It's been a quiet week of vacation for me. Hope you had a good week, and that you have a great weekend. We'll see you on Monday.
1. HELPING CHEMISTS FIND JOBS IN A TOUGH MARKET. 2. TOWARDS A QUANTITATIVE UNDERSTANDING OF THE QUALITY OF THE CHEMISTRY JOB MARKET.
It's been a quiet week of vacation for me. Hope you had a good week, and that you have a great weekend. We'll see you on Monday.
Common Organic Chemistry is resolving some technical difficulties, but has ported over the list to Google Drive for now. There are 15 new positions for July 29, and 29 new positions for July 24.
Don't forget to check out the Common Organic Chemistry company map, a very helpful resource for organic chemists looking for potential employers.
Via organic-chemistry.org, a link to the job market section.
We're soliciting questions for my column at Chemical and Engineering News. Please feel free to write me (chemjobber@gmail.com) if you have a career-oriented dilemma that you'd like me to write about in the magazine. Also, you can submit your questions with this handy web form. Thanks!
The 2022 Chemistry Faculty Jobs List (curated by Andrew Spaeth and myself) has 40 research/teaching positions.
Want to help out? Here's a Google Form to enter positions.Don't forget to click on "load more" below the comment box for the full thread.
The 2021 Chemistry Faculty Jobs List (curated by Andrew Spaeth and myself) has 343 research/teaching positions and 77 teaching assistant professor positions. We will continue tracking until August 31, 2021.
Want to help out? Here's a Google Form to enter positions.Don't forget to click on "load more" below the comment box for the full thread.
The Academic Staff Jobs list has 29 positions.
This list is curated by Sarah Cady and @nmr_chemist. It targets:An interesting fact check on a question that I wondered myself: is the current seeming difficulty for hiring workers about people who died during COVID? USA Today says no:
There is currently no data counting the number of American workers who died of COVID-19. However, even the most conservative estimates rule out the possibility that deaths caused or significantly contributed to the current shortage.
One reason is that we know the virus was far more lethal for older Americans than for working-age Americans. According to The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, a total of 596,740 people had died of COVID-19 as of July 12. Of this number, 75% were 65 years of age or older. And 57% were over 75 years of age.
Seventy-five is far above the minimum retirement age of 62 years and the full retirement age of 66 years and two months, at which retirees can claim full Social Security benefits.
For a very conservative estimate, we could assume all of the COVID-19 victims under 75 years of age were active members of the workforce.
In that case, COVID-19 deaths would account for only 7.3% of the 3.5 million people who are no longer in the workforce.
That number drops to 4.3% if we take a more reasonable but still conservative approach, assuming that 20% of the people between 65 and 74 were still working, in line with a 2019 AARP survey.
Makes sense. I really like this little comment from a former commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics:
However, a "shortage" doesn't just imply a simple lack of workers or a lack of workers with the right skills. According to Erica Groshen, a Cornell University labor economist who served as commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics from 2014-2017, it means that available workers are not willing to accept the pay and benefits of available jobs.
“I'm not a big believer in overall labor shortages,” she said. “When the price of a car goes up, we don't declare a car shortage…you always have to say (the shortage is) 'at the wages that the employers are offering.’"
I like the cut of her jib!
LA PORTE, Texas (AP) — An evacuation order has been lifted in an industrial area of a Houston-area city following a chemical release earlier in the week.Dow Chemical said Thursday there’s “no longer a risk of community impact” in areas surrounding its chemical plant in La Porte, about 25 miles (40 kilometers) east of Houston.A tank truck trailer over-pressurized on Wednesday, causing the chemical hydroxyethyl acrylate to escape through a safety valve, officials have said. A shelter-in-place order was issued shortly afterward amid air quality concerns, but that order was lifted after monitoring found no issues.The evacuation order had remained in place within a half-mile (0.8-kilometer) radius of the plant, but that was lifted by midday Thursday. Dow Chemical said late Thursday that the tank was isolated and the site was stable.
Glad it doesn't sound like anyone was hurt.
Well, this was a busy week! I hope that it was a good week for you, and that you have a good weekend. See you on Monday.
Early results from two of the world’s largest chemical companies indicate that the industry is rebounding strongly from the COVID-19 pandemic and should maintain momentum for the rest of the year.
