Matching Items (13)
Filtering by

Clear all filters

Created2003 to 2012
Description

The Arizona Department of Transportation, the Arizona Game & Fish Department and the Arizona State Parks Board are required to conduct a study every three years on watercraft fuel consumption and recreational watercraft usage. The fuel consumption data is collected to determine the allocation of motor vehicle fuel tax to

The Arizona Department of Transportation, the Arizona Game & Fish Department and the Arizona State Parks Board are required to conduct a study every three years on watercraft fuel consumption and recreational watercraft usage. The fuel consumption data is collected to determine the allocation of motor vehicle fuel tax to the State Lake Improvement Fund. The information on recreational watercraft usage patterns on Arizona’s lakes and rivers is necessary, in part, to determine the distribution of SLIF funds to applicants.

43572-Thumbnail Image.png
Created2005-06
Description

The quality of jobs in the United States became a national concern in the 1980s after a long period of losses of relatively high-paying manufacturing jobs and gains of frequently low-paying service jobs. National job quality remains a concern today, as witnessed by the debate in the 2004 presidential campaign.

The quality of jobs in the United States became a national concern in the 1980s after a long period of losses of relatively high-paying manufacturing jobs and gains of frequently low-paying service jobs. National job quality remains a concern today, as witnessed by the debate in the 2004 presidential campaign. The overall average wage is a measure of prosperity or well-being, but is not in itself a measure of job quality since job quality is just one of several factors — including cost of living, productivity, and desirability of an area — that affect the overall average wage. Little information on these factors is available by state. Adjusting for job quality reduces the state-by-state variation in wages. However, even after adjusting for job quality, the average wage still varies substantially by state.

43574-Thumbnail Image.png
Created2006-03
Description

The long-term trend toward lower-quality jobs in the United States continued between 2001 and 2004. Industrial job quality fell 1.6 percent nationally between 2001 and 2004. The decrease in occupational job quality was not quite as great at 0.9 percent. Thus, overall U.S. job quality dropped 2.5 percent during the

The long-term trend toward lower-quality jobs in the United States continued between 2001 and 2004. Industrial job quality fell 1.6 percent nationally between 2001 and 2004. The decrease in occupational job quality was not quite as great at 0.9 percent. Thus, overall U.S. job quality dropped 2.5 percent during the three years, causing the U.S. average wage to be 2.5 percent less than it otherwise would have been. Arizona’s job quality fell between 2001 and 2004 at a pace worse than the national average. Relative to the national average, the industrial and occupational job mixes each slipped a bit more than 0.3 percent during the three years, for an overall decline of 0.7 percent. In Arizona, job quality in 2004 was 2.0 percent below the national average, but Arizona ranked 23rd among all states.

43576-Thumbnail Image.png
Created2005-03
Description

Available data on the cost of living indicate that living costs in Arizona are close to the national average — thus, the state’s lower-than-average wages are not offset by low living costs. No productivity data exist for Arizona. Worker productivity in Arizona could be below the national average due to

Available data on the cost of living indicate that living costs in Arizona are close to the national average — thus, the state’s lower-than-average wages are not offset by low living costs. No productivity data exist for Arizona. Worker productivity in Arizona could be below the national average due to lesser investments in physical or human capital, which would result in lower wages. Labor market supply and demand factors are a likely cause of the low wages in Arizona. A substantial number of people seem willing to move to Arizona and accept a substandard wage in exchange for perceived qualitative advantages to living in Arizona, primarily climate.

