Average ID technology wages rose nearly 11% in 2006

BYLINE: By JOHN MILLER, Associated Press Writer

DATELINE: BOISE Idaho

 

Average wages at Idaho technology companies such as Micron Technology Inc. in Boise and AMI Semiconductor in Pocatello rose nearly 11 percent in 2006, buoyed by one of the nation's fastest-growing economies and 2.8 percent unemployment.

The average annual technology wage jumped to $66,187, or $31.82 an hour in 2006, up from $59,666, or $28.69 an hour in 2005, according to preliminary figures from the Idaho Department of Commerce and Labor, obtained by The Associated Press.

The numbers showed nearly 56,000 workers were employed in the state's so-called "high-tech industry." It's a sign the sector's labor force has all but recovered from a post-Sept. 11, 2001 recession that pared employment from a high of 57,581 that year to as low as 51,293 in 2003.

"There's no question that the industry is growing, and it suggests it's growing fairly rapidly in the last year," said Bob Fick, a Commerce and Labor spokesman.

There were 4,148 employers in the industry in 2006, nearly fourfold the number from 1991.

The wage numbers run contrary to doomsayers on a state-created science and technology panel who have said Idaho's high-tech economy is sluggish and neglected by policy makers.

The Governor's Science & Technology Advisory Council, created in 1999, has criticized Gov. C.L. "Butch" Otter for not signing on to a multimillion-dollar package of proposed taxpayer-funded high-tech business incentives that failed to win favor in the 2007 Legislature.

John Grossenbacher, the director of the Idaho National Laboratory and chairman of the Science & Technology Council, whose 17 members include three Idaho university presidents, said he wanted to let the panel's members do a more complete analysis of the latest high-tech wages before commenting on their significance for the industry.

"The council is composed from a rich mix of people throughout the state, from various industries," Grossenbacher said. "The council will need to look at it, we need to understand where the data we have comes from. Then we get to the rich analysis and understanding."

After the latest employment and salary figures were reported Wednesday, Otter aides said the governor was "reassured but not satisfied" with the health of the tech-based portion of Idaho's economy. That sector's wages totaled $3.7 billion in 2006.

"Certainly there's room for improvement not just in high tech, but in all segments of our economy," said Mark Warbis, an Otter spokesman.

Otter on Tuesday criticized the Science & Technology Council at a meeting in Twin Falls, saying its stridency this year over the proposed industry incentives had crossed the line into advocacy.

"That kind of advocacy is not appropriate," Warbis said. "It's not consistent with the role of an advisory council."

Asked about Otter's cautionary words at Tuesday's meeting, Grossenbacher said the "disconnect" between his panel and the governor likely emerged, at least in part, because Idaho had three governors in less than a year in 2006.

The group's recommendations for the 2007 Legislature were developed under the oversight of interim Gov. Jim Risch, Grossenbacher said. Otter was elected in November.

"I don't think there was a cabal of people on the Science & Technology Council that were trying to do it," Grossenbacher said. "I appreciate his frankness in bringing it up."

Geography
Source
Associated Press State & Local Wire
Article Type
Staff News