Long-Term Occupational Projections (2020-2030)

Use this page to sort, search, filter, and export long term projections. To sort the data select the header of the column to sort. Data can be filtered by entering a specific state name, or occupational title. Use "Double Quotes" to search for an exact term. If the table below is empty when a particular state is entered, that state has not yet submitted projections. If a particular occupation does not show up this means there is no publicly available projection for that occupation in the area specified.

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Additional information and resources are available on each State's website, and the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics website. More information about occupational details can be found on the O*NET Online website.

About the Long Term Projections.

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Area Title Base Projected Sort ascending Change %Change Avg. Annl Openings
United States Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 408,500 430,700 22,200 5.4 46,000
United States Civil Engineers 309,800 335,100 25,300 8.2 25,000
United States Industrial Engineers 292,000 332,000 40,000 13.7 23,300
United States Mechanical Engineers 299,200 320,100 20,900 7 20,200
United States Architectural and Engineering Managers 197,800 205,900 8,100 4.1 14,700
United States Electrical Engineers 188,000 200,700 12,700 6.8 13,700
United States Engineers, All Other 167,100 171,600 4,500 2.7 11,000
United States Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 125,200 132,900 7,700 6.2 9,000
United States Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 117,000 118,900 1,900 1.6 11,000
United States Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 94,700 98,800 4,100 4.3 9,300
United States Airline Pilots, Copilots, and Flight Engineers 74,700 85,000 10,300 13.8 9,600
United States Civil Engineering Technicians 68,800 70,000 1,200 1.7 6,500
United States Sales Engineers 63,800 68,800 5,000 7.8 7,300
United States Computer Hardware Engineers 66,200 67,300 1,100 1.7 4,500
United States Industrial Engineering Technicians 64,100 66,900 2,800 4.4 6,300
United States Aerospace Engineers 61,400 66,500 5,100 8.3 4,000
California Civil Engineers 46,700 54,600 7,900 16.9 4,320
Texas Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 44,090 54,410 10,320 23.4 6,180
United States Environmental Engineers 52,300 54,300 2,000 3.8 4,000
United States Engineering Teachers, Postsecondary 46,300 52,100 5,800 12.5 5,100
Michigan Mechanical Engineers 40,950 45,070 4,120 10.1 2,920
United States Mechanical Engineering Technicians 40,400 42,700 2,300 5.7 4,000
California Architectural and Engineering Managers 34,500 39,000 4,500 13 2,980
Texas Civil Engineers 28,490 34,700 6,210 21.8 2,820
United States Stationary Engineers and Boiler Operators 30,700 32,500 1,800 5.9 4,000
California Engineers, All Other 29,400 32,500 3,100 10.5 2,240
California Mechanical Engineers 29,100 32,500 3,400 11.7 2,140
California Electrical Engineers 28,300 32,200 3,900 13.8 2,320
California Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 28,700 31,900 3,200 11.1 3,480
Michigan Industrial Engineers 25,730 30,980 5,250 20.4 2,280
United States Petroleum Engineers 28,500 30,700 2,200 7.7 2,100
United States Chemical Engineers 26,300 28,700 2,400 9.1 1,800
United States Locomotive Engineers 26,500 27,900 1,400 5.3 2,500
United States Materials Engineers 25,100 27,200 2,100 8.4 1,800
Florida Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 23,200 26,250 3,050 13.1 2,890
United States Health and Safety Engineers, Except Mining Safety Engineers and Inspectors 24,100 25,600 1,500 6.2 1,700
Texas Mechanical Engineers 21,100 25,160 4,060 19.2 1,760
Texas Industrial Engineers 19,680 24,880 5,200 26.4 1,900
California Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 22,500 24,800 2,300 10.2 1,740
California Industrial Engineers 21,300 24,800 3,500 16.4 1,780
California Computer Hardware Engineers 19,900 22,900 3,000 15.1 1,710
Pennsylvania Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 21,070 22,120 1,050 5 2,360
United States Biomedical Engineers 19,300 20,500 1,200 6.2 1,400
Florida Civil Engineers 16,750 20,490 3,740 22.3 1,670
California Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 18,900 20,000 1,100 5.8 1,890
United States Environmental Engineering Technicians 17,300 18,600 1,300 7.5 1,800
Texas Petroleum Engineers 14,520 18,410 3,890 26.8 1,440
New York Civil Engineers 15,480 17,670 2,190 14.1 1,380
Texas Architectural and Engineering Managers 14,810 17,450 2,640 17.8 1,370
Texas Electrical Engineers 13,790 16,750 2,960 21.5 1,270
Pennsylvania Mechanical Engineers 15,600 16,700 1,100 7.1 1,050
New York Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 13,740 16,480 2,740 19.9 1,850
Ohio Industrial Engineers 14,410 16,350 1,940 13.5 1,150
United States Nuclear Engineers 17,200 15,800 -1,400 -8.1 900
North Carolina Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 14,050 15,740 1,690 12 1,720
Ohio Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 15,120 15,740 620 4.1 1,670
Massachusetts Industrial Engineers 12,650 15,720 3,070 24.3 1,190
United States Sound Engineering Technicians 13,100 15,400 2,300 17.6 1,600
Ohio Mechanical Engineers 14,170 15,240 1,070 7.6 970
New York Industrial Engineers 11,770 15,210 3,440 29.2 1,180
Georgia Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 13,320 14,770 1,450 10.9 1,610
Illinois Industrial Engineers 12,490 14,440 1,950 15.6 1,030
Colorado Civil Engineers 10,790 13,670 2,880 26.7 1,110
Illinois Mechanical Engineers 12,530 13,620 1,090 8.7 870
Florida Industrial Engineers 10,570 13,600 3,030 28.7 1,050
California Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 11,800 13,500 1,700 14.4 1,330
North Carolina Civil Engineers 11,560 13,470 1,910 16.5 1,060
Colorado Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 10,890 13,370 2,480 22.8 1,450
Wisconsin Industrial Engineers 11,630 13,360 1,730 14.9 950
Washington Civil Engineers 12,120 13,080 960 7.9 1,070
United States Aerospace Engineering and Operations Technicians 11,900 12,900 1,000 8.4 1,200
Pennsylvania Civil Engineers 11,750 12,780 1,030 8.8 960
Texas Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 10,680 12,710 2,030 19 1,270
Indiana Industrial Engineers 10,720 12,540 1,820 17 900
Virginia Civil Engineers 11,170 12,520 1,350 12.1 960
Texas Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 10,220 12,500 2,280 22.3 950
California Sales Engineers 10,500 12,100 1,600 15.2 1,310
Illinois Civil Engineers 10,700 11,890 1,190 11.1 910
Wisconsin Mechanical Engineers 10,540 11,770 1,230 11.7 770
Texas Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 10,290 11,750 1,460 14.2 1,160
Michigan Architectural and Engineering Managers 10,800 11,690 890 8.2 860
Texas Engineers, All Other 10,080 11,560 1,480 14.7 820
Pennsylvania Industrial Engineers 10,250 11,550 1,300 12.7 810
New York Mechanical Engineers 10,020 11,480 1,460 14.6 770
Illinois Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 10,540 11,470 930 8.8 1,240
Minnesota Industrial Engineers 10,300 11,450 1,150 11.2 790
Virginia Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 10,020 10,890 870 8.7 1,180
Michigan Engineers, All Other 10,230 10,860 630 6.2 720
North Carolina Industrial Engineers 9,120 10,850 1,730 19 790
Washington Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 9,490 10,840 1,350 14.2 1,330
Arizona Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 9,010 10,820 1,810 20.1 1,220
Texas Sales Engineers 9,230 10,770 1,540 16.7 1,180
North Carolina Mechanical Engineers 9,240 10,750 1,510 16.3 740
Indiana Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 10,350 10,700 350 3.4 1,130
Texas Airline Pilots, Copilots, and Flight Engineers 9,330 10,670 1,340 14.4 1,200
California Airline Pilots, Copilots, and Flight Engineers 8,800 10,600 1,800 20.5 1,220
United States Marine Engineers and Naval Architects 9,800 10,200 400 4.1 500
Florida Mechanical Engineers 8,250 10,190 1,940 23.5 730
Florida Engineers, All Other 8,370 9,730 1,360 16.2 700
New York Electrical Engineers 8,460 9,720 1,260 14.9 710
Pennsylvania Electrical Engineers 8,920 9,670 750 8.4 670
