What do people do for a living in your part of the world?

Started by ce929wax, December 20, 2018, 06:32:12 PM

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ce929wax

I'm not asking any member here specifically what they do for a living, that is really none of my business, but I am curious as to what is available, in general, for employment in your neck of the woods.

Here in my area (Kalamazoo, Michigan) there is a mix of factory work, work in the pharmaceutical industry (Pfizer, Zoetis), medical supply (Stryker), big box retail, restaurant, and breweries.  For white collar work, there are three universities in town, plus banking and financial services, plus work for the city and county.  There is a good cross section of employment opportunities.  Some of the smaller towns in the area have different factory and store jobs.  My hometown of Allegan has Perrigo. 



Scott5114

Oklahoma City is primarily based around "energy" (read: oil). As you would expect for a state capital, there's also a decent amount of state government employees here. There's Tinker Air Force Base in Midwest City. OKC is headquarters of Sonic (the restaurant, not the hedgehog), Love's, and Hobby Lobby. Paycom, a payroll firm, is also HQ'd here (I expect nobody's heard of it, since it's not a consumer-facing brand, but it's quite large). There's also a decent amount of employment in casino gaming (there are four major casinos within easy driving distance of OKC, each employing roughly 1,000 people).
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kevinb1994

#2
Jacksonville is known for being a regional business center, as it is the largest city in Florida and the largest-sized city in the lower 48 states. Winn-Dixie is headquartered on the Southside, for example. There are also various military installations both former and current scattered around the area (Mayport NAS, JAX NAS, Fort Caroline, etc).

Bruce

In Seattle, some of your neighbors are likely to work for one of the big tech firms (Amazon, Microsoft, etc), or in aerospace (Boeing and its subcontractors). Further out, you can also run into plenty of military/DOD types, thanks to the surrounding bases.

abefroman329


bandit957

Quote from: ce929wax on December 20, 2018, 06:32:12 PM
I am curious as to what is available, in general, for employment in your neck of the woods.

Pretty much nothing.
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bing101

Solano County, A mix of Bay Area and Sacramento Commuters plus people who work at Travis Air Force Base.

In the Sacramento Area people in general work for the West Coast Branches of Superpacs, State Government agencies and Lobbying outlets given that its the State Capital of California.

San Francisco of Course known for the financial and VC's operations. San Jose Tech Industry of Course. Davis and Berkeley known for being college towns.


Napa Wine processing and tourism in Norcal.

South San Francisco and Vacaville known for the Biotech industry.

US71

Like Alice I Try To Believe Three Impossible Things Before Breakfast

MikieTimT

Used to be either construction or at corporate for Wal-Mart, Tyson Foods, or J.B. Hunt, and there's still plenty of all of those, but everything around here has grown to the point that it's pretty much everything under the sun anymore.  This place is just booming anymore, so the sky is the limit.  2.7% unemployment means that about 10-12 families move into the area pretty much daily and have a decent choice in work since there aren't enough workers with health or motivation to fill the positions otherwise.

Roadgeekteen

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Max Rockatansky

Around Fresno they farm, I'm still not exactly sure what they do in it...

allniter89

Eglin AFB with 35,000 military & civilian employees is undoubtedly the largest employer in Okaloosa County, FL. It is so cool to hear the fighter jets scream overhead daily! There is a huge number of retired personnel here also. If you're in the area you should visit the AF Armament Museum, it's free & there are 24 aircraft on display outside where you can get right up & personal with fighter jets, helos & much much more.

There is a huge amount of people employed by the hospitality field, ie motel, restaurant, tourist services. We have a hectic spring/summer season then the snowbirds come in for a smaller quieter autumn/winter season.
Our beaches are sugar white with beautiful emerald colored water.


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LM117

Quote from: US71 on December 20, 2018, 10:44:14 PM
Walmart and fast food

Pretty much the same here, too. I remember when Coca-Cola closed their distribution center here about a year ago, our previous mayor, John Gilstrap, basically told the newly unemployed to do what a lot of other Danville residents do and commute to North Carolina where the jobs are. There's about to be a lot more commuters now that Petco and Dick's Sporting Goods have announced they're closing next month, which came out of left field.

He wasn't wrong, but you know your city is a dumpster fire when the mayor is telling people to go elsewhere for jobs.
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inkyatari

I'm never wrong, just wildly inaccurate.

Brandon

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kphoger

Wichita is known for aircraft manufacturing.  It's a safe bet that anyone in town knows at least one engineer.

When I first moved here, people suggested I look for a job at Cessna or Boeing or wherever.  But it's a really up-and-down industry, so I certainly would have lost my job at some point due to layoffs.
Keep right except to pass.  Yes.  You.
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Male pronouns, please.

Quote from: Philip K. DickIf you can control the meaning of words, you can control the people who must use them.

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xcellntbuy

Higher education with three colleges in town, Georgia Military College, Georgia College and State University and Central Georgia Technical College.

inkyatari

I'm never wrong, just wildly inaccurate.

TheHighwayMan3561

Duluth/Superior: hospitality, and especially increasing in Duluth's case the healthcare industry. There are still machine and plant workers, but that's been in steady decline for decades.
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slorydn1

#20
Military, Weyerhaeuser/International Paper, Moen, Bosch (dishwasher parts), yacht building, medical field, the usual hodgepodge of retail/food/fuel, and of course, farming.
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kphoger

My wife grew up in Branson, and her family lives there.  For Branson, it's hospitality.  A bunch of people making low wages bringing you food or cleaning your room.
Keep right except to pass.  Yes.  You.
Visit scenic Orleans County, NY!
Male pronouns, please.

Quote from: Philip K. DickIf you can control the meaning of words, you can control the people who must use them.

Sctvhound

In Charleston, SC: Medical care (two large hospitals in downtown Charleston, Roper and the Medical University of South Carolina), Boeing, Volvo, the local Air Force Base + Naval Weapons Station.

Boeing alone has over 7,000 employees. Joint Base Charleston (AFB + Naval Weapons Station + SPAWAR) is 22,000 employees. MUSC is 13,000, Roper St. Francis 5,500, Trident (another hospital) 2,500.

sparker

If they want to afford to stay, code -- or manage coders!

abefroman329

Coding seems like the sort of thing that could easily be outsourced.



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