2013 Supporting Statement A (1220-0042)

2013 Supporting Statement A (1220-0042).doc

Report on Occupational Employment and Wages

OMB: 1220-0042

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Supporting Statement

Report on Occupational Employment and Wages


A. Justification


1. Circumstances that Make the Collection of Information Necessary


The Occupational Employment Statistics (OES) survey is a Federal/State establishment survey of wage and salary workers designed to produce data on current detailed occupational employment and wages for each Metropolitan Statistical Area and Metropolitan Division as well as by detailed industry classification. OES survey data assists in the development of employment and training programs established by the Perkins Vocational Education Act of 1998 and the Workforce Investment Act (WIA) of 1998 (See attachments I and II for pertinent sections of each Act).


The WIA mandates that the Secretary of Labor shall oversee the development, maintenance, and continuous improvement of a nationwide employment statistics system of employment statistics that includes—“(A) statistical data from cooperative statistical survey and projection programs and data from administrative reporting systems that, taken together, enumerate, estimate, and project employment opportunities and conditions at national, State, and local levels in a timely manner, including statistics on—(ii) industrial distribution of occupations, as well as current and projected employment opportunities, wages, benefits (where data are available), and skill trends by occupation and industry, with particular attention paid to State and local conditions[.]”


In 1996, the OES program modified its collection method to produce prevailing wage data required by Foreign Labor Certification under the Immigration Act of 1990 (See attachment III for pertinent sections of this Act). The current process for obtaining foreign labor certification requires employers to actively recruit U.S. workers for a period of at least thirty days for all job openings for which foreign labor is sought. The employers’ job requirements must be reasonable and realistic, and employers must offer prevailing wages and working conditions for the occupation. Federal regulations provide more information on the determination of a prevailing wage for use in Foreign Labor Certification (See Attachment IV “Subpart D – Determination of Prevailing Wage” for an elaboration).


2. Uses of Information


Occupational employment data obtained by the OES survey are used to develop information regarding current and projected employment needs and job opportunities. These data assist in the development of State and local vocational education plans. Nation-wide collection of OES wage data can further develop labor market and occupational information at the Federal, State, and sub-State levels. The survey meets the needs of organizations involved in planning and delivering services provided by the WIA and the Perkins Vocational Education Act (1998).


National OES wage data collection can provide a significant source of information to support a number of different Federal, State, and local efforts. For instance, occupational wage data can be extremely useful in the administration of the Unemployment Insurance (UI) system. Generally, UI clients must meet work-search requirements and take jobs that pay equivalent to their previous employment. Wage data by occupation can help employment services identify occupations that meet the requirements of these individuals. Similarly, the dislocated workers program uses previous wages as a guide in preparing dislocated workers for employment. The OES survey can provide a standard source of occupational wage data to assist these workers.


Wage data at the occupational level can assist States and local authorities in carrying out vocational rehabilitation programs. The data can support U.S. military interests by providing State and local career information for Department of Defense workers. Minimum wage deliberations can use OES wage data as a source of information.


OES wage data provides vocational trainers and enrollees with information on what occupations are present in the economy as well as their corresponding wage rates. These data will assist the national, State, and local coordinating committees to develop occupational information systems designed to aid job searchers and career counselors. As an example of use of the OES program, America’s Career One Stop provides to individuals and career counselors the OES employment and wage data at its Web site at http://www.careerinfonet.org/


Reliable wage data has many practical uses. OES wage data can be an important analytical tool with enormous explanatory power. Wage data can be used to understand the direction and quality of the jobs being created in our economy and can play a part in important legal and administrative decisions. More importantly, wage information is a valuable commodity to the general public, whether the data are assembled in the BLS Occupational Outlook Handbook, or released across the country in occupational information systems. The detail, reliability, and applicability of the OES wage survey argues strongly for its expanded support.


The Immigration Act of 1990 mandates that the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) base Foreign Labor Certification (FLC) on current prevailing wage rates. Under this Act, if employers prove there is an insufficient supply of local workers with occupation-specific skills, State agencies can grant temporary work permits to foreign workers.


FLC requires employers to actively recruit U.S. workers for a period of at least 30 days for all job openings for which foreign workers are sought. The employers’ job requirements must be reasonable and realistic, and employers must offer prevailing wages and working conditions for the occupation.


The Employment and Training Administration (ETA) provides occupational wage data from the OES-FLC wage database on the Internet at http://www.foreignlaborcert.doleta.gov/.


The OES employment data are used as inputs to the Employment Cost Index. Additionally, special tabulations of employment by State, industry, and wage range are supplied to the Bureau of Economic Analysis for estimating Social Security payments from employers.


