Civil Engineer Demand in Alabama
Civil Engineer Demand in Alabama
(OP)
My wife and I are considering a move out of Florida to somewhere with lower housing costs. We want to stay close by.. Alabama or Georgia. Are there any engineers in Birmingham that are familiar with the job market? I am a recent graduate with 3 years of experience at my small land development firm. My resume is pretty extensive, I've moved up fast in my firm and have a lot of skills/training.
How is the demand in Birmingham? Atlanta seems to be very good but I'm not sure Atlanta is the place where I could see moving.
How is the demand in Birmingham? Atlanta seems to be very good but I'm not sure Atlanta is the place where I could see moving.





RE: Civil Engineer Demand in Alabama
Good luck.
Brian
RE: Civil Engineer Demand in Alabama
1) make an excel spreadsheet and compare the following between your current location and a potential new location: mortgage payment, state income taxes, property taxes and utilites. Compare "apples to apples" (i.e. a 2,000 square foot home, all brick, x size lot, etc). I tend to neglect things like cost of groceries, cable tv, etc as the difference is usually not significant.
2) Look at cities and the # of civil engineers in that city at bls.gov at this link:
http://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oessrcma.htm
Pick a city you want to look at and look under "architectural and engineering services", you should see "civil engineers". This will give you the total civils in the town and their mean compensation. Divide the total employment for the town by the # of civil engineers. That will give you a good comparison when comparing different cities. Using Birmingham as an example there are 680 C.E.s in town and total employment is 456,000, about one CE for every 670 workers. Here is why you want to make that comparison: my experience has been that you will land a new gig in a new town and everything will be hunky-dory for a while. As you gain experience and licenses, etc, your company may or may not pay you competitively. A town with a fairly high number of civils per total work force should tell you there are plenty of firms there in case you need to find employment elsewhere and someone new to pay what you are worth.
3) A few words of caution about some GA and AL towns. Some had industries in the past that have already or are in the process of "dying" (textiles, etc). This leads to higher unemployment rates, low growth rates for the town and in some instances less development, i.e. need for those new road designs by civils. The town I left had some dying industries (with stagnant population growth) and had about a tenth the number of civils compared to the growing town I moved to.
RE: Civil Engineer Demand in Alabama