The Numbers
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In 2002, there were 167,000
librarians, 119,000 library technicians, and 120,000 library assistants.
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In 2012, there will be
184,000 librarians, 139,000 library technicians, and 146,000 library assistants,
according to Bureau of Labor Statistics= projections.
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Between 2002 and 2012, the
number of librarians is expected to increase by 10.1%, while library technicians
increase by 16.8% and library assistants by 21.5%. Total employment in the U.S is expected
to increase by 14.8% over this period.
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These projections for
library workers are consistent with those for 2000–2010, when the number of
librarians was expected to increase by 7%, while the number of technicians
increased by 19.5% and the number of library assistants by 19.7%.
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This trend points to Adeprofessionalization@: Work once performed only by librarians is now
performed by support staff. In a recent American Library Association
Support Staff Interests Round Table (ALA SSIRT) Survey of 212 library support
staff, 73% stated that they are now performing tasks previously performed by
Masters of Library Science (MLS) librarians at their library, or have the same
or similar duties as MLS librarians at other institutions.
Employment
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Most librarians work
in school and academic libraries but nearly one-third work in public libraries.
The remainder work in special libraries or as information professionals for
companies and other organizations.
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More than two out of 10
librarians work part-time. Public
and college librarians often work weekends and evenings, as well as some
holidays. School librarians usually
have the same workday and vacation schedules as classroom teachers. Special librarians usually work normal
business hours, but in fast-paced industries such as advertising or legal
services, often work longer hours when needed. This applies also to library
technicians.
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More than half of all
library assistants are employed by local government in public libraries;
most of the remaining employees work in school libraries. Nearly half of all library assistants
work part-time.
Women=s Work
Library workers have been, and will continue to be, mostly female.
·
Most students of library science are women. Women comprise 80.5% of ALA-accredited
Master's of Library Science enrollment.
Gender distribution is more equal for the Master=s
of Information Science degree, where men constitute 51.4% of all students.
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In 2003, women accounted for
84.4% of all librarians, 83.6% of all library assistants, and the vast majority
of library technicians.
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An Association of Research
Libraries (ARL) survey found 64.3% of research librarians are female; 35.7%
male. While female research
librarians now outnumber male librarians among directors (53%), men still
predominate as the head of computer systems departments (65.6%).
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In academic libraries, 68%
of all librarians are women. In
public libraries, 79% are women, and in school libraries, 92% are women.
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While men account for only
15.6% of librarians, in 1999, they accounted for 43% of library directors in
academic settings and 35% in public libraries.
Diversity Among Library
Workers
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In 2003, 13.3% of all
librarians were minorities: 5.6%
were black or African America, 5.0% were Hispanic or Latino, and 2.7% were
Asian.
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Minorities accounted for 18%
of all library assistants in 2003:
6.6% were black or African American, 6.2% were Asian, and 5.2% were
Hispanic or Latino. While the Bureau
of Labor Statistics does not have these percentages for library technicians, it
is safe to assume that they are mostly white.
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In public libraries, 6.3% of
the staff is black or African American, 3.0% is Hispanic or Latino, 3.9%
Asian/Pacific Islander, 0.25% American Indian/Alaskan Native, and 86.6% white,
according to an American Library Association survey.
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In ARL libraries, 12.8% of the professional staff
is composed of minorities.
Asian/Pacific Islanders account for 5.8% of the professional staff, blacks or African
Americans for 4.3%, Latinos or Hispanics for 2.5%, and American Indian/Alaskan
natives for 0.3%. The number of
minorities in managerial or administrative positions in the largest U.S.
academic libraries is far lower:
8% are directors, 7% are associate or assistant directors, and 10% are branch
librarians. The percentage of
minorities varies significantly between geographical regions. Minorities make up 20.3% of professional
employees in ARL libraries in the South Atlantic Region, while composing 3.1% of
professionals in the East South Central ARL libraries.
An Aging Workforce
·
Fifty-eight percent of librarians in the U.S. are
projected to reach the retirement age of 65 between 2005 and 2019.
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Forty percent of library
directors plan to retire in the next nine years.
AWomen=s Work@, Women=s Pay
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Pay inequity remains a
persistent and pervasive problem in our society. In 2002, women earned 77% as much as men.
For women of color, the gap was wider:
African American women earned 67% and Latina women 55% of men=s
earnings. While Asian women do
better, they still earned only 83.5% of men’s earnings.
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In 2001, the median annual
income of a woman with bachelor=s
degree who was aged 25 and older and who worked full-time was 25% (or $13,290)
less than that of a similarly qualified man, according to Census Bureau data. A woman with a master=s degree earned 28% (or
$18,658) less than a man with a master=s
degree, while a woman with a doctoral degree earned more than 25% less than a
man with the same degree.
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Workers in predominantly
female occupations earn less than others with similar qualifications, experience
and responsibility who work in fields that are predominantly male. This is
certainly the case for library workers:
In 2001, new MLS graduates
from ALA-accredited programs earned an average annual salary of $36,818; their
median salary was $35,000. The
average starting salary for a systems analyst or database administrator with a
master=s degree in computer science
was $61,000. These are professions that are more than
82% male.