Michigan Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 8,820 9,480 660 7.5 1,020
Minnesota Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 9,070 9,480 410 4.5 1,010
California Aerospace Engineers 8,200 9,400 1,200 14.6 600
Michigan Electrical Engineers 8,660 9,370 710 8.2 650
Wisconsin Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 8,660 9,360 700 8.1 1,010
Georgia Engineers, All Other 8,420 9,220 800 9.5 630
Florida Architectural and Engineering Managers 7,460 9,060 1,600 21.4 730
Georgia Industrial Engineers 7,340 8,880 1,540 21 660
Illinois Architectural and Engineering Managers 8,450 8,880 430 5.1 640
Massachusetts Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 7,220 8,720 1,500 20.8 980
Massachusetts Civil Engineers 6,900 8,680 1,780 25.8 720
Florida Electrical Engineers 6,980 8,660 1,680 24.1 670
South Carolina Industrial Engineers 7,080 8,630 1,550 21.9 640
Massachusetts Mechanical Engineers 7,470 8,600 1,130 15.1 580
Alabama Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 7,910 8,550 640 8.1 920
Missouri Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 7,820 8,520 700 9 920
Arizona Industrial Engineers 6,380 8,470 2,090 32.8 670
Louisiana Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 7,330 8,450 1,120 15.3 940
Washington Mechanical Engineers 8,450 8,440 -10 -0.1 480
United States Ship Engineers 7,800 8,400 600 7.7 1,000
Massachusetts Electrical Engineers 6,930 8,260 1,330 19.2 620
Maryland Civil Engineers 7,660 8,170 510 6.7 600
New Jersey Civil Engineers 7,150 8,110 960 13.4 630
Virginia Mechanical Engineers 7,540 8,040 500 6.6 510
Minnesota Mechanical Engineers 7,530 7,980 450 6 500
Alabama Industrial Engineers 6,320 7,940 1,620 25.6 600
Texas Industrial Engineering Technicians 6,790 7,930 1,140 16.8 790
Colorado Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 6,540 7,890 1,350 20.6 560
Texas Civil Engineering Technicians 7,120 7,890 770 10.8 770
Florida Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 6,610 7,880 1,270 19.2 790
New York Architectural and Engineering Managers 6,990 7,840 850 12.2 600
Tennessee Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 6,750 7,830 1,080 16 870
South Carolina Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 7,190 7,750 560 7.8 840
Indiana Mechanical Engineers 6,980 7,720 740 10.6 500
Ohio Engineers, All Other 7,500 7,670 170 2.3 490
Ohio Civil Engineers 7,010 7,510 500 7.1 560
Connecticut Industrial Engineers 6,090 7,460 1,370 22.5 560
Oklahoma Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 6,720 7,460 740 11 810
Georgia Civil Engineers 6,430 7,420 990 15.4 580
Illinois Airline Pilots, Copilots, and Flight Engineers 6,550 7,330 780 11.9 820
Massachusetts Architectural and Engineering Managers 6,270 7,310 1,040 16.6 570
West Virginia Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 7,110 7,310 200 2.8 770
Texas Aerospace Engineers 6,150 7,290 1,140 18.5 480
Kentucky Industrial Engineers 5,910 7,230 1,320 22.3 540
Kansas Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 6,950 7,220 270 3.9 770
Washington Electrical Engineers 7,770 7,210 -560 -7.2 350
Arizona Electrical Engineers 6,090 7,200 1,110 18.2 540
Maryland Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 6,690 7,150 460 6.9 770
Colorado Mechanical Engineers 5,690 7,110 1,420 25 500
South Carolina Mechanical Engineers 6,150 7,100 950 15.4 480
Texas Chemical Engineers 5,670 7,100 1,430 25.2 500
Ohio Electrical Engineers 6,570 7,010 440 6.7 480
Arizona Civil Engineers 5,740 7,000 1,260 22 570
Tennessee Industrial Engineers 5,400 6,980 1,580 29.3 540
Missouri Industrial Engineers 5,890 6,970 1,080 18.3 500
Florida Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 5,860 6,960 1,100 18.8 520
Maryland Electrical Engineers 6,560 6,940 380 5.8 470
Michigan Civil Engineers 6,170 6,930 760 12.3 530
Arizona Mechanical Engineers 5,590 6,780 1,190 21.3 480
Pennsylvania Architectural and Engineering Managers 6,470 6,730 260 4 480
New York Airline Pilots, Copilots, and Flight Engineers 5,060 6,700 1,640 32.4 790
Virginia Industrial Engineers 5,780 6,690 910 15.7 480
Virginia Electrical Engineers 6,160 6,670 510 8.3 460
Iowa Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 5,690 6,640 950 16.7 740
United States Mining and Geological Engineers, Including Mining Safety Engineers 6,300 6,600 300 4.8 400
Colorado Computer Hardware Engineers 4,960 6,550 1,590 32.1 540
California Civil Engineering Technicians 6,000 6,500 500 8.3 620
Wisconsin Civil Engineers 5,810 6,460 650 11.2 490
Washington Aerospace Engineers 7,330 6,310 -1,020 -13.9 210
Utah Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 4,650 6,180 1,530 32.9 720
Connecticut Mechanical Engineers 5,320 6,170 850 16 420
Georgia Airline Pilots, Copilots, and Flight Engineers 4,150 6,170 2,020 48.7 760
Maryland Mechanical Engineers 5,990 6,150 160 2.7 370
Missouri Civil Engineers 5,350 6,100 750 14 470
Nevada Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 5,020 6,060 1,040 20.7 680
South Carolina Civil Engineers 5,460 6,060 600 11 460
North Carolina Electrical Engineers 5,220 6,030 810 15.5 440
Washington Industrial Engineers 6,210 6,000 -210 -3.4 320
Minnesota Civil Engineers 5,500 5,950 450 8.2 440
California Environmental Engineers 5,500 5,900 400 7.3 450
California Stationary Engineers and Boiler Operators 5,400 5,900 500 9.3 730
New Jersey Industrial Engineers 5,190 5,900 710 13.7 410
Georgia Mechanical Engineers 5,090 5,870 780 15.3 400
Louisiana Engineers, All Other 5,590 5,870 280 5 390
Ohio Architectural and Engineering Managers 5,670 5,850 180 3.2 420
Florida Airline Pilots, Copilots, and Flight Engineers 5,100 5,840 740 14.5 660
Kentucky Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 5,790 5,820 30 0.5 610
New York Engineering Teachers, Postsecondary 4,900 5,790 890 18.2 580
Oregon Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 4,980 5,690 710 14.3 380
Pennsylvania Engineers, All Other 5,460 5,680 220 4 370
Maryland Architectural and Engineering Managers 5,570 5,670 100 1.8 400
Virginia Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 5,310 5,650 340 6.4 540
New York Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 5,170 5,580 410 7.9 530
Washington Architectural and Engineering Managers 5,140 5,570 430 8.4 450
New York Stationary Engineers and Boiler Operators 4,720 5,560 840 17.8 700
New Jersey Mechanical Engineers 5,230 5,550 320 6.1 350
Oregon Industrial Engineers 4,440 5,420 980 22.1 390
Utah Civil Engineers 3,830 5,400 1,570 41 480
Alabama Civil Engineers 4,820 5,360 540 11.2 410
Maryland Engineers, All Other 5,400 5,340 -60 -1.1 330
Texas Locomotive Engineers 4,670 5,300 630 13.5 500
North Carolina Architectural and Engineering Managers 4,770 5,270 500 10.5 400
Tennessee Engineers, All Other 4,260 5,200 940 22.1 390
New Jersey Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 4,880 5,180 300 6.1 550
Florida Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 4,700 5,140 440 9.4 500
New York Engineers, All Other 4,640 5,130 490 10.6 360
Massachusetts Sales Engineers 4,070 5,110 1,040 25.6 570
Oregon Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 4,540 5,090 550 12.1 530
Texas Computer Hardware Engineers 4,470 5,090 620 13.9 380
Alabama Electrical Engineers 4,500 5,030 530 11.8 360
Oregon Civil Engineers 4,430 5,020 590 13.3 380
Georgia Electrical Engineers 4,350 4,960 610 14 360
New Jersey Architectural and Engineering Managers 4,620 4,930 310 6.7 360
California Mechanical Engineering Technicians 4,300 4,900 600 14 490
Virginia Engineers, All Other 4,810 4,890 80 1.7 310
Illinois Electrical Engineers 4,490 4,820 330 7.3 330
Florida Computer Hardware Engineers 4,070 4,810 740 18.2 370
Colorado Industrial Engineers 3,770 4,800 1,030 27.3 360
Colorado Electrical Engineers 3,650 4,770 1,120 30.7 360
New Mexico Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 4,340 4,700 360 8.3 510
Virginia Architectural and Engineering Managers 4,420 4,690 270 6.1 340
Wisconsin Electrical Engineers 4,330 4,690 360 8.3 320
Utah Mechanical Engineers 3,410 4,660 1,250 36.7 360
Arizona Architectural and Engineering Managers 4,000 4,650 650 16.3 360
New Jersey Engineers, All Other 4,490 4,630 140 3.1 300
Georgia Architectural and Engineering Managers 4,230 4,620 390 9.2 340
