Times-Call (Longmont)

Metro Denver has rich streaks of relatively rare occupation­s

Earth science jobs overrepres­ented in region’s job mix, as are airline workers

- By Aldo Svaldi asvaldi@denverpost.com

Jeff Pigati, a research geologist working at the U.S. Geological Survey in Lakewood, ran seeds from a site where human footprints were found alongside tracks of mammoths and saber-toothed tigers at White Sands National Park in New Mexico through lab equipment to collect pure carbon samples.

He expected the results would carbon date back at most 13,000 years when humans are believed to have first crossed over from Asia into North America. Instead, he was surprised when the carbon in the samples ranged between 21,000 and 23,000 years old. People were walking around what was then an Ice Age lake far earlier than anthropolo­gists had proposed.

“You never know what you are going to find,” said Pigati, describing what he enjoys most about his job at the USGS.

Pigati is a geoscienti­st, one of about 230 employed in the state last year, according to estimates from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. While far from the largest occupation in the area, geoscienti­sts are found in metro Denver at 6.1 times the rate seen nationally, making it the most concentrat­ed job category according to the “location quotient.”

“The location quotient can tell you some interestin­g things about the population and what kind of work people are engaging in,” said Julie Percival, a regional economist with the Dallas office of the BLS.

That location quotient, average hourly and annual wages and headcounts are found in the Occupation­al Employment and Wage Statistics survey, which is compiled twice a year by the BLS and state labor department­s.

The USGS is increasing­ly using drones with specialize­d and sophistica­ted cameras to better track what is happening on the Earth’s surface and what is located below ground. Some of those drone operators are photogramm­etrists, who along with cartograph­ers constitute the second most concentrat­ed occupation in metro Denver at 5.45 times the U.S. rate. And some, like Todd Burton, are geographer­s, who are prevalent at 4.58 times the U.S. concentrat­ion.

For those who think geographer­s spend their time leafing through dusty maps, think again. Burton and his

colleagues, like Joe Adams, guide drones across raging rivers that are flooding, above erupting volcanoes to track lava flows and across the vast Alaskan permafrost to measure methane emissions as temperatur­es warm.

Metro Denver has rich streaks of relatively rare occupation­s like geoscienti­sts, cartograph­ers, hydrologis­ts and petroleum engineers. They blend in with aboveavera­ge concentrat­ions of occupation­s common in many large metro areas — computer scientists, real estate brokers and airline pilots.

Manufactur­ing occupation­s are mostly underrepre­sented outside of beverages and some tech and electronic equipment makers. And there are unexpected concentrat­ions of jobs, like a lot of landscape architects and of all things, acupunctur­ists. The mix of roughly 830 occupation­s represents a spectrum unique to metro Denver’s economy, one that makes it distinct from any other metro.

“It can be difficult at times to see the forest from the trees,” said Ryan Gedney, a senior labor economist with the Colorado Department of Labor and Employment who cut his teeth on the Occupation­al Employment and Wage Statistics survey. If you are an employer wanting to know what the going wage is for an open job, a worker wanting to make sure the pay offered is at the market rate, or somebody curious about what makes a local economy tick, the survey offers a deep and detailed place to dive in.

Metro Denver’s overconcen­tration in earth sciences probably got its start when miners found gold in Cherry Creek. Denver became a hub for the mining industry globally and hosts the regional hubs and headquarte­rs of oil and gas producers tapping petroleumr­ich reserves in the region It helps to have the Colorado School of Mines spinning out engineers and scientists. And Denver early on became a hub for federal scientists trying to map the vast rural areas of the Rocky Mountain region.

“We have more USGS employees in Colorado than in any other state,” said Peter Griffiths, regional director of the agency’s Rocky Mountain Region. Colorado is home to about 1,000 USGS workers, many of them highly specialize­d in their fields.

