State and Local Government, Excluding Education and Hospitals Careers

Occupations

Service occupations made up the largest share of employment in State and local governments, accounting for 31 percent of all jobs (table 2). Of these, police and sheriff's patrol officers, bailiffs, correctional officers and jailers, and fire fighters, concentrated in local government, were the largest occupations (chart 1). Professional and related occupations accounted for 21 percent of employment; office and administrative support occupations accounted for 21 percent; and management, business, and financial occupations constituted 11 percent.

Chart 1.  Number of workers in thousands.  Local government employs almost four times as many service workers as State government.

State and local governments employ people in occupations found in nearly every industry in the economy, including chief executives, managers, engineers, computer specialists, secretaries, and health technicians. Certain occupations, however, are mainly or exclusively found in these governments, such as legislators; tax examiners, collectors, and revenue agents; urban and regional planners; judges, magistrates, and other judicial workers; police and sheriff's patrol officers; and correctional officers and jailers.

Chief executives, general and operations managers, and legislators establish government policy and develop laws, rules, and regulations. They are elected or appointed officials who either preside over units of government or make laws. Chief executives include governors, lieutenant governors, mayors, and city managers. General and operations managers include district managers and revenue directors. Legislators include State senators and representatives, county commissioners, and city council members.

Tax examiners, collectors, and revenue agents determine tax liability and collect past-due taxes from individuals or businesses. Urban and regional planners draft plans and recommend programs for the development and use of resources such as land and water. They also propose construction of physical facilities, such as schools and roads, under the authority of cities, counties, and metropolitan areas. Planners devise strategies outlining the best use of community land and identify the places in which residential, commercial, recreational, and other types of development should be located.

Judges arbitrate, advise, and administer justice in a court of law. They oversee legal processes in courts and apply the law to resolve civil disputes and determine guilt in criminal cases. Magistrates resolve criminal cases not involving penitentiary sentences, as well as civil cases involving damages below a sum specified by State law.

Social workers counsel and assess the needs of clients, refer them to the appropriate sources of help, and monitor their progress. Eligibility interviewers, government programs interview and investigate applicants and recipients to determine eligibility to receive, or continue receiving, welfare and other types of social assistance. Social and human service assistant's duties vary with specific job titles. These workers include social service technicians, case management aides, social work assistants, residential counselors, alcoholism or drug abuse counseling aides, child abuse workers, community outreach workers, and gerontology aides. Probation officers and correctional treatment specialists assist in rehabilitation of law offenders in custody or on probation or parole.

Court, municipal, and license clerks perform a variety of State and local government administrative tasks. Court clerks prepare dockets of cases to be called, secure information for judges, and contact witnesses, lawyers, and attorneys to obtain information for the court. Municipal clerks draft agendas for town or city councils, record minutes of council meetings, answer official correspondence, keep fiscal records and accounts, and prepare reports on civic needs. License clerks keep records and help the public obtain motor vehicle ownership titles, operator permits, and a variety of other permits and licenses. State and local governments also employ many secretaries and administrative assistants and general office clerks.

Fire fighters control and extinguish fires, assist with emergency medical treatment, and help with the recovery from natural disasters such as earthquakes and tornadoes. Fire inspectors inspect public buildings for conditions that might present a fire hazard. Emergency medical technicians and paramedics assess injuries, administer emergency medical care, and extricate trapped individuals. They transport injured or sick persons to medical facilities.

Police and sheriff's patrol officers and detectives and criminal investigators have duties that range from controlling traffic to preventing and investigating crimes. They maintain order; enforce laws and ordinances; issue traffic summonses; investigate accidents; give evidence in court; serve legal documents for the court system; and apprehend, arrest, and process prisoners. State and local correctional officers guard inmates in jails, prisons, or juvenile detention institutions. Bailiffs keep order in courts.

Highway maintenance workers maintain highways, municipal and rural roads, airport runways, and rights-of-way. They patch broken or eroded pavement, repair guard rails and highway markers, plow snow, and mow or clear brush from along roads. Bus drivers pick up and deliver passengers at prearranged stops throughout their assigned routes. Operators may collect fares, answer questions about schedules and transfer points, and announce stops.

Table 2. Employment of wage and salary workers in state and local government, excluding education and hospitals, by occupation, 2004 and projected change, 2004-14 (Employment in thousands)
OccupationEmployment, 2004Percent change, 2004-14
NumberPercent

All occupations

7,872100.011.4

Management, business, and financial occupations

87011.111.8

Top executives

1622.18.1

Legislators

650.82.0

Accountants and auditors

751.0-7.5

Tax examiners, collectors, and revenue agents

380.58.0

Professional and related occupations

1,62520.615.1

Computer specialists

1321.721.8

Engineers

901.116.4

Social workers

1762.212.4

Probation officers and correctional treatment specialists

901.112.0

Social and human service assistants

981.36.0

Lawyers

841.135.1

Registered nurses

901.117.0

Emergency medical technicians and paramedics

610.825.5

Service occupations

2,46631.314.3

Nursing, psychiatric, and home health aides

1081.413.4

First-line supervisors/managers of police and detectives

901.116.4

Fire fighters

2653.425.4

Correctional officers and jailers

3985.14.8

Police and sheriff's patrol officers

6027.615.0

Janitors and cleaners, except maids and housekeeping cleaners

1021.320.6

Landscaping and groundskeeping workers

901.111.1

Recreation workers

1061.412.7

Office and administrative support occupations

1,61920.61.2

First-line supervisors/managers of office and administrative support workers

1161.55.3

Bookkeeping, accounting, and auditing clerks

1031.31.8

Court, municipal, and license clerks

1041.318.9

Eligibility interviewers, government programs

911.2-10.3

Police, fire, and ambulance dispatchers

841.115.0

Secretaries and administrative assistants

3224.10.6

Office clerks, general

3384.30.3

Construction and extraction occupations

4495.716.6

Construction equipment operators

891.115.1

Highway maintenance workers

1341.723.2

Installation, maintenance, and repair occupations

2813.613.5

Maintenance and repair workers, general

1121.413.5

Production occupations

1311.711.8

Water and liquid waste treatment plant and system operators

740.914.3

Transportation and material moving occupations

3484.411.9

Bus drivers, transit and intercity

1031.314.2

Note: May not add to totals due to omission of occupations with small employment

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