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Current Employment by Industry (CES) data reflect jobs by "place of work." It does not include the self-employed, unpaid family workers, and private household employees. Jobs located in the county or the metropolitan area that pay wages and salaries are counted although workers may live outside the area. Jobs are counted regardless of the number of hours worked. Individuals who hold more than one job (i.e. multiple job holders) may be counted more than once. The employment figure is an estimate of the number of jobs in the area (regardless of the place of residence of the workers) rather than a count of jobs held by the residents of the area.
This is a dataset hosted by the State of New York. The state has an open data platform found here and they update their information according the amount of data that is brought in. Explore New York State using Kaggle and all of the data sources available through the State of New York organization page!
This dataset is maintained using Socrata's API and Kaggle's API. Socrata has assisted countless organizations with hosting their open data and has been an integral part of the process of bringing more data to the public.
Cover photo by Guilherme Cunha on Unsplash
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The Occupational Employment Statistics (OES) survey is a semiannual mail survey of employers that measures occupational employment and occupational wage rates for wage and salary workers in nonfarm establishments, by industry. OES estimates are constructed from a sample of about 51,000 establishments. Each year, forms are mailed to two semiannual panels of approximately 8,500 sampled establishments, one panel in May and the other in November.
This is a dataset hosted by the State of New York. The state has an open data platform found here and they update their information according the amount of data that is brought in. Explore New York State using Kaggle and all of the data sources available through the State of New York organization page!
This dataset is maintained using Socrata's API and Kaggle's API. Socrata has assisted countless organizations with hosting their open data and has been an integral part of the process of bringing more data to the public.
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TwitterThis dataset contains seasonally adjusted employment data for New York City. Data is reported at the industry level (in units of thousands) and aggregated to total nonfarm and total private levels. Updates are posted after the not-seasonally-adjusted data is published by the NYS Department of Labor – typically monthly but with irregularities due to annual benchmark revisions.
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TwitterData from the Current Population Survey (CPS) provide detailed labor market information and demographics. The CPS data are provided for NYS. Topics include Veterans (employment status and selected demographics only available for New York State), employment status and other labor force demographics.
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More details about each file are in the individual file descriptions.
This is a dataset hosted by the State of New York. The state has an open data platform found here and they update their information according the amount of data that is brought in. Explore New York State using Kaggle and all of the data sources available through the State of New York organization page!
This dataset is maintained using Socrata's API and Kaggle's API. Socrata has assisted countless organizations with hosting their open data and has been an integral part of the process of bringing more data to the public.
This dataset is distributed under the following licenses: Public Domain
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TwitterThe Title and Salary Listing is a compilation of job titles under the jurisdiction of the Department of Civil Service.
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More details about each file are in the individual file descriptions.
This is a dataset hosted by the State of New York. The state has an open data platform found here and they update their information according the amount of data that is brought in. Explore New York State using Kaggle and all of the data sources available through the State of New York organization page!
This dataset is maintained using Socrata's API and Kaggle's API. Socrata has assisted countless organizations with hosting their open data and has been an integral part of the process of bringing more data to the public.
This dataset is distributed under the following licenses: Public Domain
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TwitterThe Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages (QCEW) program (also known as ES-202) collects employment and wage data from employers covered by New York State's Unemployment Insurance (UI) Law. This program is a cooperative program with the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. QCEW data encompass approximately 97 percent of New York's nonfarm employment, providing a virtual census of employees and their wages as well as the most complete universe of employment and wage data, by industry, at the State, regional and county levels. "Covered" employment refers broadly to both private-sector employees as well as state, county, and municipal government employees insured under the New York State Unemployment Insurance (UI) Act. Federal employees are insured under separate laws, but are considered covered for the purposes of the program. Employee categories not covered by UI include some agricultural workers, railroad workers, private household workers, student workers, the self-employed, and unpaid family workers. QCEW data are similar to monthly Current Employment Statistics (CES) data in that they reflect jobs by place of work; therefore, if a person holds two jobs, he or she is counted twice. However, since the QCEW program, by definition, only measures employment covered by unemployment insurance laws, its totals will not be the same as CES employment totals due to the employee categories excluded by UI.
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The dataset includes more than twenty years of Workers’ Compensation Claims records starting from the year 2000, giving a comprehensive overview of this important segment of the labor market. From information on claimants' age, gender and zip code to details on claim type, injury type, injury source and event exposure they each hold invaluable insights into the health of workers' compensation. Stay up-to-date with WIBC's constantly growing database featuring essential data that can help you in making informed decisions on how to manage claims and look after your workforce. Learn what types of injuries lead to successful claims; understand which carrier types are most often involved in claims; research claim assembly process times; gain an understanding of slow or disputed claims; find out about wage averages for claimants; and numerous other aspects related to workers’ compensation. With such insight available at your fingertips make sure you capitalize on its potential as you work towards better management and protection of your workforce - Now with complete data from 2000 all the way up till today!
For more datasets, click here.
- 🚨 Your notebook can be here! 🚨!
Welcome to the Workers’ Compensation Claims in New York State: 2000-Present dataset! This dataset contains information about workers’ compensation claims in New York State between the years 2000 and present.