Pennsylvania Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 4,390 4,570 180 4.1 430
Arizona Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 3,780 4,550 770 20.4 340
Tennessee Mechanical Engineers 3,670 4,520 850 23.2 320
Alabama Mechanical Engineers 3,940 4,490 550 14 300
Georgia Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 4,250 4,480 230 5.4 300
Oregon Architectural and Engineering Managers 3,910 4,480 570 14.6 310
Montana Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 3,490 4,460 970 27.8 500
Maryland Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 4,350 4,440 90 2.1 290
Illinois Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 4,170 4,430 260 6.2 420
Florida Aerospace Engineers 3,620 4,380 760 21 300
Texas Engineering Teachers, Postsecondary 3,680 4,370 690 18.8 440
Michigan Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 4,020 4,360 340 8.5 300
Michigan Mechanical Engineering Technicians 4,020 4,360 340 8.5 420
New Jersey Electrical Engineers 3,930 4,360 430 10.9 310
Wyoming Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 3,900 4,340 440 11.3 470
Connecticut Architectural and Engineering Managers 3,870 4,320 450 11.6 330
New York Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 3,640 4,310 670 18.4 320
United States Rail Yard Engineers, Dinkey Operators, and Hostlers 4,200 4,300 100 2.4 400
California Sound Engineering Technicians 3,600 4,300 700 19.4 470
Indiana Civil Engineers 3,910 4,290 380 9.7 320
Minnesota Architectural and Engineering Managers 4,080 4,230 150 3.7 300
Virginia Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 3,980 4,230 250 6.3 290
Colorado Architectural and Engineering Managers 3,470 4,210 740 21.3 300
Pennsylvania Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 4,180 4,190 10 0.2 380
Ohio Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 3,970 4,170 200 5 280
Colorado Airline Pilots, Copilots, and Flight Engineers 3,550 4,160 610 17.2 420
Idaho Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 3,540 4,160 620 17.5 440
Tennessee Civil Engineers 3,500 4,160 660 18.9 330
Oregon Mechanical Engineers 3,570 4,150 580 16.2 270
Alabama Aerospace Engineers 3,600 4,140 540 15 270
Minnesota Electrical Engineers 3,890 4,040 150 3.9 270
Minnesota Industrial Engineering Technicians 3,840 4,010 170 4.4 380
North Dakota Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 3,500 4,010 510 14.6 440
Missouri Electrical Engineers 3,730 4,000 270 7.2 280
Massachusetts Industrial Engineering Technicians 3,500 3,990 490 14 390
Connecticut Civil Engineers 3,520 3,970 450 12.8 310
Indiana Architectural and Engineering Managers 3,710 3,960 250 6.7 290
Florida Civil Engineering Technicians 3,270 3,950 680 20.8 400
Washington Engineers, All Other 3,990 3,930 -60 -1.5 230
Pennsylvania Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 3,550 3,910 360 10.1 270
Ohio Aerospace Engineers 3,620 3,900 280 7.7 240
Virginia Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 3,760 3,890 130 3.5 360
Arkansas Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 3,660 3,880 220 6 420
Texas Environmental Engineers 3,280 3,870 590 18 320
Georgia Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 3,480 3,810 330 9.5 370
Texas Mechanical Engineering Technicians 3,220 3,810 590 18.3 380
Wisconsin Architectural and Engineering Managers 3,570 3,780 210 5.9 270
Kansas Industrial Engineers 3,080 3,770 690 22.4 280
Michigan Industrial Engineering Technicians 3,410 3,750 340 10 360
Indiana Electrical Engineers 3,520 3,730 210 6 250
Kentucky Mechanical Engineers 3,270 3,730 460 14.1 250
Iowa Mechanical Engineers 3,090 3,700 610 19.7 260
Arizona Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 3,310 3,680 370 11.2 360
Tennessee Architectural and Engineering Managers 3,100 3,680 580 18.7 290
Oregon Engineers, All Other 3,200 3,670 470 14.7 250
New York Environmental Engineers 3,420 3,640 220 6.4 280
Georgia Sales Engineers 3,300 3,630 330 10 390
New Jersey Airline Pilots, Copilots, and Flight Engineers 3,250 3,600 350 10.8 400
Pennsylvania Engineering Teachers, Postsecondary 3,320 3,600 280 8.4 350
Maryland Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 3,540 3,590 50 1.4 330
Maryland Industrial Engineers 3,130 3,590 460 14.7 250
Mississippi Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 3,430 3,590 160 4.7 380
North Carolina Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 3,160 3,580 420 13.3 260
Washington Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 3,310 3,560 250 7.6 270
Alabama Engineers, All Other 3,500 3,550 50 1.4 230
Nevada Civil Engineers 2,910 3,510 600 20.6 280
Texas Health and Safety Engineers, Except Mining Safety Engineers and Inspectors 2,890 3,510 620 21.5 260
Iowa Industrial Engineers 2,900 3,500 600 20.7 260
Maryland Computer Hardware Engineers 3,550 3,500 -50 -1.4 230
Puerto Rico Industrial Engineers 2,870 3,500 630 22 260
North Carolina Civil Engineering Technicians 3,260 3,490 230 7.1 330
Connecticut Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 3,070 3,450 380 12.4 380
Maryland Aerospace Engineers 3,230 3,450 220 6.8 210
Missouri Mechanical Engineers 3,060 3,410 350 11.4 220
District of Columbia Engineers, All Other 3,500 3,380 -120 -3.4 200
Pennsylvania Sales Engineers 3,120 3,360 240 7.7 360
Tennessee Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 2,870 3,360 490 17.1 340
Indiana Engineers, All Other 3,150 3,320 170 5.4 220
New York Industrial Engineering Technicians 2,840 3,320 480 16.9 330
Ohio Industrial Engineering Technicians 3,180 3,320 140 4.4 310
Oregon Electrical Engineers 2,740 3,310 570 20.8 240
California Biomedical Engineers 2,900 3,300 400 13.8 240
Kentucky Civil Engineers 3,090 3,280 190 6.1 240
Massachusetts Engineers, All Other 2,860 3,210 350 12.2 220
South Carolina Architectural and Engineering Managers 2,910 3,210 300 10.3 240
California Industrial Engineering Technicians 2,900 3,200 300 10.3 310
Illinois Engineers, All Other 3,050 3,200 150 4.9 210
Ohio Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 3,160 3,190 30 0.9 290
Massachusetts Computer Hardware Engineers 2,640 3,150 510 19.3 240
Massachusetts Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 2,830 3,110 280 9.9 300
Minnesota Airline Pilots, Copilots, and Flight Engineers 2,890 3,110 220 7.6 340
New Jersey Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 2,890 3,100 210 7.3 210
Utah Industrial Engineers 2,210 3,100 890 40.3 250
Colorado Engineers, All Other 2,570 3,080 510 19.8 220
New York Sales Engineers 2,620 3,080 460 17.6 340
Tennessee Electrical Engineers 2,540 3,070 530 20.9 230
North Carolina Industrial Engineering Technicians 2,780 3,050 270 9.7 290
Illinois Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 2,990 3,040 50 1.7 280
Nebraska Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 2,830 3,030 200 7.1 330
California Petroleum Engineers 3,100 3,000 -100 -3.2 190
Alaska Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 2,630 2,950 320 12.2 320
Louisiana Civil Engineers 2,710 2,950 240 8.9 220
Maryland Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 2,810 2,930 120 4.3 270
Michigan Airline Pilots, Copilots, and Flight Engineers 2,760 2,930 170 6.2 320
Oregon Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 2,660 2,930 270 10.2 260
Colorado Aerospace Engineers 2,320 2,910 590 25.4 200
Idaho Civil Engineers 2,450 2,880 430 17.6 220
New Mexico Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 2,700 2,880 180 6.7 270
Georgia Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 2,550 2,870 320 12.5 280
Kansas Mechanical Engineers 2,540 2,860 320 12.6 190
California Materials Engineers 2,500 2,800 300 12 190
Louisiana Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 2,780 2,800 20 0.7 260
Connecticut Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 2,190 2,770 580 26.5 220
New Hampshire Mechanical Engineers 2,530 2,760 230 9.1 180
Connecticut Electrical Engineers 2,360 2,750 390 16.5 200
Colorado Sales Engineers 2,230 2,740 510 22.9 290
Texas Materials Engineers 2,210 2,720 510 23.1 200
Indiana Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 2,590 2,700 110 4.2 180
New Jersey Aerospace Engineers 2,040 2,700 660 32.4 200
Oklahoma Engineers, All Other 2,550 2,700 150 5.9 180
Minnesota Civil Engineering Technicians 2,630 2,680 50 1.9 250