Dow is the first major chemical firm to post full second-quarter results. The company’s sales vaulted 66.2% versus the same quarter last year, the quarter most impacted by the pandemic lockdowns. Earnings for the period hit $2.1 billion, versus a loss of $189 million in 2020. Sales increased 42.2% in the first half of 2021, while earnings increased 1,134.0%.BASF, the world’s largest chemical maker, posted preliminary results. Its sales increased by 55.8% in the second quarter and 33.0% in the first half. Earnings before taxes increased 942.0% in the quarter and 22.8% in the first 6 months.In a conference call with analysts on July 22, Dow CEO Jim Fitterling boasted of the “strongest quarterly earnings performance in the company’s history.”Dow’s largest segment, packaging and specialty plastics, saw a 78% sales increase during the quarter, mostly due to higher prices and strong performance in its petrochemical unit. Plastics sales volumes actually declined somewhat due to the lingering effects of the February freeze in Texas and planned plant maintenance. Dow’s other businesses, such as coating materials and polyurethanes, also posted strong gains.
This is continued good news for chemical employment, I think.
Via organic-chemistry.org, a link to the job market section.
We're soliciting questions for my column at Chemical and Engineering News. Please feel free to write me (chemjobber@gmail.com) if you have a career-oriented dilemma that you'd like me to write about in the magazine. Also, you can submit your questions with this handy web form. Thanks!
The 2022 Chemistry Faculty Jobs List (curated by Andrew Spaeth and myself) has 33 research/teaching positions.
Want to help out? Here's a Google Form to enter positions.Don't forget to click on "load more" below the comment box for the full thread.
The 2021 Chemistry Faculty Jobs List (curated by Andrew Spaeth and myself) has 342 research/teaching positions and 77 teaching assistant professor positions. We will continue tracking until August 31, 2021.
Want to help out? Here's a Google Form to enter positions.Don't forget to click on "load more" below the comment box for the full thread.
The Academic Staff Jobs list has 27 positions.
This list is curated by Sarah Cady and @nmr_chemist. It targets:Twenty-six people were hospitalized with breathing problems or skin irritation after they were exposed to bleach and sulfuric acid on Saturday afternoon at Six Flags Hurricane Harbor Splashtown, a water park in Spring, Texas, the authorities said.One person was in critical condition on Saturday evening, said Rachel Neutzler, a spokeswoman for the Harris County Fire Marshal’s Office.The authorities evacuated the park at about 3:30 p.m. local time.Ms. Neutzler said investigators did not believe the exposure to the chemicals, which are used to maintain pH balance, had been the result of an intentional act. She said it had occurred in a shallow pool intended for children.Scott Seifert, chief of the Spring Fire Department, said that the authorities had decontaminated more than 60 people by having them massage their eyes and wash off under the hose of a ladder truck.Chief Seifert said the breathing problems had been caused by a combination of 35 percent sulfuric acid and 10 to 13 percent bleach.Ms. Neutzler said that 39 people who had come into contact with the chemicals did not want to go the hospital.Investigators were examining a system at the park that injects chemicals into the water to maintain a pH balance of 7. When the authorities arrived, they tested the water, and the pH balance was 7, said Lina Hidalgo, the Harris County judge.
Curious to know if there was a moment in which the system put too much acid in? Combination of bleach and acid would get you some hypochlorous acid pretty quickly...
While President Joe Biden has nominated three people to the independent board that investigates chemical accidents, supporters of the Chemical Safety Board said other steps also must be taken so the agency properly can do its job.A letter from 22 unions, environmental groups and other advocacy organizations to Chair Katherine Lemos, the last remaining member of the board, called for more investigators, addressing the backlog of probes, publishing the names of those killed in accidents, and protecting unauthorized workers, who can provide needed details, from the threat of deportation.“The information that they put out is used by the entire universe from industry to advocates,” said Debra Coyle McFadden, executive director of the New Jersey Work Environment Council, one of the groups signing the letter. “That’s why it’s still critically important that they’re able to fulfill their mission.”The board is important to New Jersey, the 10th largest chemical producer in the U.S., whose $13.4 billion chemical industry is the largest manufacturing industry in the state, according to the American Chemistry Council.A board spokeswoman, Sabrina Morris, said the agency was reviewing the letter.The groups were not alone in expressing concern about the chemical board. Both Democratic and Republican members of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, led by its chair, Rep. Frank Pallone Jr., D-6th Dist, asked Lemos in May whether a lack of staffing and board members has interfered with the chemical safety board’s operations.Advocates said the changes they recommended could be made within the board’s existing $12 million budget. For example, the board now has only 12 investigators, the lowest number in recent years, according to the groups signing the letter, which also include United Steelworkers Union, National Council for Occupational Safety and Health, Union of Concerned Scientists, AFL-CIO and the Sierra Club.
