and forestry | 0.3 | 0.1 | * | 12.67 | 18.43 | * | 45 |
Construction and extraction | 4.0 | 8.8 | * | 22.88 | 20.82 | * | -9 |
Installation, maintenance, and repair | 3.9 | 5.5 | * | 22.11 | 23.12 | 5 | |
Production | 6.6 | 10.8 | * | 17.41 | 25.06 | * | 44 |
Transportation and material moving | 6.9 | 6.6 | 16.90 | 17.35 | 3 | ||
(1) A positive percent difference measures how much the mean wage in Beaumont-Port Arthur is above the national mean wage, while a negative difference reflects a lower wage. | |||||||
Note: * The percent share of employment or mean hourly wage for this area is significantly different from the national average of all areas at the 90-percent confidence level. |
One occupational group – production – was chosen to illustrate the diversity of data available for any of the 22 major occupational categories. Beaumont had 17,830 jobs in production, accounting for 10.8 percent of local area employment, significantly higher than the national share of 6.6 percent. The local average hourly wage for this occupational group was $25.06, more than 40 percent above the national average of $17.41.
Some of the larger detailed occupations within the production group included petroleum pump system operators, refinery operators, and gaugers (2,320), welders, cutters, solderers, and brazers (2,310), and first-line supervisors of production and operating workers (1,530). Among the higher paying jobs were petroleum pump system operators, refinery operators, and gaugers, as well as chemical plant and system operators, with mean hourly wages of $37.65 and $37.06, respectively. At the lower end of the wage scale were laundry and dry-cleaning workers ($10.85) and team assemblers ($13.67). (Detailed occupational data for production workers are presented in table 1; for a complete listing of all occupations see www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_13140.htm.)
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 2.0 indicates that an occupation accounts for twice the share of employment in the area than it does nationally. In the Beaumont metropolitan area, above average concentrations of employment were found in many of the occupations within the production group. For instance, local petroleum pump system operators, refinery operators, and gaugers were employed at 45.8 times the U.S. average, and chemical plant and system operators, at 20.9 times the national rate. Both location quotients were among the highest in all metropolitan areas for these particular occupations. On the other hand, packaging and filling machine operators and tenders had a location quotient of 1.0 in Beaumont, indicating that this occupation’s local and national employment shares were similar.
These statistics are from the Occupational Employment Statistics (OES) survey, a federal-state cooperative program between BLS and State Workforce Agencies, in this case, the Texas Workforce Commission.
With the issuance of data for May 2015, the OES program has incorporated redefined metropolitan area definitions as designated by the Office of Management and Budget. OES data are available for 394 metropolitan areas, 38 metropolitan divisions, and 167 OES-defined nonmetropolitan areas. A listing of the areas and their definitions can be found at www.bls.gov/oes/current/msa_def.htm.
A value that is statistically different from another does not necessarily mean that the difference has economic or practical significance. Statistical significance is concerned with the ability to make confident statements about a universe based on a sample. It is entirely possible that a large difference between two values is not significantly different statistically, while a small difference is, since both the size and heterogeneity of the sample affect the relative error of the data being tested.
The Occupational Employment Statistics (OES) survey is a semiannual mail survey measuring occupational employment and wage rates for wage and salary workers in nonfarm establishments in the United States. The OES program produces employment and wage estimates for over 800 occupations for all industries combined in the nation; the 50 states and the District of Columbia; 432 metropolitan areas and divisions; 167 nonmetropolitan areas; and Guam, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. National estimates are also available by industry for NAICS sectors, 3-, 4-, and selected 5- and 6-digit industries, and by ownership across all industries and for schools and hospitals. OES data are available at www.bls.gov/oes/tables.htm.
OES estimates are constructed from a sample of about 1.2 million establishments. Forms are mailed to approximately 200,000 sampled establishments in May and November each year. May 2015 estimates are based on responses from six semiannual panels collected over a 3-year period: May 2015, November 2014, May 2014, November 2013, May 2013, and November 2012. The overall national response rate for the six panels is 73.5 percent based on establishments and 69.6 percent based on weighted sampled employment. The unweighted employment of sampled establishments across all six semiannual panels represents approximately 57.9 percent of total national employment. (Response rates are slightly lower for these estimates due to the federal shutdown in October 2013.) The sample in the Beaumont-Port Arthur Metropolitan Statistical Area included 1,858 establishments with a response rate of 68 percent. For more information about OES concepts and methodology, go to www.bls.gov/news.release/ocwage.tn.htm.
The May 2015 OES estimates are based on the 2010 Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) system and the 2012 North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). Information about the 2010 SOC is available on the BLS website at www.bls.gov/soc and information about the 2012 NAICS is available at www.bls.gov/bls/naics.htm.
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 Beaumont-Port Arthur Metropolitan Statistical Area includes Hardin, Jefferson, Newton, and Orange Counties in Texas.