Washington Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 2,440 2,670 230 9.4 280
Kansas Electrical Engineers 2,460 2,660 200 8.1 180
Alabama Civil Engineering Technicians 2,530 2,650 120 4.7 250
Georgia Aerospace Engineers 2,300 2,640 340 14.8 170
Iowa Civil Engineers 2,160 2,610 450 20.8 210
North Carolina Airline Pilots, Copilots, and Flight Engineers 2,300 2,610 310 13.5 290
Virginia Nuclear Engineers 2,770 2,600 -170 -6.1 150
New Jersey Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 2,420 2,590 170 7 250
Alabama Architectural and Engineering Managers 2,370 2,580 210 8.9 190
New York Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 2,290 2,580 290 12.7 250
Utah Engineers, All Other 2,030 2,570 540 26.6 200
Washington Computer Hardware Engineers 1,900 2,570 670 35.3 280
Iowa Architectural and Engineering Managers 2,330 2,560 230 9.9 190
Pennsylvania Environmental Engineers 2,460 2,560 100 4.1 190
Washington Airline Pilots, Copilots, and Flight Engineers 2,430 2,560 130 5.3 300
Washington Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 2,500 2,560 60 2.4 250
Florida Sales Engineers 2,100 2,540 440 21 280
New York Locomotive Engineers 2,520 2,530 10 0.4 220
Idaho Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 2,060 2,500 440 21.4 180
Illinois Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 2,530 2,500 -30 -1.2 160
Hawaii Civil Engineers 2,330 2,490 160 6.9 180
Oklahoma Industrial Engineers 2,000 2,490 490 24.5 190
Pennsylvania Computer Hardware Engineers 2,400 2,490 90 3.8 170
Virginia Computer Hardware Engineers 2,440 2,490 50 2 170
Oklahoma Architectural and Engineering Managers 2,210 2,450 240 10.9 180
Arizona Aerospace Engineers 2,050 2,440 390 19 160
Arizona Engineers, All Other 2,230 2,440 210 9.4 170
Kentucky Civil Engineering Technicians 2,450 2,440 -10 -0.4 220
North Carolina Sales Engineers 2,140 2,430 290 13.6 260
Ohio Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 2,350 2,430 80 3.4 230
Pennsylvania Mechanical Engineering Technicians 2,300 2,430 130 5.7 230
Puerto Rico Civil Engineers 2,070 2,410 340 16.4 190
California Engineering Teachers, Postsecondary 2,200 2,400 200 9.1 240
Ohio Mechanical Engineering Technicians 2,300 2,400 100 4.3 230
Kansas Civil Engineers 2,170 2,390 220 10.1 180
New Mexico Engineers, All Other 2,260 2,380 120 5.3 160
Oklahoma Mechanical Engineers 1,990 2,370 380 19.1 170
Arizona Computer Hardware Engineers 2,100 2,360 260 12.4 170
North Carolina Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 2,200 2,350 150 6.8 220
Florida Aerospace Engineering and Operations Technicians 1,710 2,340 630 36.8 250
Indiana Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 2,270 2,340 70 3.1 220
Alaska Airline Pilots, Copilots, and Flight Engineers 1,920 2,320 400 20.8 270
South Dakota Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 2,120 2,310 190 9 250
Alabama Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 2,210 2,300 90 4.1 220
South Carolina Electrical Engineers 2,030 2,300 270 13.3 170
Florida Environmental Engineers 1,940 2,290 350 18 190
Ohio Materials Engineers 2,150 2,290 140 6.5 150
Minnesota Engineers, All Other 2,230 2,280 50 2.2 150
Oklahoma Civil Engineers 2,000 2,280 280 14 180
Missouri Architectural and Engineering Managers 2,130 2,260 130 6.1 160
Oklahoma Petroleum Engineers 1,780 2,260 480 27 180
Virginia Marine Engineers and Naval Architects 2,140 2,260 120 5.6 120
Washington Environmental Engineers 2,040 2,260 220 10.8 200
Arizona Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 1,930 2,230 300 15.5 220
Colorado Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 1,860 2,220 360 19.4 210
Massachusetts Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 1,920 2,220 300 15.6 160
New Hampshire Industrial Engineers 1,890 2,210 320 16.9 160
Virginia Airline Pilots, Copilots, and Flight Engineers 1,860 2,210 350 18.8 250
Puerto Rico Industrial Engineering Technicians 1,930 2,200 270 14 220
Virginia Aerospace Engineers 2,020 2,190 170 8.4 130
Mississippi Industrial Engineers 1,940 2,170 230 11.9 150
South Carolina Industrial Engineering Technicians 1,950 2,150 200 10.3 210
Wisconsin Mechanical Engineering Technicians 1,970 2,150 180 9.1 210
Mississippi Civil Engineers 2,080 2,140 60 2.9 150
Utah Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 1,680 2,140 460 27.4 220
Connecticut Aerospace Engineers 1,790 2,130 340 19 140
Tennessee Industrial Engineering Technicians 1,860 2,120 260 14 210
California Locomotive Engineers 1,900 2,100 200 10.5 190
Tennessee Civil Engineering Technicians 2,030 2,090 60 3 200
Utah Electrical Engineers 1,540 2,090 550 35.7 170
Hawaii Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 1,980 2,080 100 5.1 220
Michigan Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 1,940 2,080 140 7.2 200
Michigan Engineering Teachers, Postsecondary 1,800 2,060 260 14.4 200
Illinois Industrial Engineering Technicians 1,910 2,050 140 7.3 200
Ohio Sales Engineers 2,000 2,050 50 2.5 210
Pennsylvania Industrial Engineering Technicians 1,940 2,050 110 5.7 190
New Hampshire Electrical Engineers 1,800 2,030 230 12.8 150
Pennsylvania Civil Engineering Technicians 2,010 2,030 20 1 190
Texas Stationary Engineers and Boiler Operators 1,740 2,030 290 16.7 250
Oklahoma Electrical Engineers 1,740 2,020 280 16.1 150
Oklahoma Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 1,890 2,020 130 6.9 140
California Health and Safety Engineers, Except Mining Safety Engineers and Inspectors 1,900 2,000 100 5.3 130
Illinois Civil Engineering Technicians 1,950 2,000 50 2.6 190
Pennsylvania Stationary Engineers and Boiler Operators 1,910 2,000 90 4.7 240
Massachusetts Biomedical Engineers 1,610 1,990 380 23.6 150
Virginia Civil Engineering Technicians 1,900 1,990 90 4.7 190
Nebraska Civil Engineers 1,820 1,980 160 8.8 150
North Carolina Engineers, All Other 1,800 1,970 170 9.4 140
Virginia Sales Engineers 1,890 1,970 80 4.2 210
Michigan Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 1,870 1,960 90 4.8 190
Minnesota Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 1,980 1,960 -20 -1 180
North Carolina Computer Hardware Engineers 1,820 1,960 140 7.7 140
Indiana Industrial Engineering Technicians 1,810 1,940 130 7.2 190
Montana Civil Engineers 1,510 1,940 430 28.5 160
New Jersey Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 1,760 1,940 180 10.2 190
Florida Industrial Engineering Technicians 1,630 1,930 300 18.4 190
Kansas Aerospace Engineers 1,640 1,930 290 17.7 130
Maryland Stationary Engineers and Boiler Operators 1,790 1,930 140 7.8 240
Georgia Computer Hardware Engineers 1,760 1,920 160 9.1 140
Massachusetts Environmental Engineers 1,630 1,920 290 17.8 160
Utah Architectural and Engineering Managers 1,510 1,910 400 26.5 160
Colorado Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 1,590 1,900 310 19.5 180
Illinois Engineering Teachers, Postsecondary 1,760 1,900 140 8 180
New York Health and Safety Engineers, Except Mining Safety Engineers and Inspectors 1,600 1,900 300 18.8 140
Texas Aerospace Engineering and Operations Technicians 1,570 1,900 330 21 190
Indiana Engineering Teachers, Postsecondary 1,660 1,870 210 12.7 180
New Jersey Computer Hardware Engineers 1,780 1,870 90 5.1 130
Arkansas Industrial Engineers 1,620 1,850 230 14.2 130
Colorado Civil Engineering Technicians 1,450 1,850 400 27.6 180
Massachusetts Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 1,580 1,850 270 17.1 180
Pennsylvania Materials Engineers 1,670 1,850 180 10.8 120
Connecticut Marine Engineers and Naval Architects 1,330 1,840 510 38.3 130
Tennessee Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 1,440 1,840 400 27.8 150
Texas Environmental Engineering Technicians 1,510 1,840 330 21.9 190
Oklahoma Aerospace Engineers 1,670 1,820 150 9 110
South Carolina Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 1,680 1,820 140 8.3 180
Illinois Stationary Engineers and Boiler Operators 1,680 1,810 130 7.7 220
Missouri Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 1,670 1,810 140 8.4 130
California Chemical Engineers 1,600 1,800 200 12.5 120
California Environmental Engineering Technicians 1,600 1,800 200 12.5 170
New York Civil Engineering Technicians 1,690 1,800 110 6.5 170
Arizona Airline Pilots, Copilots, and Flight Engineers 1,760 1,790 30 1.7 190