3. Uses of Improved Information Technology


In 2004, OES started collecting data by email. In addition to email, OES utilizes an online data submission tool. This online collection tool, referred to as Weblite, is another option for providing data electronically. If respondents choose to use Weblite, they have the option to upload an existing data file that contains the necessary employment and wage information, or complete an online version of the form. Once the online form is completed, it is submitted to the appropriate State office, and the respondent receives no further follow-up mailings. OES also actively seeks electronic reports from some larger establishments.


4. Efforts to Identify Duplication


The American Community Survey is the only other source of data available at a similar level of occupational and geographic detail, however it does not produce as much occupational detail as OES. The collection of employment and wage data at the detailed levels produced by OES eliminates the need for fragmented local collection efforts carried out within the States. These efforts are not only costly, but place a burden on employers, since several different groups may request wage data from the same employers. The OES wage survey produces current and accurate data on occupational employment information at the National, State, and sub-state levels.


5. Minimizing the Burden to Small Establishments


The OES sample design as described in Part B calls for using a variation of the Neymann allocation procedure to allocate sample to each ST/MSA/4-5-6 digit NAICS cell. Additionally, the establishments within each of these cells are selected using probability proportional to employment size. Both of these procedures result in smaller establishments having a smaller chance or probability of inclusion in the sample than the larger establishments. In other words, the larger the establishment size the greater the likelihood of being included in the sample.


In addition, two basic types of reporting forms, long and unstructured, are used. The long form contains the full complement of occupations used to record all workers in a three- or four-digit North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) industry code. A shorter unstructured form does not list specific occupations. The size of the establishment determines which of the two OES forms the establishment will receive. Typically, long forms are mailed to establishments with at least 20 employees, and the shorter unstructured form is sent to small establishments.


In our last clearance package, OMB approved the use of a simplified, one page fax form which OES is currently utilizing. This form will further reduce burden to small establishments. Upon receipt of the survey mail packet, small establishments may request this fax form from their State office.


Finally, many smaller establishments find it easy to report the data by phone when states are conducting non-response follow-up.

6. Consequences of Not Collecting the Data or Less Frequent Data Collection


The purpose of the Labor Market Information (LMI) program, to which the OES program is vital, is to meet the information needs of the organizations involved in planning and delivering employment and training services at the State and sub-State levels. Therefore, there is a need for a comprehensive LMI system that provides continuous, timely, accurate, and detailed labor information. Since the inception of the OES program in 1971, the capability to develop timely, accurate, and detailed occupational estimates and projections has increased substantially. Due to changing staffing patterns, wage rates, and seasonal fluctuations, the OES survey needs to be conducted on a semi-annual basis at a minimum. Any change to a longer frequency of data collection may adversely affect the existing reliability of OES data.


7. Special Circumstances


There are no special circumstances for this collection of information.


8 Outside Consultations


One comment was received as a result of the Federal Register notice published in 78 FR 29382 on May 20, 2013. The comment, which was e-mailed to BLS on May 27, 2013, expressed the opinion that the information collected for this survey already exists elsewhere in the Government. However, the OES program is the only source of occupational wage data at the geographic level necessary to produce prevailing wage rates for Foreign Labor Certification, as mandated by the Immigration Act of 1990. No other Federal information collection produces the occupational detail that the OES does.


The name and phone number of the occupational expert consulted is:


Ms. Rebecca Rust

Workforce Investment Council Co-chair

Labor Market Statistics
Florida
Agency for Workforce Innovation

850-245-7257


9. Respondent Payments


The OES program does not pay employers to complete the questionnaire.


10. BLS Confidentiality Policy


The Confidential Information Protection and Statistical Efficiency Act of 2002 (CIPSEA) safeguards the confidentiality of individually identifiable information acquired under a pledge of confidentiality for exclusively statistical purposes by controlling access to, and uses made of, such information. CIPSEA includes fines and penalties for any knowing and willful disclosure of individually identifiable information by an officer, employee, or agent of the BLS.


Based on this law, the BLS provides respondents with the following confidentiality pledge/informed consent statement:


The Bureau of Labor Statistics, its employees, agents, and partner statistical agencies, will use the information you provide for statistical purposes only and will hold the information in confidence to the full extent permitted by law. In accordance with the Confidential Information Protection and Statistical Efficiency Act of 2002 (Title 5 of Public Law 107-347) and other applicable Federal laws, your responses will not be disclosed in identifiable form without your informed consent."


BLS policy on the confidential nature of respondent identifiable information (RII) states that “RII acquired or maintained by the BLS for exclusively statistical purposes and under a pledge of confidentiality shall be treated in a manner that ensures the information will be used only for statistical purposes and will be accessible only to authorized individuals with a need-to-know.”


11. Sensitive Questions


No questions of a sensitive nature are requested by the OES program.






12. Estimated Reporting Burden

Based upon the results from the 1989 OES Wage Pilot survey and a Response Analysis Survey conducted early in 2012 to determine respondent burden, OES respondents take an average of ¾ employee-hour (from 15 minutes to 3 hours) to furnish the desired occupational employment and wage information. In order to calculate annual burden hours, the BLS used ¾ hour as the basis for the calculation. Each employer is contacted only once during the year.