This guide will provide you with an overview of the data included, as well as how to use this information for your own research and exploration.
Firstly, you should familiarize yourself with the data columns. This dataset includes a variety of fields related to workers’ compensation claims such as claim type, injury type, district name and current claim status, age at injury, assembly date and ANCR date (claim acceptance or denial). Additionally it contains details about medical costs covered by WCB (Average Weekly Wage) , dispute resolution mechanisms (Alternative Dispute Resolution), legal representatives handling the case(Attorney/Representative), insurance carrier involved(Carrier Name)and other useful details pertinent for understanding workers' compenstation cases such as Hearing count & Closed count.
Once you understand all available fields/columns and their respective values/labels in this dataset you can start exploring them one by one & create custom queries based on specific parameters within each field. For example some common analysis could include:
- Analyzing worker benefits based on salary ranges or specific professions; - Comparing survival rates of injured employees across different regions; - Seeing how injuries vary across gender lines; - Studying dispute resolution patterns over time; - Examining attorney or representative impact on settlement outcomes; And much more!With this guide hopefully you have been equipped with a basic understanding of how to use the Workers’ Compensation Claims in New York State: 2000-Present Kaggle database so that your explorations become more fruitful! Enjoy!
- Identifying potential problem areas in the workers’ compensation system and illustrating how to best resolve those issues.
- Demonstrating potential correlations between types of injuries, claim types, and outcomes in order to inform better decision-making with regards to workplace safety.
- Estimating the financial impact of future claims based on current trends in workers' compensation data
If you use this dataset in your research, please credit the original authors. Data Source
License: Dataset copyright by authors - You are free to: - Share - copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format for any purpose, even commercially. - Adapt - remix, transform, and build upon the material for any purpose, even commercially. - You must: - Give appropriate credit - Provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. - ShareAlike - You must distribute your contributions under the same license as the original. - Keep intact - all notices that refer to this license, including copyright notices.
File: Assembled_Workers_Compensation_Claims_Beginning_2000.csv | Column ...
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TwitterInvestigator(s): Delbert Elliot For this series, parents and youth were interviewed about events and behavior of the preceding year to gain a better understanding of both conventional and deviant types of behavior by youths. Data were collected on demographic and socioeconomic status of respondents, disruptive events in the home, neighborhood problems, parental aspirations for youth, labeling, integration of family and peer contexts, attitudes toward deviance in adults and juveniles, parental discipline, community involvement, drug and alcohol use, victimization, pregnancy, depression, use of outpatient services, spouse violence by respondent and partner, and sexual activity. Demographic variables include sex, ethnicity, birth date, age, marital status, and employment of the youths, and information on the marital status and employment of the parents. NYS was sponsored by the National Institute of Mental Health.
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TwitterThis dataset reflects the monthly number of employee-reported incidents of workplace violence, as defined by New York State Labor Law Section 27-B, against on-duty MTA employees. This dataset divides workplace violence incidents into groupings as reported pursuant to New York State Labor Law Section 27-B. The same data is available in the MTA Workplace Violence Penal Law Incidents dataset, which divides the data according to New York State Penal Law Related Offenses.
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Employment, investment and tax credit information reported by businesses certified in the Empire Zones Program.
This is a dataset hosted by the State of New York. The state has an open data platform found here and they update their information according the amount of data that is brought in. Explore New York State using Kaggle and all of the data sources available through the State of New York organization page!
This dataset is maintained using Socrata's API and Kaggle's API. Socrata has assisted countless organizations with hosting their open data and has been an integral part of the process of bringing more data to the public.
Cover photo by rawpixel on Unsplash
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TwitterThis layer depicts 2013 ocean economy employment as a percentage of total employment in 33 coastal counties from Maine to New York. Data illustrates a stronger relative dependence of some coastal communities on the ocean economy, using employment measures. Results are based on research from the Center for the Blue Economy and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s 2013 Economics: National Ocean Watch (ENOW) database. ENOW provides time-series data on the coastal and ocean economy from 2005 to 2013 derived from national accounts of the Bureau of Labor Statistics and the Bureau of Economic Analysis. ENOW’s four economic indicators are the number of business establishments, number of people employed, wages paid to employees, and contribution to gross domestic product. For more information, users are encouraged to consult the Northeast Ocean Planning Baseline Assessment report.View Dataset on the Gateway
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TwitterYouth data for the sixth wave of the National Youth Survey
are contained in this collection. This research project, which was
designed to gain a better understanding of both conventional and
deviant types of behavior by youths, involved collecting information
from a representative sample of young people in the United States. The
first wave of this survey was conducted in 1976, the
second wave in 1977, the third wave in 1978,
the fourth wave in 1979, and the fifth wave in 1980. For this wave, youths and young adults were interviewed in early
1984 about events and behavior occurring in calendar year 1983, when
they were 17 to 26 years of age. Data are available on the demographic
and socioeconomic status of respondents, disruptive events for parents,
neighborhood problems, employment, children, aspirations and current
successes, normlessness, labeling by parents, perceived disapproval by
parents, peers, co-workers, and partner, attitudes toward deviance,
exposure to delinquent peers, self-reported delinquency, drug and
alcohol use, victimization, pregnancy, depression, use of outpatient
services, spouse violence by respondent and partner, and sexual
activity.This study has 1 Data Set.
