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- LMID - contains
statewide and metropolitan area wages from the Occupational Employment Survey and local
wages from the California Cooperative Occupational Information System surveys. http://www.calmis.cahwnet.gov/htmlfile/subject/OCCup$.HTM
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- BLS -
Occupational Compensation Surveys - extensive information for large occupations--wages
by public/private sector, full-/part-time, and level. Available for Los Angeles, San
Francisco Bay Area, San Diego and Sacramento so far. http://stats.bls.gov/compub.htm
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- BLS - Occupational Employment
Statistics for California - wages for virtually all OES coded occupations--statewide
information, but maybe useful when more local data not available. http://stats.bls.gov:80/oes/state/oes_ca.htm
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- BLS - Occupational Employment
Statistics for the U.S. - see above. http://stats.bls.gov/oes/national/oes_nat.htm
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- BLS - Occupational Employment
Statistics for other states - see above. http://stats.bls.gov/oes/state/oessrch2.htm
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- BLS -
Employee Benefits Survey - typical benefit packages for private and public sector
employers. Small vs. medium and large firms, full- vs. part-time workers. Get Adobe
Acrobat Reader free off the Internet to read the pdf version of report--it's better than
text version. http://stats.bls.gov/ebshome.htm
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- America's
Career InfoNet - Salary and Wage Links - if you can't find the wage you want from the
above sources, some of these links may get you to it. http://www.acinet.org/resource/salary/
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- BLS -
Occupational Outlook Handbook - not a primary source for wage data but okay if you'll
settle for a general idea of how much is paid by occupation. http://stats.bls.gov/ocohome.htm
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- Prevailing Wages in the
Building Trades - the California Department of Industrial Relations is responsible for
determining the prevailing wages to be paid by building
contractors who get contracts with State and/or local funding. http://www.dir.ca.gov/DIR/S&R/statistics_research.html
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- Private sector websites tend offer national and
industry-specific data. Often, their job categories are more specific than
you'll typically find in government surveys. The following sites have links and/or
wage data of their own.
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- JobStar Salary Links - a large
collection of surveys from many sources. http://jobstar.org/tools/salary/index.htm
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- CareerMosaic - business, finance,
computers, engineering and education are the strong suit here. http://www.careermosaic.com/cm/crc/crc18.html
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- Wall Street
Journal - CAREERS, NOT JUST JOBS - an extensive collection of data from the National
Business Employment Weekly. Click on "Salaries and Profiles" from the list
on the left side of the screen. http://careers.wsj.com/
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- U.S. MinimumWage -
the national minimum is currently (October 1998) below California's. http://www2.dol.gov/dol/esa/public/youth/mwtour4.htm
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- California
Minimum Wage - this is the minimum wage in the State. http://www.dir.ca.gov/DIR/Labor_Law/DLSE/Rights/Minimum_Wage.html
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- The Federal Reserve Bank's
CPI Calculation Machine - handy when you want to compare costs/values over time--even
back to 1913. http://woodrow.mpls.frb.fed.us/economy/calc/cpihome.html
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- Bureau
of Labor Statistics Employment Cost Trends - get Adobe Acrobat Reader free off the
Internet if you don't already have it, and look at the pdf versions of the data--they're
much easier to follow. The employment cost index will show how wages and benefits
have risen better than the more general consumer price index--but it's more work than the
the CPI Calculation Machine. http://stats.bls.gov/ecthome.htm
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- LA and Bay Area CPIs - the
Bureau of Labor Statistics' local consumer price index--monthly for Los
Angeles-Riverside-Orange Metropolitan Area and bimonthly for the San Francisco-Oakland-San
Jose Metropolitan Area. http://stats.bls.gov:80/news.release/cpi.t03.htm
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- California, Los Angeles
and Bay Area CPI - Statewide CPI based on the LA and Bay Area CPIs from the Bureau of
Labor Statistics. http://www.dir.ca.gov/DIR/S&R/statistics_research.html
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- These two calculators have somewhat different
lists of areas covered. If you don't find your choices in one, check the other.
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- CareerBuilder - look for their "Salary Calculator."
- http://www.careerbuilder.com/
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- Money Online
- from Money Magazine. http://cgi.pathfinder.com/@@RaZkCgQATWuV1@zS/cgi-bin/Money/col.cgi