Current BLS plans for form BLS 2877 by Fiscal Year are summarized below:

Survey year

Mandatory / voluntary

Ownership

NAICS Coverage

Estimated Responding Units

Estimated burden hours

FY 2014

Voluntary

private

1133, 1151, 1152, 21-81 (exc. 814)

274,231

205,673

Voluntary

government

State and local government

5,855

4,391

Mandatory

private

1133, 1151, 1152, 21-81 (exc. 814)

29,352

22,014

Mandatory

government

State and local government

630

472

Total

310,068

232,550







Survey year

Mandatory / voluntary

Ownership

NAICS Coverage

Estimated Responding Units

Estimated burden hours

FY 2015

Voluntary

private

1133, 1151, 1152, 21-81 (exc. 814)

274,231

205,673

Voluntary

government

State and local government

5,855

4,391

Mandatory

private

1133, 1151, 1152, 21-81 (exc. 814)

29,352

22,014

Mandatory

government

State and local government

630

472

Total

 

 

310,068

232,550







Survey year

Mandatory / voluntary

Ownership

NAICS Coverage

Estimated Responding Units

Estimated burden hours

FY 2016

Voluntary

private

1133, 1151, 1152, 21-81 (exc. 814)

274,231

205,673

Voluntary

government

State and local government

5,855

4,391

Mandatory

private

1133, 1151, 1152, 21-81 (exc. 814)

29,352

22,014

Mandatory

government

State and local government

630

472

Total

310,068

232,550


The BLS estimates the annual cost to respondents for FY 2014 at $5,681,197.  To arrive at this figure, the average annual burden hours of 232,550 were multiplied by $24.43 per hour.  The BLS derives this wage figure from Employer costs for employee compensation, total compensation of office and administrative support occupations for the most recent data available (2013 2nd quarter). (Source: http://data.bls.gov/pdq/SurveyOutputServlet;jsessionid=519D572A04562ACE4E5C6A20740E2EE4.tc_instance5.)


13. Annual Cost Burden to Respondents


The OES program does not require respondents to keep special records, or to purchase and install any equipment such as special hardware or software. Employers use traditional payroll and personnel records as a source to complete the questionnaire.


14 Estimated Cost of the Survey


The approximate cost to the Federal Government for Fiscal Year 2013 is estimated to be approximately $36,000,000. This amount includes grants to the cooperating State agencies to collect the data. The Bureau of Labor Statistics will expend a portion for survey materials, planning, development, and training of State staff, technical assistance, and customer service.


Due to sequestration, the FY 2013 expenses outlined above do not reflect the long-term annual costs of the program. Specifically, FY 2013 expenses reflect curtailed spending as well as a hiring freeze, both of which may impact the quality and quantity of some BLS data.


15. Change in Burden and Respondent Costs


Annual respondent burden for the OES survey is estimated to be 232,550 hours. This number has decreased from the current Office of Management and Budget inventory due to the completion of a Response Analysis Survey for the OES, a reduction in the OES sample as a result of the elimination of the Green Goods and Services survey, and a reduction of the OES response rate from 78% to 77%.


16. Plans for Tabulation and Publication


The reference dates for the OES survey will be the payroll periods that include the 12th day of either November or May. Data collection will begin during the third week of the reference month and will end approximately eight to ten months later. Four mailings per panel (an initial and up to three follow-ups) are planned. Telephone and field follow-ups of nonrespondents are conducted throughout the collection period. States are requested to transmit a clean “master file” to the BLS about 9 months after the payroll reference period. Exact deadlines for States to complete specified tasks are negotiated each year as part of the LMI Cooperative Agreement process.


National, State, and sub-State estimates from the survey will be available to customers in March of the year following the survey reference date.


These news releases will be published in electronic and paper formats. The electronic news release will be posted on the BLS webpage at www.bls.gov/oes. Paper copies will be mailed upon request.


17. Display of Expiration Date


The OES program is requesting OMB permission to continue to omit the expiration date on the OES collection instruments. The OMB expiration date often falls in the middle of the data collection-period and displaying the expiration date could cause some respondents to not cooperate. In order to ensure the high quality of OES data, State Workforce Agencies will need to continue to collect data past the expiration date on the form. Additionally, in order to maintain and improve on the current 77-percent response rate, State Workforce Agencies (SWAs) will need to obtain data from late reporters. These delayed responders are crucial to achieving response rates allowing for production of estimates for detailed occupations in every U.S. metropolitan area.


18. Certification for Paperwork Reduction Act Submissions


There are no exceptions to the certification.





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File Typeapplication/msword
File TitleA. Justification
AuthorJOSEPH C. BUSH
Last Modified Byrowan_c
File Modified2013-10-30
File Created2013-08-23

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