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TwitterData provided by Clients in their Semi-Annual filings submitted to NYS Joint Commission on Public Ethics.
Splitgraph serves as an HTTP API that lets you run SQL queries directly on this data to power Web applications. For example:
See the Splitgraph documentation for more information.
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TwitterThis dataset is a subset of “Assembled Workers’ Compensation Claims: Beginning 2000” with two new fields: Part of Body Injured List and Part of Body Injured Decode. The first field is a list of Workers Compensation Insurance Organizations (WCIO) part of body codes, separated by commas, the second field is a list of WCIO Part of Body Descriptions, separated by commas. Each row is per claim.
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TwitterYouth data for the fifth wave of the National Youth Survey
are contained in this collection. The first wave of this survey was
conducted in 1976, the second wave in 1977,
the third wave in 1978, and the fourth wave in 1979. For this wave, youths in the United States were interviewed in
early 1981 about events and behavior occurring in calendar year 1980.
Data are available on the demographic and socioeconomic status of
respondents, disruptive events in the home, neighborhood problems,
youth aspirations and current successes, normlessness, labeling by
parents, friends, and co-workers, perceived disapproval, attitudes
toward deviance, exposure and commitment to delinquent peers, sex
roles, interpersonal violence, attitudes toward sexual violence,
pressure for substance abuse by peers, drug and alcohol use, and
victimization.This study has 1 Data Set.
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This provides information on the location, contact persons, services provided and capacity of New York State Commission for the Blind (NYSCB) Comprehensive Service Contractors.
This is a dataset hosted by the State of New York. The state has an open data platform found here and they update their information according the amount of data that is brought in. Explore New York State using Kaggle and all of the data sources available through the State of New York organization page!
This dataset is maintained using Socrata's API and Kaggle's API. Socrata has assisted countless organizations with hosting their open data and has been an integral part of the process of bringing more data to the public.
Cover photo by Jordan Andrews on Unsplash
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The Workers’ Compensation Board (WCB) administers and regulates workers’ compensation benefits, disability benefits, volunteer firefighters’ benefits, volunteer ambulance workers’ benefits, and volunteer civil defense workers’ benefits. The WCB processes and adjudicates claims for benefits; ensures employer compliance with the requirement to maintain appropriate insurance coverage; and regulates the various system stakeholders, including self-insured employers, medical providers, third party administrators, insurance carriers and legal representatives. Claim assembly occurs when the WCB learns of a workplace injury and assigns the claim a WCB claim number. The WCB “assembles” a claim in which an injured worker has lost more than one week of work, has a serious injury that may result in a permanent disability, is disputed by the carrier or employer, or receives a claim form from the injured worker (Form C-3). A reopened claim is one that has been reactivated to resolve new issues following a finding that no further action was necessary
This is a dataset hosted by the State of New York. The state has an open data platform found here and they update their information according the amount of data that is brought in. Explore New York State using Kaggle and all of the data sources available through the State of New York organization page!
This dataset is maintained using Socrata's API and Kaggle's API. Socrata has assisted countless organizations with hosting their open data and has been an integral part of the process of bringing more data to the public.
Cover photo by Austin Distel on Unsplash
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TwitterThe New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA), in collaboration with the New York State Department of Public Service (DPS), conducted a statewide residential baseline study (study) from 2011 to 2014 of the single-family and multifamily residential housing segments, including new construction, and a broad range of energy uses and efficiency measures. This dataset includes data from 47 completed Heating Ventilation and Air Conditioning (HVAC) contractor surveys. The survey sample was stratified by the size of the HVAC contractor company: 28 survey completes for small companies (defined as having 1-10 employees) and 19 survey completes for large companies (defined as larger than 10 employees.) The surveys focused on employer or company information, sales of energy efficient HVAC equipment, installation practices, training, and experience with NYS energy efficiency programs. How does your organization use this dataset? What other NYSERDA or energy-related datasets would you like to see on Open NY? Let us know by emailing OpenNY@nyserda.ny.gov.
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Current Employment by Industry (CES) data reflect jobs by "place of work." It does not include the self-employed, unpaid family workers, and private household employees. Jobs located in the county or the metropolitan area that pay wages and salaries are counted although workers may live outside the area. Jobs are counted regardless of the number of hours worked. Individuals who hold more than one job (i.e. multiple job holders) may be counted more than once. The employment figure is an estimate of the number of jobs in the area (regardless of the place of residence of the workers) rather than a count of jobs held by the residents of the area.
This is a dataset hosted by the State of New York. The state has an open data platform found here and they update their information according the amount of data that is brought in. Explore New York State using Kaggle and all of the data sources available through the State of New York organization page!
This dataset is maintained using Socrata's API and Kaggle's API. Socrata has assisted countless organizations with hosting their open data and has been an integral part of the process of bringing more data to the public.
Cover photo by Guilherme Cunha on Unsplash
Unsplash Images are distributed under a unique Unsplash License.