No DPT last week, so clearing the queue. Positions posted in the last week or so at C&EN Jobs:
Somerset, NJ: Apicore LLC has two positions open: an analytical chemist position and a QC chemist position.
Laredo, TX: Laquitex is a company that tests materials for tariff issues; they're looking for a B.S. chemist/supervisor. Offering $58,178. I suspect that's pretty good for Laredo.
Boston, MA: Block Engineering ("a developer of advanced mid-infrared spectroscopy products") is looking for a Ph.D. chemist (with experience with Matlab) to be an advanced development scientist.
New York, NY: SiGNa Chemistry is looking for a R&D director; 110-140k offered.
Brevard, NC: I see PharmAgra Labs is at it, yet again.
$140K with 5- 10 yrs experience.....in NYC......wow.
ReplyDelete$140K in NYC is nothing. I find it very low actually. Someone with that experience probably has a family (a wife, 1-2 kids). Considering the rent and other expenses in NYC, it's probably like $70K in Boston.
ReplyDeleteYou don't have to live in New York City with a family. Most people commute. You also get things like Northeast public education. Access to hospitals and health care.
DeleteYou can still bleed yourself dry paying for housing in a suburb with decent schools, unless you're OK with a very long train ride (and if that train is NJ Transit, you'll be passing pharmas where non-director PhDs can get $140k).
Delete"Northeast public education"? Wow, that must be great! Big-city unions are never corrupt or self-serving! I'm sure they deliver value for the dollar.
Deletehttp://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/10/16/rubber-rooms-in-new-york-city-22-million_n_1969749.html
Please stay on topic, thanks.
DeleteThe topic being retarded misconceptions about NYC life? Maybe I should go with the "apartment 3 blocks away" would somehow be relevant one below.
DeleteSorry, on second thought I have told myself before not to be a jerk on comments, so erase as you see fit.
DeleteRelax, we've all been there.
DeleteAnon @12:39 is the only one with a valid point. Also, do you want your children to grow up with that Kevin Smith cynicism and that Jersey chip on their shoulder?
DeleteJust for fun, I started looking up apartments close to that Signa job. Though I didn't go through a very extensive search, the cheapest I found was a 1-bedroom 3 blocks away that runs for $3200/month. A 1700 sq. ft. 3-bedroom apartment is a mere $11K/month. In contrast, my 3500 sq. ft. home on 3.8 acres runs around $1100/month. New York - too much of a culture shock for my blood.
ReplyDelete$140K in NYC...fresh college graduates from top-tier business schools can pull that (base + bonus + commission).
ReplyDeleteAside from stratospheric base rents, the aspiring NYCer has to tolerate/embrace city and state income tax, high sales tax, expensive utilities, poor sanitation, and standoffish attitudes. Still, it's NYC...may be worth it for someone who has a high-income spouse or can otherwise live to work (as opposed to work to live).
PharmAgra at it again? Come on, now they can't be that desperate, otherwise they would have responded to my application, which was submitted back towards the end of May 2015 :-)
ReplyDelete