Center of Excellence 1410 Ethan Way Sacramento, California 95825 Regional Staffing Patterns Report Economic Modeling Specialists, Inc. www.economicmodeling.com Page 1/6 Region Info Region: CR Region Counties: Del Norte, CA (6015), Humboldt, CA (6023), Mendocino, CA (6045) Mapping Generated for Industries: NAICS Code 90 Description Government Page 2/6 Fastest Changing Occupations SOC Code Description Change 25-1099 Postsecondary teachers 321 25-2021 Elementary school teachers, except special education 202 25-9041 Teacher assistants 191 33-3012 Correctional officers and jailers 147 25-2022 Middle school teachers, except special and vocational education 134 33-3051 Police and sheriff's patrol officers 121 43-9061 Office clerks, general 116 13-1199 Business operation specialists, all other 102 25-2031 Secondary school teachers, except special and vocational education 92 33-2011 Fire fighters 88 SOC Code Description % Change 49-3043 Rail car repairers 68% 17-3021 Aerospace engineering and operations technicians 68% 15-1081 Network systems and data communications analysts 57% 27-1012 Craft artists 41-9091 Door-to-door sales workers, news and street vendors, and related workers 19-4092 Forensic science technicians 41% 23-1011 Lawyers 39% 43-4071 File clerks 49-9041 Industrial machinery mechanics 15-1031 Computer software engineers, applications 42% -41% -38% 38% 38% Source: EMSI Complete Employment - Spring 2008 Release v. 2 Page 3/6 Occupational Makeup SOC Code Description 2006 Jobs 2016 Jobs Change % Change % of Industry 25-9041 Teacher assistants 1,475 1,666 191 13% 6% 25-1099 Postsecondary teachers 1,072 1,393 321 30% 4% 25-2021 Elementary school teachers, except special education 1,005 1,207 202 20% 4% 43-9061 Office clerks, general 831 947 116 14% 3% 25-2031 Secondary school teachers, except special and 776 868 92 12% 3% 756 890 134 18% 3% vocational education 25-2022 Middle school teachers, except special and vocational education 55-9999 Military Occupations 614 565 -49 -8% 3% 33-3012 Correctional officers and jailers 595 742 147 25% 2% 33-3051 Police and sheriff's patrol officers 576 697 121 21% 2% 37-2011 Janitors and cleaners, except maids and housekeeping 556 628 72 13% 2% cleaners 25-3099 Teachers and instructors, all other 514 590 76 15% 2% 13-1199 Business operation specialists, all other 473 575 102 21% 2% 39-9032 Recreation workers 411 478 67 16% 2% 29-1111 Registered nurses 408 483 75 18% 2% 33-2011 Fire fighters 400 488 88 22% 2% 43-6011 Executive secretaries and administrative assistants 379 442 63 17% 2% 43-6014 Secretaries, except legal, medical, and executive 376 387 11 3% 2% 49-9042 Maintenance and repair workers, general 357 419 62 18% 1% 43-3031 Bookkeeping, accounting, and auditing clerks 269 315 46 17% 1% 25-2032 Vocational education teachers, secondary school 247 250 3 1% 1% 37-3011 Landscaping and groundskeeping workers 238 272 34 14% 1% 19-4093 Forest and conservation technicians 235 229 -6 -3% 1% 33-3021 Detectives and criminal investigators 225 293 68 30% 1% 53-3022 Bus drivers, school 224 250 26 12% 1% Page 4/6 43-1011 First-line supervisors/managers of office and 223 242 19 8% 1% administrative support workers 33-9099 Protective service workers, all other 215 251 36 17% 1% 21-1012 Educational, vocational, and school counselors 199 232 33 17% 1% 11-9033 Education administrators, postsecondary 184 222 38 21% 1% 11-9032 Education administrators, elementary and secondary 181 206 25 14% 1% school 25-9031 Instructional coordinators 170 222 52 31% 1% 35-3021 Combined food preparation and serving workers, 170 197 27 16% 1% 169 206 37 22% 1% including fast food 33-1021 First-line supervisors/managers of fire fighting and prevention workers 11-1021 General and operations managers 168 178 10 6% 1% 43-4061 Eligibility interviewers, government programs 159 173 14 9% 1% 33-9032 Security guards 157 182 25 16% 1% 39-3091 Amusement and recreation attendants 152 186 34 22% 1% 33-1011 First-line supervisors/managers of correctional officers 151 183 32 21% 1% 39-1012 Slot key persons 149 183 34 22% 1% 25-2012 Kindergarten teachers, except special education 146 180 34 23% 1% 47-2073 Operating engineers and other construction equipment 138 165 27 20% 1% 30 23% 1% operators 13-2011 Accountants and auditors 129 159 35-2012 Cooks, institution and cafeteria 124 130 6 5% 1% 21-1021 Child, family, and school social workers 121 138 17 14% 1% 43-9199 Office and administrative support workers, all other 120 117 -3 -3% 1% 35-2021 Food preparation workers 120 136 16 13% 1% 39-3019 Gaming service workers, all other 113 138 25 22% 0% 25-2041 Special education teachers, preschool, kindergarten, 108 136 28 26% 0% 104 128 24 22% 0% 103 126 23 22% 0% 110 10 10% 0% and elementary school 51-8031 Water and liquid waste treatment plant and system operators 33-9092 Lifeguards, ski patrol, and other recreational protective service workers 21-1093 Social and human service assistants 100 Source: EMSI Complete Employment - Spring 2008 Release v. 2 Page 5/6 Data Sources and Calculations Occupation Data Organizing regional employment information by occupation provides a workforce-oriented view of the regional economy. EMSI's occupation data are based on EMSI's industry data and regional staffing patterns taken from the Occupational Employment Statistics program (U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics). Wage information is partially derived from the American Community Survey. The occupation-to-program (SOC-to-CIP) crosswalk is based on one from the U.S. Department of Education, with customizations by EMSI. Industry Data In order to capture a complete picture of industry employment, EMSI basically combines covered employment data from Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages (QCEW) produced by the Department of Labor with total employment data in Regional Economic Information System (REIS) published by the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA), augmented with County Business Patterns (CBP) and Nonemployer Statistics (NES) published by the U.S. Census Bureau. Projections are based on the latest available EMSI industry data, 15-year past local trends in each industry, growth rates in statewide and (where available) sub-state area industry projections published by individual state agencies, and (in part) growth rates in national projections from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. State Data Sources This report uses state data from the following agencies: California Labor Market Information Department. Page 6/6