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U.S. Department of Labor
Industry: Government; Labor
Number of terms: 77176
Number of blossaries: 0
Company Profile:
Workers who operate cranes to hoist, move, and place materials and objects, using attachments, such as sling, electromagnet, grapple hook, bucket, demolition ball, and clamshell. Classifications are made according to type of crane operated as overhead crane operator, locomotive-crane operator, monorail crane operator, or truck-crane operator.
Industry:Professional careers
Workers engaged in cutting materials, such as cloth, leather, or plastic, by hand or machine, according to pattern, layout lines, or specified dimensions. Classifications are made according to method of cutting as cutter, hand i, cutter, machine i, die cutter, or according to material cut as leather cutter.
Industry:Professional careers
Workers who prepare diamonds for use in making jewelry. Classifications are made according to specific occupations as brilliandeer-lopper, diamond cleaver, gem cutter, girdler, or lathe operator.
Industry:Professional careers
Persons who possess educational qualifications, work experience, and license or certificate for employment in various fields of dietetics, such as research, consultation, administration, community, and clinical. Classifications are made according to specialized area of employment as dietitian, clinical, dietitian, consultant, dietitian, or research.
Industry:Professional careers
A construction worker i, construction worker ii, or laborer, concrete-mixing plant when digging trenches, footing holes, and similar excavations to specified depth and width, and refilling trenches with excavated material, using pick and shovel.
Industry:Professional careers
Railroad officials who administer activities of specified sector of railroad operations, such as segment of line between prescribed points, terminal, classification yard, or other facility. Classifications are made according to operations or facility administered as superintendent, division, or yard manager.
Industry:Professional careers
Workers engaged in dyeing yarn, stockings, and knitted cloth, garments, and tubing. Workers are classified according to material dyed as dye-reel operator, skein-yarn dyer, or according to type of machine utilized as dye-tub operator.
Industry:Professional careers
Workers who study, analyze, and evaluate environmental problems, apply scientific knowledge to prevent pollution, develop solutions to existing environmental problems, and predict possibility of future environmental pollution, including that concerned with air, water, land and land use, noise, and radioactivity. May prepare environmental impact reports or studies detailing types and causes of pollution and probability of future environmental problems. May work with federal, state, and local governmental agencies and community groups in establishing and promoting environmental policies. General classifications are environmental analyst and pollution-control engineer. Since environmental work activities are interdisciplinary in nature, classifications are also made according to specific fields of specialization, such as civil engineering, soils engineering, chemistry, biology, geophysics, geology, geography, architecture, or forestry. Workers may direct and coordinate activities of other environmental scientists and be classified project manager, environmental research. Workers may function at the technician level, providing scientific or engineering support to environmental projects, and be classified biological aide, laboratory tester, pollution-control technician, scientific helper, or laboratory tester.
Industry:Professional careers
A worker who carries out prescribed tests on electric power equipment used in production, transmission, distribution, and utilization of electricity, using various types of electrical testing equipment. Classifications are made according to type of equipment tested as relay tester, transformer tester, or according to purpose of test as voltage tester.
Industry:Professional careers
Persons who possess educational qualifications, work experience, and legal certification where required as established by engineering schools, employers, and licensing authorities for employment in various fields of engineering. Engineers typically function in one or more activities, such as research, development, design, production, consulting, administration and management, teaching, technical writing, or technical sales and service. Classifications are made according to one or more engineering fields in which individual is qualified for employment, such as aeronautical, electrical, mechanical, chemical, mining, marine, or nuclear engineering.
Industry:Professional careers