Additional information
OES data are available on our regional web page at www.bls.gov/regions/southwest. Answers to frequently asked questions about the OES data are available at www.bls.gov/oes/oes_ques.htm. Detailed technical information about the OES survey is available in our Survey Methods and Reliability Statement on the BLS website at www.bls.gov/oes/current/methods_statement.pdf.
Information in this release will be made available to sensory impaired individuals upon request. Voice phone: (202) 691-5200; Federal Relay Service: (800) 877-8339.
Occupation(1) | Employment | Mean wages | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Level(2) | Location quotient(3) | Hourly | Annual(4) | |
Production occupations | 17,830 | 1.6 | $25.06 | $52,130 |
First-line supervisors of production and operating workers | 1,530 | 2.1 | 39.69 | 82,560 |
Coil winders, tapers, and finishers | (5) | (5) | 23.27 | 48,410 |
Electrical and electronic equipment assemblers | (5) | (5) | 16.12 | 33,530 |
Structural metal fabricators and fitters | 240 | 2.5 | 20.29 | 42,210 |
Team assemblers | 750 | 0.6 | 13.67 | 28,430 |
Assemblers and fabricators, all other | 60 | 0.2 | 11.47 | 23,860 |
Bakers | (5) | (5) | 9.72 | 20,210 |
Butchers and meat cutters | 100 | 0.6 | 14.22 | 29,570 |
Food batchmakers | 90 | 0.5 | 13.81 | 28,730 |
Food processing workers, all other | 60 | 1.0 | 11.07 | 23,020 |
Computer-controlled machine tool operators, metal and plastic | (5) | (5) | 20.77 | 43,210 |
Forging machine setters, operators, and tenders, metal and plastic | (5) | (5) | 17.47 | 36,340 |
Cutting, punching, & press machine setters, operators, and tenders, metal & plastic | 260 | 1.1 | 16.63 | 34,600 |
Grinding, lapping, polishing, and buffing machine tool setters, operators, and tenders, metal and plastic | (5) | (5) | 17.66 | 36,730 |
Machinists | 590 | 1.2 | 25.50 | 53,040 |
Multiple machine tool setters, operators, and tenders, metal and plastic | (5) | (5) | 17.62 | 36,640 |
Welders, cutters, solderers, and brazers | 2,310 | 5.0 | 24.51 | 50,990 |
Welding, soldering, and brazing machine setters, operators, and tenders | 250 | 3.9 | 21.92 | 45,580 |
Heat treating equipment setters, operators, and tenders, metal and plastic | (5) | (5) | 25.08 | 52,160 |
Layout workers, metal and plastic | 90 | 6.8 | 23.56 | 49,010 |
Printing press operators | 80 | 0.4 | 14.63 | 30,440 |
Laundry and dry-cleaning workers | 240 | 1.0 | 10.85 | 22,560 |
Pressers, textile, garment, and related materials | (5) | (5) | 9.13 | 18,990 |
Sewing machine operators | 70 | 0.4 | 11.36 | 23,630 |
Upholsterers | (5) | (5) | 13.00 | 27,040 |
Cabinetmakers and bench carpenters | 110 | 1.0 | 12.87 | 26,770 |
Woodworking machine setters, operators, and tenders, except sawing | (5) | (5) | 11.45 | 23,810 |
Stationary engineers and boiler operators | 30 | 0.8 | 23.18 | 48,210 |
Water and wastewater treatment plant and system operators | 270 | 2.0 | 18.35 | 38,160 |
Chemical plant and system operators | 880 | 20.9 | 37.06 | 77,090 |
Petroleum pump system operators, refinery operators, and gaugers | 2,320 | 45.8 | 37.65 | 78,310 |
Chemical equipment operators and tenders | 1,080 | 13.4 | 31.31 | 65,120 |
Separating, filtering, clarifying, precipitating, & still machine setters, operators, & tenders | 80 | 1.4 | (5) | (5) |
Mixing and blending machine setters, operators, and tenders | 290 | 1.8 | (5) | (5) |
Inspectors, testers, sorters, samplers, and weighers | 780 | 1.3 | 26.52 | 55,150 |
Dental laboratory technicians | 50 | 1.2 | 15.32 | 31,860 |
Packaging and filling machine operators and tenders | 440 | 1.0 | (5) | (5) |
Coating, painting, and spraying machine setters, operators, and tenders | 660 | 6.2 | 17.20 | 35,780 |
Painters, transportation equipment | 80 | 1.3 | 23.10 | 48,040 |
Painting, coating, and decorating workers | (5) | (5) | 12.05 | 25,060 |
Helpers-production workers | 1,060 | 2.0 | 15.65 | 32,540 |
(1) For a complete listing of all detailed occupations in the Beaumont-Port Arthur MSA, see www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_13140.htm. |
Last Modified Date: Friday, June 24, 2016