Department of Labor Logo United States Department of Labor
Dot gov

The .gov means it's official.
Federal government websites often end in .gov or .mil. Before sharing sensitive information, make sure you're on a federal government site.

Https

The site is secure.
The https:// ensures that you are connecting to the official website and that any information you provide is encrypted and transmitted securely.

OEWS Survey Respondents
PRINT:Print
OEWS OEWS Program Links

Instructions for MI

What data is being requested?

Which employees should I report?

  • Report employees who worked during the pay period that included May 12, 2023.
  • Report employees working at, or reporting to, the location specified after “Report for” in the mailing address in your letter or email.
  • Report employees who are on paid leave or assigned temporarily to other work locations, including employees who are working remotely or off-site.
  • Report paid owners and officers of incorporated firms.

What information should I report?

For each of these employees, please report the following information:

  • Job title
  • Brief description of duties
  • Part-time or full-time status
  • Hourly wage rate (for part-time or full-time employees) or annual salary (for full-time employees only)
  • Weekly hours
  • Hire date
  • Gender
  • Birth year
  • Department (optional)

What information should not be reported?

Do not report any of the following employees or information:

  • Do not report contract workers
  • Do not report owners or partners of unincorporated firms.
  • Do not report employee names or Social Security numbers
  • Do not report annual wages for part-time employees

How should I report job titles?

  • Report employee job titles according to the work they are doing, not their training.
    Example: Report an employee working as a drafter, but trained as an engineer, as a drafter.
  • Report an employee as a supervisor if they spend at least 80 percent of their time supervising other employees.
    Example: Report a head cashier as a supervisor of cashiers if they spend more than 80 percent of their time supervising other cashiers. Report them as a cashier if they spend less than 80 percent of their time supervising other cashiers.
  • Report apprentices separately from helpers.
    Example: Report an apprentice carpenter as a carpenter but report an employee who helps them as a carpenter’s helper.

How should I report wage rates?

  • Report hourly wage rates or annual salaries for full-time employees. Report hourly wage rates for part-time employees. If wage rates are recorded differently, such as by the month, convert them to an hourly wage rate.
  • Report each employee’s actual wage rate, not an approximation.
  • For employees who earn tips, commissions, or piece-rate payments, calculate their hourly wage rate or annual salary including their base pay plus tips, commissions, or piece rates.
  • If you are reporting for a school, please see the additional reporting instructions at www.bls.gov/respondents/oes/MI.htm#school.

What should I include when reporting wages? (Definitions of pay terms)

  • Base rate
  • Commissions
  • Tips
  • Cost-of-living allowance
  • Deadheading pay
  • Guaranteed pay
  • Hazard pay
  • Incentive pay
  • Longevity pay
  • Piece rate
  • Portal-to-portal rate
  • Production bonus

What should I exclude when reporting wages? (Definitions of pay terms)

  • Attendance bonus
  • Back pay
  • Draw
  • Holiday bonus
  • Holiday premium pay
  • Jury duty pay
  • Lodging payments
  • Meal payments
  • Merchandise discounts
  • Nonproduction bonus
  • On-call pay
  • Overtime pay
  • Perquisites
  • Profit-sharing payment
  • Relocation allowance
  • Tuition repayments
  • Severance pay
  • Shift differential
  • Stock bonuses
  • Tool allowance
  • Uniform allowance

How should I report my data?

Create or export a file

First, create or export a file with the requested information about the employees who worked at, or reported to, the location specified after “Report for” in the mailing address for the pay period that included May 12, 2023. You can provide a report from your own payroll or personnel system or download our Excel template. We prefer Excel files (.xlsx), but can accept almost any file format except executable (.exe) files. An example spreadsheet is below.

Job title Part-time
or full-time
Hourly Annual Weekly
hours
Hire date Gender Birth
year
Department

Forklift operator

FT $16.00   40 9/30/17 Female 1990 Warehouse

Forklift operator

PT $12.98   25 4/30/21 Male 2000 Warehouse

Forklift operator

FT $14.72   35 5/23/22 Male 1995 Warehouse

Truck driver

FT   $45,000 40 12/6/18 Female 1982 Warehouse

Webmaster

FT $23.24   35 11/12/16 Male 1990 IT

IT user support

FT $18.87   50 8/1/16 Female 1997 IT

General manager

FT   $80,000 60 7/16/15 Female 1979 Office

Logistics manager

FT   $68,140 40 2/20/20 Other 1986 Office

Bookkeeper

PT $17.22   20 10/25/15 Male 1965 Office

Submit your file

Once your file is ready, you can upload it or email it to your state office.

Upload a data file

Note: To ensure the security of your data, your session will time out after 30 minutes. Make sure your file is ready before logging in.

  1. Go to https://idcfoews.bls.gov. Log in with your unique IDCF number, located above the mailing address on your OEWS data request.
  2. Follow the instructions to enter your contact information and answer questions about the location specified after “Report for” in the mailing address on your data request.
  3. On the file upload page, scroll down and use the “Browse” button to select your data file. Multiple files can be attached, but the total size cannot exceed 30 MB.
  4. Click “Send” to submit your file. Click “Continue” on the next page to send yourself a confirmation email.

That’s it – you’re done! Thank you for your help.

Email a data file

  1. Open a new email to our secure state email address.
  2. Attach the completed spreadsheet with your IDCF number in the subject line. BLS encourages respondents to encrypt email attachments and send the password in a separate email. Please do not include sensitive information in the body of the email.
  3. You will receive an email confirming your submission; please retain this for your records. Our Michigan office will contact you if they have questions or need more information.

That’s it – you’re done! Thank you for your help.

Extra Instructions for Schools

These instructions apply to teachers, professors, and other faculty who are paid on a different basis than hourly or annual wage rates. We also need some extra information on educators to classify them correctly. Providing this information now can reduce the need for follow up phone calls asking for clarification.

Please note that these instructions apply to teachers, professors, and other faculty and educators only. Hourly or annual wage rates should be reported for school employees who are not educators.

Primary and Secondary Schools

  • For teachers (primary or secondary educators), specify the grade level and indicate if they teach special education or career, technical, or vocational education.
  • For teachers or substitute teachers being paid on a daily basis, report the daily wage and the number of hours in their workday.
  • For faculty who work less than full-time but receive an annual salary, report the salary and whether they are employed half-time, three-quarters time, one-third time, two-thirds time, etc.

Post-Secondary Schools

  • For professors or adjunct teachers (post-secondary educators), include the subject taught or department. For adjunct teachers, please list the per-credit pay rate.
  • For full-time faculty being paid an annual salary, report their annual salary.
  • For faculty who work less than full-time but receive an annual salary, report the salary and whether they are employed half-time, three-quarters time, one-third time, two-thirds time, etc.

 

Last Modified Date: May 9, 2023