Louisiana Mechanical Engineers 1,700 1,790 90 5.3 110
Connecticut Engineers, All Other 1,510 1,780 270 17.9 130
Florida Ship Engineers 1,510 1,780 270 17.9 220
Maine Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 1,790 1,780 -10 -0.6 190
Arizona Industrial Engineering Technicians 1,420 1,770 350 24.6 180
Michigan Sales Engineers 1,620 1,770 150 9.3 190
Illinois Mechanical Engineering Technicians 1,640 1,750 110 6.7 170
South Carolina Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 1,500 1,740 240 16 130
Washington Civil Engineering Technicians 1,630 1,740 110 6.7 180
Puerto Rico Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 1,610 1,720 110 6.8 190
Wisconsin Civil Engineering Technicians 1,640 1,720 80 4.9 160
Mississippi Mechanical Engineers 1,590 1,710 120 7.5 110
Nevada Airline Pilots, Copilots, and Flight Engineers 1,480 1,710 230 15.5 190
Kansas Architectural and Engineering Managers 1,560 1,690 130 8.3 120
Nebraska Industrial Engineers 1,410 1,690 280 19.9 120
New York Mechanical Engineering Technicians 1,490 1,690 200 13.4 170
Georgia Environmental Engineers 1,560 1,680 120 7.7 130
Tennessee Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 1,490 1,680 190 12.8 160
Washington Nuclear Engineers 1,570 1,680 110 7 120
Indiana Mechanical Engineering Technicians 1,550 1,670 120 7.7 160
New York Sound Engineering Technicians 1,360 1,670 310 22.8 180
Minnesota Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 1,550 1,660 110 7.1 160
Alabama Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 1,550 1,650 100 6.5 110
North Carolina Engineering Teachers, Postsecondary 1,480 1,650 170 11.5 160
Arizona Civil Engineering Technicians 1,490 1,640 150 10.1 160
Kentucky Industrial Engineering Technicians 1,450 1,640 190 13.1 160
Louisiana Chemical Engineers 1,560 1,640 80 5.1 100
New Mexico Civil Engineers 1,500 1,640 140 9.3 120
New Mexico Electrical Engineers 1,490 1,640 150 10.1 120
North Carolina Environmental Engineers 1,520 1,640 120 7.9 130
Ohio Engineering Teachers, Postsecondary 1,550 1,640 90 5.8 160
Puerto Rico Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 1,450 1,640 190 13.1 160
Virginia Industrial Engineering Technicians 1,460 1,640 180 12.3 160
Kentucky Architectural and Engineering Managers 1,510 1,630 120 7.9 120
Arkansas Civil Engineers 1,470 1,620 150 10.2 120
District of Columbia Architectural and Engineering Managers 1,650 1,620 -30 -1.8 110
District of Columbia Civil Engineers 1,440 1,620 180 12.5 120
Kansas Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 1,450 1,610 160 11 110
Kentucky Electrical Engineers 1,490 1,610 120 8.1 110
New Hampshire Civil Engineers 1,420 1,610 190 13.4 130
Idaho Architectural and Engineering Managers 1,420 1,590 170 12 110
Minnesota Stationary Engineers and Boiler Operators 1,510 1,580 70 4.6 190
Maryland Environmental Engineers 1,530 1,570 40 2.6 120
New Hampshire Architectural and Engineering Managers 1,460 1,570 110 7.5 120
Ohio Civil Engineering Technicians 1,540 1,560 20 1.3 140
Nevada Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 1,330 1,550 220 16.5 150
New Jersey Environmental Engineers 1,450 1,550 100 6.9 120
Hawaii Airline Pilots, Copilots, and Flight Engineers 1,220 1,540 320 26.2 180
Louisiana Industrial Engineers 1,410 1,530 120 8.5 100
New Mexico Architectural and Engineering Managers 1,450 1,520 70 4.8 110
Iowa Electrical Engineers 1,410 1,510 100 7.1 100
Virginia Environmental Engineers 1,440 1,510 70 4.9 110
United States Agricultural Engineers 1,500 1,500 0 0 100
Colorado Petroleum Engineers 1,200 1,500 300 25 110
North Carolina Mechanical Engineering Technicians 1,310 1,500 190 14.5 150
Utah Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 1,300 1,500 200 15.4 110
Colorado Environmental Engineers 1,180 1,480 300 25.4 110
Iowa Engineers, All Other 1,350 1,480 130 9.6 100
New Hampshire Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 1,380 1,480 100 7.2 160
Oklahoma Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 1,330 1,480 150 11.3 140
South Dakota Civil Engineers 1,260 1,470 210 16.7 120
Arizona Environmental Engineers 1,270 1,460 190 15 120
New Jersey Stationary Engineers and Boiler Operators 1,380 1,460 80 5.8 180
Oklahoma Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 1,350 1,460 110 8.1 140
West Virginia Civil Engineers 1,350 1,460 110 8.1 110
Delaware Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 1,310 1,450 140 10.7 160
Indiana Sales Engineers 1,260 1,450 190 15.1 160
Indiana Locomotive Engineers 1,510 1,440 -70 -4.6 120
Maryland Civil Engineering Technicians 1,420 1,440 20 1.4 130
Michigan Civil Engineering Technicians 1,350 1,440 90 6.7 140
Michigan Environmental Engineers 1,310 1,440 130 9.9 110
Utah Mechanical Engineering Technicians 1,010 1,440 430 42.6 160
Virginia Ship Engineers 1,390 1,440 50 3.6 170
Oregon Computer Hardware Engineers 1,350 1,430 80 5.9 100
South Carolina Nuclear Engineers 1,480 1,430 -50 -3.4 90
New York Computer Hardware Engineers 1,290 1,420 130 10.1 100
Connecticut Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 1,320 1,410 90 6.8 140
Florida Health and Safety Engineers, Except Mining Safety Engineers and Inspectors 1,230 1,410 180 14.6 100
Louisiana Petroleum Engineers 1,220 1,410 190 15.6 100
Missouri Engineers, All Other 1,300 1,400 100 7.7 90
Wisconsin Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 1,390 1,400 10 0.7 130
Georgia Industrial Engineering Technicians 1,260 1,390 130 10.3 140
North Dakota Civil Engineers 1,180 1,390 210 17.8 110
South Carolina Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 1,300 1,390 90 6.9 130
Georgia Civil Engineering Technicians 1,260 1,370 110 8.7 130
Tennessee Engineering Teachers, Postsecondary 1,050 1,370 320 30.5 140
Arkansas Mechanical Engineers 1,240 1,360 120 9.7 90
Indiana Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 1,280 1,360 80 6.3 130
Virginia Engineering Teachers, Postsecondary 1,170 1,360 190 16.2 140
Louisiana Architectural and Engineering Managers 1,290 1,350 60 4.7 100
Missouri Locomotive Engineers 1,280 1,350 70 5.5 120
Utah Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 1,110 1,350 240 21.6 140
Missouri Sales Engineers 1,210 1,340 130 10.7 140
Georgia Health and Safety Engineers, Except Mining Safety Engineers and Inspectors 1,180 1,330 150 12.7 90
Maryland Industrial Engineering Technicians 1,170 1,330 160 13.7 130
New Mexico Mechanical Engineers 1,270 1,330 60 4.7 80
Texas Biomedical Engineers 1,130 1,330 200 17.7 100
Florida Biomedical Engineers 1,130 1,320 190 16.8 100
Illinois Sales Engineers 1,290 1,320 30 2.3 140
Iowa Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 1,220 1,320 100 8.2 130
Louisiana Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 1,290 1,320 30 2.3 120
Maryland Airline Pilots, Copilots, and Flight Engineers 2,160 1,320 -840 -38.9 100
South Carolina Environmental Engineers 1,190 1,320 130 10.9 100
Utah Industrial Engineering Technicians 1,050 1,320 270 25.7 140
Iowa Civil Engineering Technicians 1,170 1,310 140 12 130
Minnesota Mechanical Engineering Technicians 1,250 1,310 60 4.8 120
Rhode Island Mechanical Engineers 1,240 1,310 70 5.6 80
California Aerospace Engineering and Operations Technicians 1,100 1,300 200 18.2 130
Idaho Electrical Engineers 1,130 1,300 170 15 90
Mississippi Electrical Engineers 1,260 1,300 40 3.2 90
New Jersey Civil Engineering Technicians 1,210 1,300 90 7.4 120
Pennsylvania Health and Safety Engineers, Except Mining Safety Engineers and Inspectors 1,210 1,290 80 6.6 90
Illinois Environmental Engineers 1,230 1,280 50 4.1 100
Kentucky Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 1,200 1,280 80 6.7 120
Oregon Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 1,120 1,280 160 14.3 120
Oregon Civil Engineering Technicians 1,130 1,280 150 13.3 120
Colorado Industrial Engineering Technicians 1,170 1,270 100 8.5 110
Idaho Industrial Engineers 1,050 1,270 220 21 90
Arizona Sales Engineers 980 1,260 280 28.6 140
New Jersey Chemical Engineers 1,150 1,240 90 7.8 80
Pennsylvania Biomedical Engineers 1,170 1,230 60 5.1 80
Alabama Industrial Engineering Technicians 1,060 1,220 160 15.1 120
Idaho Mechanical Engineers 1,030 1,220 190 18.4 80
Minnesota Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 1,140 1,220 80 7 80