43584-Thumbnail Image.png
Created2005-06
Description

The best way to evaluate job quality would be to analyze a dataset that presents both occupational and industrial data, but the only dataset of this nature available by state comes from the decennial census. It is severely limited by small sample size, the latest data are for 1999, and

The best way to evaluate job quality would be to analyze a dataset that presents both occupational and industrial data, but the only dataset of this nature available by state comes from the decennial census. It is severely limited by small sample size, the latest data are for 1999, and the 1999 data are not consistent with the 1989 data. Thus, the initial work by the Seidman Institute on job quality ("Job Quality in Arizona," March 2005) presented data on Arizona job quality from several sources of either industrial or occupational data. "Job Quality in Arizona Compared to All States" (June 2005), is an extension of the March 2005 report. Arizona’s job quality in the latest year and its change over time is compared to the national
average and is ranked among the 51 “states” (including the District of Columbia).

96386-Thumbnail Image.jpg
ContributorsPalacio, Phyllis (Host) / Bommersbach, Jana (Commentator) / Public Broadcasting Service (Broadcaster)
Created1987-03-31
Description
Sales Tax Poll Package, Michael O'Neil In-Studio Interview (Shelton); Bommersbach's Byline #48: Steffey Bill Package (Durrenberger); Young and Old Package (Britton). Segments on a poll regarding Governor Mecham's sales tax repeal, Bommersbach's Byline (teen pregnancy in Arizona and the politics of high school sex), and a school tutoring program connecting

Sales Tax Poll Package, Michael O'Neil In-Studio Interview (Shelton); Bommersbach's Byline #48: Steffey Bill Package (Durrenberger); Young and Old Package (Britton). Segments on a poll regarding Governor Mecham's sales tax repeal, Bommersbach's Byline (teen pregnancy in Arizona and the politics of high school sex), and a school tutoring program connecting old and young generations.
96925-Thumbnail Image.jpg
ContributorsPalacio, Phyllis (Host) / Altheide, David L. (Interviewee) / Rogers, Fred (Speaker) / Grant, Michael, 1951- (Interviewer) / Public Broadcasting Service (Broadcaster)
Created1991-02-21
DescriptionWar/Media Package with Pat Murphy and David Altheide, Ph.D. (Palacio); War/Children with Robert Coles (Hawkins). Segments on the Persian Gulf War (media coverage and how the war is affecting the minds of children).
96823-Thumbnail Image.jpg
ContributorsGrant, Michael, 1951- (Host) / Palacio, Phyllis (Reporter) / Goddard, Terry (Interviewee) / Barr, Burton, 1917-1997 (Interviewee) / Bommersbach, Jana (Interviewee) / Public Broadcasting Service (Broadcaster)
Created1989-02-07
DescriptionValtrans Package, Jana Bommersbach Interview, Earl DeBerge Interview (Shelton); Small Business Package, Lois Yates Interview, Kirby Garrett Interview (Miller). Segments on the beginning of a series of weekly reports on ValTrans and the concerns of small businesses.
96828-Thumbnail Image.jpg
ContributorsGrant, Michael, 1951- (Host) / Bommersbach, Jana (Commentator) / Palacio, Phyllis (Reporter) / Corpstein, Peter, 1931- (Interviewee) / Goddard, Terry (Speaker) / Public Broadcasting Service (Broadcaster)
Created1989-02-14
DescriptionValtrans Package, Rosendo Gutierrez Interview, Ross Dean Interview (Shelton); Bommersbach's Byline #129 Package (Bommersbach). Segments on the ValTrans vote (costs and routes of the proposed system) and Bommersbach's Byline #129: Navajo Tribal Chairman Peter McDonald's controversy.
96833-Thumbnail Image.jpg
ContributorsGrant, Michael, 1951- (Host) / Palacio, Phyllis (Reporter) / Barr, Burton, 1917-1997 (Interviewee) / Public Broadcasting Service (Broadcaster)
Created1989-02-21
DescriptionValtrans Package, Alan Wulkan Interview, George Chasse Interview (Shelton); Nurse Shortage Package, Denise Hallfors Interview, Mitzi Jobes Interview (Bloom). Segments on an update concerning the mass transit campaign (ValTrans) and the beginning of a special series of reports concerning the nursing shortage in Arizona.