More generally, metro Denver is overrepres­ented in many science, technology, engineerin­g, and mathematic­s or STEM fields. Electronic­s engineers are present at 3.8 times the national rate, computer network architects at 3.27 times, and computer and mathematic­al occupation­s at 1.6 times.

“Our industry clusters are so specialize­d and very technical — informatio­n technology, digital communicat­ions, aerospace. Denver is a freight train of 21st-century careers that are high paying,” said Andrew Hudson, who runs a popular job list that helps connect job hunters with opportunit­ies.

Denver Internatio­nal Airport and the three major carriers serving it — United Airlines, Southwest Airlines and Frontier Airlines — also provide the metro area with a higher concentrat­ion of aviation workers. Aircraft service workers are present in metro Denver at 5.2 times the national rate, airline pilots at 4.6 times and flight attendants at 3.99 times the expected concentrat­ion.

Metro Denver has a hot housing market, with 4 times as many real estate brokers and 2.3 times as many real estate sales agents employed here than the concentrat­ion nationally. But employed is the operative word, Gedney said. A lot of agents and brokers are not on a payroll and not captured in the BLS survey. Metro Denver may just have more real estate salespeopl­e earning a paycheck.

Metro Denver has a higher share of workers in business and financial operations overall, 9% vs. 6.4% nationally. Yet it has a smaller share of workers in management, 5.3% vs. 6.3% nationally. Does that mean workers here need less supervisio­n or that businesses prefer to run leaner?

Even though the city isn’t as much of a hub for corporate headquarte­rs as places like Minneapoli­s or Dallas, probably not. Gedney said CDLE workers take a harder line when it comes to classifyin­g who is a manager, weeding out situations where someone might have a big title but little pay. And they are very strict when it comes to labeling someone a CEO. Metro Denver has only an eighth of the concentrat­ion of chief executives seen nationally.

For those trying to decide on a career field, the highest pay is available in more advanced health care profession­s for those able to cover the higher costs of entry in time, effort and money. Of the 10 highest-paid occupation­s last year in metro Denver, nine were in health care. Orthopedic surgeons topped the pay scale with an average annual salary of $317,850. Surgeons not covered in other categories pulled down $280,950 a year, while ophthalmol­ogists made on average $273,050 a year.

CEOS came in as the sixth highest paid at $249,780 a year, but many, at least those heading public companies, make the bulk of their compensati­on in stock options and grants, which aren’t counted as wages. Profession­al athletes earned on average $186,990 a year, ranking 11th overall.

Percival said if an occupation has too few workers its detailed informatio­n is masked. Wages in metro Denver were not disclosed for anesthesio­logists, cardiologi­sts, gynecologi­sts and radiologis­ts, occupation­s that likely would have joined the highest-paid list.

And as with real estate agents, it is worth distinguis­hing income from wages. Dentists drawing a paycheck made on average $125,590 last year in metro Denver. But if that dentist owned his or her own practice, and was somewhat successful, chances are good the business income would have been much higher than what BLS is capturing in wages.

Of the 22 major occupation­al groups, 18 pay significan­tly more than the national average, a reflection of higher living costs. Sales workers command the biggest premium, at 24%, receiving an average hourly rate of $27.51 versus $22.15 nationally. Managers receive an 18% premium, while transporta­tion workers received 16% more pay per hour than the wage they receive nationally.

Hudson said he has seen a lot more jobs in metro Denver paying $100,000 and up to workers with midlevel experience. He is also seeing more cases where starting wages are between $60,000 to $70,000 a year.

“It is becoming more and more difficult to find employees willing to accept low wages.”

 ?? HYOUNG CHANG — THE DENVER POST ?? Geoscienti­st Jeff Pigati works with a carbon extraction and graphitiza­tion system at the U.S. Geological Survey at the Federal Center in Lakewood on Friday.
HYOUNG CHANG — THE DENVER POST Geoscienti­st Jeff Pigati works with a carbon extraction and graphitiza­tion system at the U.S. Geological Survey at the Federal Center in Lakewood on Friday.

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