Wisconsin Engineers, All Other 1,160 1,220 60 5.2 80
Wisconsin Industrial Engineering Technicians 1,130 1,220 90 8 120
Michigan Materials Engineers 1,070 1,210 140 13.1 80
Arizona Mechanical Engineering Technicians 1,000 1,200 200 20 120
Ohio Environmental Engineers 1,160 1,200 40 3.4 90
Tennessee Mechanical Engineering Technicians 1,050 1,200 150 14.3 120
Idaho Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 1,000 1,190 190 19 110
Massachusetts Engineering Teachers, Postsecondary 1,030 1,190 160 15.5 120
Ohio Chemical Engineers 1,090 1,180 90 8.3 70
Puerto Rico Architectural and Engineering Managers 1,010 1,170 160 15.8 90
Florida Environmental Engineering Technicians 900 1,160 260 28.9 120
North Carolina Chemical Engineers 1,000 1,160 160 16 80
Missouri Aerospace Engineers 1,160 1,150 -10 -0.9 60
Alabama Computer Hardware Engineers 1,150 1,140 -10 -0.9 80
Vermont Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 1,060 1,140 80 7.5 120
South Carolina Civil Engineering Technicians 1,080 1,130 50 4.6 110
Virginia Mechanical Engineering Technicians 1,060 1,130 70 6.6 110
Wyoming Civil Engineers 920 1,130 210 22.8 90
Nebraska Mechanical Engineers 1,010 1,120 110 10.9 70
Maine Mechanical Engineers 1,110 1,110 0 0 70
New Jersey Sales Engineers 1,010 1,110 100 9.9 120
Pennsylvania Locomotive Engineers 1,090 1,100 10 0.9 100
Rhode Island Civil Engineers 940 1,100 160 17 90
Rhode Island Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 1,050 1,100 50 4.8 70
Tennessee Environmental Engineers 1,080 1,090 10 0.9 80
Hawaii Architectural and Engineering Managers 1,070 1,080 10 0.9 80
Minnesota Sales Engineers 1,040 1,080 40 3.8 110
Nevada Mechanical Engineers 920 1,080 160 17.4 70
Minnesota Biomedical Engineers 1,030 1,070 40 3.9 70
Missouri Industrial Engineering Technicians 1,000 1,070 70 7 100
Hawaii Electrical Engineers 1,030 1,060 30 2.9 70
Nevada Architectural and Engineering Managers 930 1,060 130 14 80
Nevada Engineers, All Other 920 1,060 140 15.2 80
Iowa Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 1,020 1,050 30 2.9 100
Maine Civil Engineers 1,000 1,050 50 5 80
Missouri Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 990 1,050 60 6.1 100
Nebraska Locomotive Engineers 910 1,050 140 15.4 100
Utah Civil Engineering Technicians 790 1,050 260 32.9 110
Indiana Biomedical Engineers 960 1,040 80 8.3 70
West Virginia Industrial Engineers 860 1,040 180 20.9 80
Kansas Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 990 1,030 40 4 100
Maryland Engineering Teachers, Postsecondary 890 1,030 140 15.7 100
Maryland Sales Engineers 940 1,030 90 9.6 110
Alaska Civil Engineers 980 1,020 40 4.1 80
Kansas Civil Engineering Technicians 990 1,020 30 3 100
Pennsylvania Chemical Engineers 930 1,020 90 9.7 60
Louisiana Electrical Engineers 940 1,010 70 7.4 70
Oregon Sales Engineers 900 1,010 110 12.2 100
Rhode Island Industrial Engineers 870 1,010 140 16.1 70
Utah Computer Hardware Engineers 840 1,010 170 20.2 80
Colorado Chemical Engineers 810 1,000 190 23.5 70
Connecticut Industrial Engineering Technicians 890 1,000 110 12.4 100
Connecticut Sales Engineers 910 1,000 90 9.9 110
New York Biomedical Engineers 820 1,000 180 22 70
Virginia Locomotive Engineers 930 1,000 70 7.5 90
Ohio Locomotive Engineers 980 990 10 1 90
South Carolina Mechanical Engineering Technicians 890 990 100 11.2 100
Mississippi Architectural and Engineering Managers 940 980 40 4.3 70
Missouri Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 870 980 110 12.6 100
New Mexico Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 950 980 30 3.2 90
New Mexico Nuclear Engineers 920 980 60 6.5 70
North Carolina Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 940 980 40 4.3 90
Missouri Civil Engineering Technicians 890 970 80 9 90
Wisconsin Environmental Engineers 940 970 30 3.2 70
Kentucky Engineers, All Other 910 960 50 5.5 60
Michigan Chemical Engineers 810 960 150 18.5 60
New Jersey Industrial Engineering Technicians 890 960 70 7.9 90
Ohio Airline Pilots, Copilots, and Flight Engineers 920 960 40 4.3 100
Pennsylvania Aerospace Engineers 860 960 100 11.6 60
Tennessee Chemical Engineers 800 950 150 18.8 60
Washington Sales Engineers 770 950 180 23.4 120
Utah Aerospace Engineers 670 940 270 40.3 70
Virginia Environmental Engineering Technicians 870 940 70 8 90
Wisconsin Health and Safety Engineers, Except Mining Safety Engineers and Inspectors 870 940 70 8 60
Alabama Materials Engineers 800 930 130 16.3 60
Connecticut Computer Hardware Engineers 850 930 80 9.4 70
Maryland Materials Engineers 860 930 70 8.1 60
Nebraska Architectural and Engineering Managers 870 930 60 6.9 70
Nevada Industrial Engineers 740 930 190 25.7 70
New Jersey Engineering Teachers, Postsecondary 820 930 110 13.4 90
Wisconsin Sales Engineers 860 930 70 8.1 100
Colorado Biomedical Engineers 820 920 100 12.2 70
Iowa Industrial Engineering Technicians 800 920 120 15 90
Maine Industrial Engineers 820 920 100 12.2 70
New York Materials Engineers 780 920 140 17.9 60
Alaska Engineers, All Other 840 910 70 8.3 60
Delaware Civil Engineers 850 910 60 7.1 70
Indiana Civil Engineering Technicians 880 910 30 3.4 90
Iowa Locomotive Engineers 870 910 40 4.6 80
Ohio Stationary Engineers and Boiler Operators 890 910 20 2.2 110
Washington Mechanical Engineering Technicians 850 910 60 7.1 90
Alabama Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 840 900 60 7.1 90
Alabama Mechanical Engineering Technicians 810 900 90 11.1 90
Arkansas Architectural and Engineering Managers 830 900 70 8.4 70
New Mexico Civil Engineering Technicians 890 900 10 1.1 80
New York Chemical Engineers 780 900 120 15.4 60
Ohio Petroleum Engineers 850 900 50 5.9 60
Maryland Biomedical Engineers 850 890 40 4.7 60
Mississippi Civil Engineering Technicians 900 890 -10 -1.1 80
South Carolina Materials Engineers 760 890 130 17.1 60
Arkansas Electrical Engineers 810 880 70 8.6 60
Missouri Environmental Engineers 830 880 50 6 70
Nevada Civil Engineering Technicians 780 880 100 12.8 90
Puerto Rico Mechanical Engineers 710 880 170 23.9 60
South Carolina Engineers, All Other 850 880 30 3.5 60
Tennessee Environmental Engineering Technicians 750 880 130 17.3 90
Mississippi Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 850 870 20 2.4 80
Ohio Computer Hardware Engineers 870 870 0 0 60
Vermont Civil Engineers 790 870 80 10.1 70
Washington Industrial Engineering Technicians 970 870 -100 -10.3 60
Maine Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 880 860 -20 -2.3 80
Oregon Airline Pilots, Copilots, and Flight Engineers 680 850 170 25 90
Florida Sound Engineering Technicians 680 840 160 23.5 90
Oklahoma Health and Safety Engineers, Except Mining Safety Engineers and Inspectors 710 840 130 18.3 60
Massachusetts Stationary Engineers and Boiler Operators 720 830 110 15.3 100
New Mexico Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 790 830 40 5.1 60
West Virginia Mechanical Engineers 720 830 110 15.3 60
District of Columbia Sales Engineers 730 820 90 12.3 90
Louisiana Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 680 820 140 20.6 60
Washington Biomedical Engineers 710 820 110 15.5 70
Arizona Engineering Teachers, Postsecondary 670 810 140 20.9 80
Ohio Aerospace Engineering and Operations Technicians 750 810 60 8 80
Wisconsin Engineering Teachers, Postsecondary 750 810 60 8 80
Alabama Chemical Engineers 710 800 90 12.7 50
Nebraska Electrical Engineers 720 800 80 11.1 60
Nevada Mining and Geological Engineers, Including Mining Safety Engineers 690 800 110 15.9 60
Wisconsin Locomotive Engineers 780 800 20 2.6 70
Illinois Computer Hardware Engineers 850 790 -60 -7.1 50
Kansas Engineers, All Other 740 790 50 6.8 50
Maryland Chemical Engineers 710 790 80 11.3 50
Montana Computer Hardware Engineers 620 790 170 27.4 60
Pennsylvania Petroleum Engineers 780 790 10 1.3 50
Tennessee Materials Engineers 650 790 140 21.5 60
Virginia Chemical Engineers 710 790 80 11.3 50
Washington Locomotive Engineers 850 790 -60 -7.1 60
Wisconsin Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 740 790 50 6.8 80
Hawaii Mechanical Engineers 780 780 0 0 50
Nebraska Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 730 780 50 6.8 70
Connecticut Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 670 770 100 14.9 80
Maine Electrical Engineers 730 770 40 5.5 50
