- According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, there were 17,540 television cameramen in the United States in 2009, and they earned an average of $23.84 an hour, or $49,590 a year. The pay ranged from $10.05 an hour to $39.71 an hour, from the 10th to 90th percentiles. This equates to $20,901 a year to $82,600 a year.
- The federal government was the top-paying industry for television cameramen in 2009, according to the bureau. The 470 television cameramen employed by the federal government earned on average $63,940 a year. Other top-paying industries were accounting; tax preparation; bookkeeping and payroll services; cable and other subscription programming; computer systems design and related services; and museums, historical sites, and similar institutions. Most of these industries were not among the top employers of television cameramen, though. The industries that employ the most television cameramen are radio and television broadcasting; motion picture and video industries; cable and other subscription programming; other professional, scientific, and technical services, and the federal government.
- Oregon was the top-paying state for television cameramen in 2009, where the 290 cameramen in the state earned an average of $73,890 a year. Other top-paying states included New Mexico, Washington D.C., California and Washington state. Washington, D.C., had 0.464 cameramen per thousand workers. Other states that had a high concentration of television cameramen were Connecticut, New York, California and South Dakota.
- The Portland-Vancouver-Beaverton Oregon-Washington area was the highest-paying metropolitan area for television cameramen in 2009. The 190 cameramen earned an average of $94,660 a year. Other top-paying areas were Salinas, California; Boston-Cambridge-Quincy, Massachusetts; Albuquerque, New Mexico; and San Francisco-San Mateo-Redwood City, California,. The areas with the highest concentration of television camermen were Elizabethtown, Kentucky; Hartford-West Hartford-East Hartford, Connecticut; Los Angeles-Long Beach-Glendale, California; Bethesda-Frederick-Gaithersburg, Maryland; and New York-White Plains-Wayne, New York-New Jersey.
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