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The median hourly wage for
librarians
in 2003 was $21.22 (an annual wage of $44,137 for those working full-time); the
median hourly wage for similarly qualified computer systems analysts was $30.85
(an annual wage of $64,168), that of electrical engineers was $33.58 ($69,846 a
year), that of computer and information systems research scientists was $39.23
($81,598 a year), and actuaries earned $34.86 ($72,508 a year). These (mostly male) professionals have
education and responsibilities comparable to those of librarians.
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The median hourly wage of
library technicians was $11.65 (an annual wage of $24,232 for those working
full-time); the median hourly wage for civil engineering technicians was $18.30,
while that of respiratory technicians was $16.75. Paralegals earned $17.12 an hour.
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In a 1999 ALA survey of
library support staff, 56% of respondents had a bachelor=s or higher degree. The mean hourly wage was $11.28.
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Library assistants had a
median hourly salary of $9.58 (amounting to $19,926 annually for full-time work)
in 2003, while loan interviewers and clerks earned $13.62 ($28,329).
The Wage Gap
In addition to library
workers being poorly paid because they are predominantly female, those library
workers who are women may well be paid less than those who are men.
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In a 2003 survey of academic
librarians, even when years of experience in a particular job category are
accounted for, men still outpace women in salary by almost 6%: $56,199 for women, and $59,417 for men.
The average years of experience for women: 17.0;
for men: 16.8. This pattern is repeated for minority
librarians. The average salary of
minority men is higher than that for minority women in seven of the 10 cohorts.
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The average salary for male
directors in ARL libraries was higher than that of their female counterparts. The overall salary for women research
librarians was 94.4% that of men in 2003, compared to 94.1% in 2002.
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In 1999, male librarians had
median annual earnings of $35,493, while the median annual earnings for women
were $30,482.
Regional Variance in
Salaries
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The median hourly wage for
librarians was $20.72 in 2002.
However, librarians in the West North Central Region earned an hourly
median of $17.65, while librarians in the Pacific Region earned an hourly median
of $24.84. This amounted to an
annual difference of nearly $15,000.
Librarians in the Mid-Atlantic, New England, and South Atlantic Regions
earned median hourly wages of between $21.58 and $22.23.
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While the median hourly wage
for library technicians was $11.58 in 2002, library technicians in the East
South Central Region earned a median hourly wage of $9.05, and their
counterparts in the Pacific Region earned $15.41.
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Library assistants in the
Mid-Atlantic Region earned a median hourly wage of $6.56, while those in the
Pacific Region earned nearly double this wage.
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The East South Central and
West South Central Regions have salaries below the national median for library
workers. These regions also have
union membership rates below the national average. The Pacific Region, which has a union
membership rate above the national average, also consistently had the highest
median salaries for library workers.
Benefits
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Nearly 12% of public libraries do not offer a pension and 17.4% do not offer
retirement savings. Among academic
libraries, 23.3% do not offer a pension and 20% do not offer retirement savings.
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Almost 40% of public libraries do not offer vision insurance and 16% do not
offer dental insurance. Among
academic libraries, 42.9% do not offer vision insurance and 17.9% do not offer
dental insurance.
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Almost 34% of public libraries do not offer disability insurance and almost 17%
do not offer prescription coverage; in academic libraries, 19.7% do not offer
disability insurance and 23.1% do not offer prescription coverage.
Unionization
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In 2003, 21% of librarians
were union members; 25% were represented by unions. Eight percent of library technicians were union
members; 12.4% were represented by unions.
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Union librarians earned an
average of 38% more than non-union librarians in 2003.
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Union library assistants
earned an average of 17% more than non-union.
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Through the NY Public
Library Guild, Local 1930, American Federation of State, County and Municipal
Employees (AFSCME) library workers won an eight percent pay increase, in
addition to the two four percent raises negotiated for citywide employees, after
a three year campaign and negotiating with city officials.
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Orange County, Florida
Library System organized and affiliated with the Service Employees International
Union (SEIU). Management spent
$100,000 to defeat the union.
Workers got the first pay raise in nine years as a result of bargaining,
as well as an extra floating holiday and a grievance procedure that mandates
binding arbitration.
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According to ALA, 65.7% of
libraries surveyed reported that no one in their library was covered by a
collective bargaining agreement, and that all professional staff were covered in
only 16.4% of libraries surveyed. All support staff were covered in 20.3%
of the libraries surveyed.

Source: Bureau of National Affairs, Union Membership and Earnings Data Book, 2004
Edition, Washington, DC.
________________________
For further information on
professional workers, check out DPE’s Web site:
www.dpeaflcio.org.
The Department for Professional Employees, AFL-CIO (DPE)
comprises 25 AFL-CIO unions representing four million people working in
professional, technical and administrative support occupations. DPE-affiliated unions represent: teachers, college professors and school
administrators; library workers; nurses, doctors and other health care
professionals; engineers, scientists and IT workers; journalists and
writers, broadcast technicians and communications specialists; performing
and visual artists; professional athletes; professional firefighters;
psychologists, social workers and many others.
DPE was chartered by the AFL-CIO in 1977 in recognition of the
rapidly-growing professional and technical occupations.
|
Source: DPE Research
Department
815 16th Street, NW, N.W.,
7th Floor, Washington, D.C. 20005
Contact: Pamela Wilson; 202/638-6684; pwilson@dpeaflcio.org