New Hampshire Mechanical Engineering Technicians 710 770 60 8.5 70
Vermont Industrial Engineers 710 770 60 8.5 50
Washington Ship Engineers 800 770 -30 -3.8 90
Hawaii Engineers, All Other 760 760 0 0 50
Maryland Nuclear Engineers 790 760 -30 -3.8 40
Massachusetts Aerospace Engineers 700 760 60 8.6 50
Massachusetts Mechanical Engineering Technicians 650 760 110 16.9 80
Nevada Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 640 760 120 18.8 60
New Mexico Aerospace Engineers 670 760 90 13.4 50
Pennsylvania Nuclear Engineers 900 760 -140 -15.6 40
Texas Sound Engineering Technicians 620 760 140 22.6 80
Illinois Biomedical Engineers 720 750 30 4.2 50
Maine Architectural and Engineering Managers 750 750 0 0 50
New Jersey Locomotive Engineers 710 750 40 5.6 70
Utah Biomedical Engineers 570 750 180 31.6 60
Utah Environmental Engineers 610 750 140 23 60
Arkansas Locomotive Engineers 770 740 -30 -3.9 60
Florida Materials Engineers 630 740 110 17.5 50
Indiana Environmental Engineers 700 740 40 5.7 60
New Hampshire Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 730 730 0 0 70
Washington Engineering Teachers, Postsecondary 630 730 100 15.9 80
Iowa Engineering Teachers, Postsecondary 620 720 100 16.1 70
Maryland Health and Safety Engineers, Except Mining Safety Engineers and Inspectors 690 720 30 4.3 50
Montana Electrical Engineers 580 720 140 24.1 50
Oklahoma Environmental Engineers 660 720 60 9.1 60
South Dakota Industrial Engineers 610 720 110 18 50
Florida Marine Engineers and Naval Architects 530 710 180 34 50
Louisiana Civil Engineering Technicians 700 710 10 1.4 70
Louisiana Ship Engineers 610 710 100 16.4 90
Oklahoma Industrial Engineering Technicians 680 710 30 4.4 70
Rhode Island Engineers, All Other 650 710 60 9.2 50
West Virginia Electrical Engineers 640 710 70 10.9 50
Alabama Environmental Engineers 670 700 30 4.5 50
Kentucky Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 670 700 30 4.5 70
Minnesota Environmental Engineers 690 700 10 1.4 50
Nevada Electrical Engineers 590 700 110 18.6 50
North Carolina Aerospace Engineers 600 700 100 16.7 50
Ohio Environmental Engineering Technicians 670 700 30 4.5 70
West Virginia Civil Engineering Technicians 690 700 10 1.4 60
Florida Locomotive Engineers 840 690 -150 -17.9 50
Missouri Materials Engineers 610 690 80 13.1 50
Wisconsin Computer Hardware Engineers 650 690 40 6.2 50
Alabama Health and Safety Engineers, Except Mining Safety Engineers and Inspectors 620 680 60 9.7 50
Idaho Environmental Engineers 500 680 180 36 50
Montana Mechanical Engineers 540 680 140 25.9 50
Vermont Electrical Engineers 630 680 50 7.9 50
Alaska Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 640 670 30 4.7 60
District of Columbia Electrical Engineers 630 670 40 6.3 50
Virginia Stationary Engineers and Boiler Operators 610 670 60 9.8 80
Washington Materials Engineers 720 670 -50 -6.9 30
District of Columbia Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 670 660 -10 -1.5 40
District of Columbia Mechanical Engineers 660 660 0 0 40
Indiana Materials Engineers 590 660 70 11.9 40
New York Environmental Engineering Technicians 610 660 50 8.2 60
North Carolina Health and Safety Engineers, Except Mining Safety Engineers and Inspectors 580 660 80 13.8 50
Oregon Environmental Engineers 580 660 80 13.8 50
Colorado Materials Engineers 540 650 110 20.4 40
District of Columbia Stationary Engineers and Boiler Operators 580 650 70 12.1 80
Massachusetts Environmental Engineering Technicians 530 650 120 22.6 70
Mississippi Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 600 650 50 8.3 60
Nebraska Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 610 650 40 6.6 60
Nebraska Stationary Engineers and Boiler Operators 620 650 30 4.8 80
New Jersey Mechanical Engineering Technicians 590 650 60 10.2 60
North Dakota Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 510 650 140 27.5 70
Tennessee Sales Engineers 520 650 130 25 70
Alabama Engineering Teachers, Postsecondary 580 640 60 10.3 60
Alaska Civil Engineering Technicians 620 640 20 3.2 60
Delaware Industrial Engineers 600 640 40 6.7 40
Illinois Environmental Engineering Technicians 610 640 30 4.9 60
Illinois Materials Engineers 600 640 40 6.7 40
Maine Engineers, All Other 670 640 -30 -4.5 40
Minnesota Engineering Teachers, Postsecondary 590 640 50 8.5 60
Tennessee Health and Safety Engineers, Except Mining Safety Engineers and Inspectors 550 640 90 16.4 50
Connecticut Engineering Teachers, Postsecondary 570 630 60 10.5 60
Massachusetts Health and Safety Engineers, Except Mining Safety Engineers and Inspectors 530 630 100 18.9 50
Wisconsin Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 580 630 50 8.6 40
Idaho Nuclear Engineers 540 620 80 14.8 40
Illinois Chemical Engineers 560 620 60 10.7 40
Mississippi Engineers, All Other 610 620 10 1.6 40
New York Ship Engineers 490 620 130 26.5 80
South Carolina Chemical Engineers 510 620 110 21.6 40
Tennessee Biomedical Engineers 510 620 110 21.6 50
Michigan Health and Safety Engineers, Except Mining Safety Engineers and Inspectors 570 610 40 7 40
New Hampshire Industrial Engineering Technicians 560 610 50 8.9 60
North Carolina Locomotive Engineers 580 610 30 5.2 50
Tennessee Nuclear Engineers 580 610 30 5.2 40
Washington Chemical Engineers 540 610 70 13 50
Arizona Mining and Geological Engineers, Including Mining Safety Engineers 520 600 80 15.4 40
Delaware Mechanical Engineers 590 600 10 1.7 40
North Dakota Electrical Engineers 510 600 90 17.6 40
Ohio Biomedical Engineers 590 600 10 1.7 40
Rhode Island Computer Hardware Engineers 560 600 40 7.1 40
Georgia Chemical Engineers 500 590 90 18 40
Iowa Mechanical Engineering Technicians 500 590 90 18 60
Puerto Rico Electrical Engineers 570 590 20 3.5 40
Rhode Island Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 510 590 80 15.7 70
Alabama Aerospace Engineering and Operations Technicians 490 580 90 18.4 60
Michigan Stationary Engineers and Boiler Operators 530 580 50 9.4 70
North Dakota Mechanical Engineers 490 580 90 18.4 40
Washington Marine Engineers and Naval Architects 570 580 10 1.8 30
Arizona Materials Engineers 470 570 100 21.3 40
District of Columbia Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 510 570 60 11.8 60
Maryland Mechanical Engineering Technicians 560 570 10 1.8 50
Hawaii Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 560 560 0 0 50
Indiana Computer Hardware Engineers 550 560 10 1.8 40
Minnesota Computer Hardware Engineers 560 560 0 0 40
Washington Stationary Engineers and Boiler Operators 530 560 30 5.7 70
Georgia Environmental Engineering Technicians 470 550 80 17 50
Illinois Nuclear Engineers 670 550 -120 -17.9 30
Kentucky Locomotive Engineers 550 550 0 0 50
Nevada Environmental Engineers 480 550 70 14.6 40
New Jersey Biomedical Engineers 530 550 20 3.8 40
North Carolina Biomedical Engineers 490 550 60 12.2 40
Oregon Mechanical Engineering Technicians 470 550 80 17 50
South Carolina Sales Engineers 480 550 70 14.6 60
Virginia Biomedical Engineers 550 550 0 0 30
Kansas Industrial Engineering Technicians 470 540 70 14.9 50
Ohio Health and Safety Engineers, Except Mining Safety Engineers and Inspectors 510 540 30 5.9 40
Oklahoma Environmental Engineering Technicians 540 540 0 0 50
Rhode Island Electrical Engineers 470 540 70 14.9 40
Utah Materials Engineers 380 540 160 42.1 40
Connecticut Environmental Engineers 510 530 20 3.9 40
Kentucky Environmental Engineers 520 530 10 1.9 40
Mississippi Environmental Engineers 530 530 0 0 40
Mississippi Marine Engineers and Naval Architects 460 530 70 15.2 30
Utah Health and Safety Engineers, Except Mining Safety Engineers and Inspectors 400 530 130 32.5 40
Wisconsin Biomedical Engineers 500 530 30 6 40
Arkansas Industrial Engineering Technicians 480 520 40 8.3 50
Colorado Mechanical Engineering Technicians 450 520 70 15.6 50
Minnesota Locomotive Engineers 530 520 -10 -1.9 50
South Dakota Mechanical Engineers 450 520 70 15.6 40
Tennessee Stationary Engineers and Boiler Operators 440 520 80 18.2 70
Connecticut Materials Engineers 400 510 110 27.5 40
Kentucky Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 450 510 60 13.3 40
North Dakota Civil Engineering Technicians 450 510 60 13.3 50
South Carolina Computer Hardware Engineers 500 510 10 2 40
Utah Engineering Teachers, Postsecondary 360 510 150 41.7 50
Connecticut Chemical Engineers 430 500 70 16.3 30
District of Columbia Marine Engineers and Naval Architects 480 500 20 4.2 30
Hawaii Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 500 500 0 0 30
Nebraska Environmental Engineers 480 500 20 4.2 40
Nevada Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 430 500 70 16.3 50
New Mexico Industrial Engineers 440 500 60 13.6 40
North Carolina Materials Engineers 440 500 60 13.6 30
Oregon Locomotive Engineers 470 500 30 6.4 40
Texas Marine Engineers and Naval Architects 400 500 100 25 30
West Virginia Architectural and Engineering Managers 470 500 30 6.4 40
Colorado Environmental Engineering Technicians 380 490 110 28.9 50
Hawaii Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 490 490 0 0 50
Iowa Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 410 490 80 19.5 40
Mississippi Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 490 490 0 0 30
Missouri Stationary Engineers and Boiler Operators 450 490 40 8.9 60
New Hampshire Sales Engineers 460 490 30 6.5 50
North Dakota Industrial Engineers 390 490 100 25.6 40
Virginia Health and Safety Engineers, Except Mining Safety Engineers and Inspectors 460 490 30 6.5 30
Wyoming Locomotive Engineers 550 490 -60 -10.9 40
Delaware Electrical Engineers 470 480 10 2.1 30
District of Columbia Aerospace Engineers 440 480 40 9.1 30
District of Columbia Computer Hardware Engineers 520 480 -40 -7.7 30
Pennsylvania Environmental Engineering Technicians 450 480 30 6.7 50
South Dakota Civil Engineering Technicians 440 480 40 9.1 50
Washington Environmental Engineering Technicians 480 480 0 0 40
Wisconsin Chemical Engineers 410 480 70 17.1 30
Illinois Health and Safety Engineers, Except Mining Safety Engineers and Inspectors 430 470 40 9.3 30
Kansas Sales Engineers 430 470 40 9.3 50
Massachusetts Materials Engineers 410 470 60 14.6 30
Puerto Rico Engineers, All Other 450 470 20 4.4 30
South Carolina Health and Safety Engineers, Except Mining Safety Engineers and Inspectors 410 470 60 14.6 30
Tennessee Computer Hardware Engineers 370 470 100 27 40
Washington Health and Safety Engineers, Except Mining Safety Engineers and Inspectors 430 470 40 9.3 40
Alaska Petroleum Engineers 410 460 50 12.2 30
Arizona Biomedical Engineers 350 460 110 31.4 40
Arkansas Engineers, All Other 430 460 30 7 30
Florida Stationary Engineers and Boiler Operators 430 460 30 7 60
Indiana Aerospace Engineering and Operations Technicians 410 460 50 12.2 50
New Jersey Environmental Engineering Technicians 390 460 70 17.9 50
Oregon Stationary Engineers and Boiler Operators 430 460 30 7 50
Tennessee Aerospace Engineers 390 460 70 17.9 30
Georgia Mechanical Engineering Technicians 410 450 40 9.8 40
Idaho Engineers, All Other 410 450 40 9.8 30
Kentucky Mechanical Engineering Technicians 400 450 50 12.5 50
Nebraska Engineers, All Other 420 450 30 7.1 30
Arizona Locomotive Engineers 460 440 -20 -4.3 40
District of Columbia Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 440 440 0 0 40
Kansas Environmental Engineers 410 440 30 7.3 30
Kentucky Materials Engineers 380 440 60 15.8 30
Louisiana Health and Safety Engineers, Except Mining Safety Engineers and Inspectors 410 440 30 7.3 30
Louisiana Industrial Engineering Technicians 460 440 -20 -4.3 40
Michigan Nuclear Engineers 510 440 -70 -13.7 20
Minnesota Health and Safety Engineers, Except Mining Safety Engineers and Inspectors 420 440 20 4.8 30
New Mexico Materials Engineers 390 440 50 12.8 30
Oklahoma Sales Engineers 380 440 60 15.8 50
Oregon Materials Engineers 390 440 50 12.8 30
Arizona Environmental Engineering Technicians 350 430 80 22.9 40
Maryland Environmental Engineering Technicians 410 430 20 4.9 40
Minnesota Environmental Engineering Technicians 420 430 10 2.4 40
New Hampshire Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 380 430 50 13.2 30
Rhode Island Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 400 430 30 7.5 40
Wisconsin Materials Engineers 410 430 20 4.9 30
Louisiana Environmental Engineers 410 420 10 2.4 30
Maine Civil Engineering Technicians 420 420 0 0 40
Montana Architectural and Engineering Managers 340 420 80 23.5 40
Montana Industrial Engineers 300 420 120 40 30
Oklahoma Civil Engineering Technicians 390 420 30 7.7 40
Oklahoma Locomotive Engineers 400 420 20 5 40
Oklahoma Mechanical Engineering Technicians 340 420 80 23.5 40
Pennsylvania Rail Yard Engineers, Dinkey Operators, and Hostlers 410 420 10 2.4 40
Vermont Mechanical Engineers 400 420 20 5 30
West Virginia Engineers, All Other 410 420 10 2.4 30
Arkansas Stationary Engineers and Boiler Operators 400 410 10 2.5 50
Kansas Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 390 410 20 5.1 40
Minnesota Materials Engineers 380 410 30 7.9 30
New Hampshire Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 390 410 20 5.1 40
New Jersey Health and Safety Engineers, Except Mining Safety Engineers and Inspectors 390 410 20 5.1 30
New Jersey Materials Engineers 390 410 20 5.1 30
New York Aerospace Engineers 340 410 70 20.6 30
Puerto Rico Engineering Teachers, Postsecondary 410 410 0 0 40
South Carolina Aerospace Engineers 370 410 40 10.8 30
West Virginia Electrical and Electronics Engineering Technicians 410 410 0 0 40
Wyoming Petroleum Engineers 350 410 60 17.1 30
Arkansas Calibration and Engineering Technologists and Technicians, Except Drafters, All Other 370 400 30 8.1 40
Florida Chemical Engineers 350 400 50 14.3 30
Idaho Computer Hardware Engineers 340 400 60 17.6 30
Indiana Stationary Engineers and Boiler Operators 380 400 20 5.3 50
Missouri Health and Safety Engineers, Except Mining Safety Engineers and Inspectors 350 400 50 14.3 30
Montana Environmental Engineers 330 400 70 21.2 30
North Carolina Stationary Engineers and Boiler Operators 370 400 30 8.1 50
Rhode Island Architectural and Engineering Managers 360 400 40 11.1 30
Tennessee Sound Engineering Technicians 280 400 120 42.9 50
Connecticut Mechanical Engineering Technicians 340 390 50 14.7 40
Delaware Architectural and Engineering Managers 390 390 0 0 30
Indiana Chemical Engineers 350 390 40 11.4 30
Louisiana Environmental Engineering Technicians 370 390 20 5.4 40
Montana Locomotive Engineers 360 390 30 8.3 40
New Mexico Petroleum Engineers 370 390 20 5.4 30
Utah Sound Engineering Technicians 290 390 100 34.5 40
Vermont Architectural and Engineering Managers 380 390 10 2.6 30
Virginia Materials Engineers 350 390 40 11.4 30
Colorado Health and Safety Engineers, Except Mining Safety Engineers and Inspectors 320 380 60 18.8 30
Idaho Sales Engineers 280 380 100 35.7 40
Maine Marine Engineers and Naval Architects 340 380 40 11.8 20
Mississippi Industrial Engineering Technicians 360 380 20 5.6 40
Missouri Chemical Engineers 330 380 50 15.2 30
Puerto Rico Electronics Engineers, Except Computer 320 380 60 18.8 30
Guam Civil Engineers 320 370 50 15.6 30
New Mexico Health and Safety Engineers, Except Mining Safety Engineers and Inspectors 340 370 30 8.8 20
West Virginia Environmental Engineers 360 370 10 2.8 30
Colorado Aerospace Engineering and Operations Technicians 280 360 80 28.6 40
Connecticut Aerospace Engineering and Operations Technicians 280 360 80 28.6 40
Delaware Chemical Engineers 360 360 0 0 20
Guam Operating Engineers and Other Construction Equipment Operators 360 360 0 0 40
Massachusetts Chemical Engineers 300 360 60 20 20
Massachusetts Civil Engineering Technicians 320 360 40 12.5 40
Washington Aerospace Engineering and Operations Technicians 430 360 -70 -16.3 20
Wyoming Mechanical Engineers 300 360 60 20 30
Alabama Sales Engineers 340 350 10 2.9 40
Alaska Architectural and Engineering Managers 320 350 30 9.4 30
Alaska Environmental Engineers 330 350 20 6.1 30
Colorado Mining and Geological Engineers, Including Mining Safety Engineers 300 350 50 16.7 30
Georgia Sound Engineering Technicians 240 350 110 45.8 40
Indiana Health and Safety Engineers, Except Mining Safety Engineers and Inspectors 330 350 20 6.1 20
Iowa Environmental Engineers 300 350 50 16.7 30
Louisiana Materials Engineers 320 350 30 9.4 20
Montana Civil Engineering Technicians 310 350 40 12.9 40
Montana Engineers, All Other 340 350 10 2.9 20
Nevada Health and Safety Engineers, Except Mining Safety Engineers and Inspectors 300 350 50 16.7 30
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