12 investigators seems a little low...
Hope you had a great week. I still have work to do, but... it'll get done. Hope you have a great weekend, and see you on Monday.
A Harvard University nanotechnology professor fighting federal grant fraud charges said the agents who arrested him tricked and coerced him into making statements and ignored his request to have an attorney present. Harvard professor Charles Lieber — arrested shortly before dawn on Jan. 28, 2020, for allegedly lying on federal grant forms about his research and funding ties to China — said Monday federal agents ignored his request for counsel and then “unlawfully employed tactics of trickery and coerced involuntary statements” from him.The professor, currently on leave from Harvard, wants a Massachusetts federal judge to suppress all statements he made after he asked for a lawyer, along with all evidence the government derived from that interview and the videotape of the three hours of questioning in the interrogation room at the Harvard University Police Department.The filing does not state what Lieber told the agents during the interview. The government has not yet responded to the motion.Presented by two federal agents with a Miranda waiver to sign, Lieber responded: “No, I understand my rights I guess. Um, yeah, I’m willing to sign this, but I guess I think probably I should have ah, an attorney,” according to a transcript in the court papers.The professor’s attorneys said Lieber that morning was in physical pain from his battle with cancer, hadn’t eaten yet, and was “blindsided by federal agents who ransacked his office, arrested him and hauled him off for questioning.”Lieber said the federal agent responded to his request for an attorney by repeating the Miranda warning until the professor waived his rights.The agent, having understood the professor’s request, should have halted his questioning and asked the professor to clarify his request rather than interrupting him to confuse him into agreeing to waive his right to remain silent, Lieber said. “He had never been arrested before, and when the agent interrupted his request to read his rights yet again, professor Lieber believed he had no choice but to answer the agent’s questions,” the professor’s lawyers wrote.Additionally, the agents misrepresented their investigation to Lieber, claiming it had to do with national security concerns about China and protecting him from Chinese intelligence agencies, according to the motion. Lieber’s attorney, Marc L. Mukasey of Mukasey Frenchman & Sklaroff LLP, said in a statement Wednesday, “This is a critically important case to Dr. Lieber, and also for the cause of academic freedom and good faith scientific collaboration. We will leave no stone unturned.”A spokeswoman for the U.S. attorney’s office declined to comment Wednesday.
You, dear readers, know my advice about talking to the FBI: don't. If the FBI — or any law enforcement agency — asks to talk to you, say "No, I want to talk to my lawyer, I don't want to talk to you," and repeat as necessary. Do not talk to them "just to see what they want." Do not try to "set the facts straight." Do not try to outwit them. Do not explain that you have "nothing to hide."Shut up, shut up, shut up, shut up, shut up, shut up.
If they can do this to the chair of the Harvard chemistry department, they can do it to me, and they can do it to you.
Common Organic Chemistry is resolving some technical difficulties, but has ported over the list to Google Drive for now. There are 6 new positions for July 13, and 22 new positions for July 10.
Don't forget to check out the Common Organic Chemistry company map, a very helpful resource for organic chemists looking for potential employers.
We're soliciting questions for my column at Chemical and Engineering News. Please feel free to write me (chemjobber@gmail.com) if you have a career-oriented dilemma that you'd like me to write about in the magazine. Also, you can submit your questions with this handy web form. Thanks!
The 2022 Chemistry Faculty Jobs List (curated by Andrew Spaeth and myself) has 26 research/teaching positions.
Want to help out? Here's a Google Form to enter positions.Don't forget to click on "load more" below the comment box for the full thread.
From the inbox, a position at Case Western Reserve:
We invite applications for a one-year full-time lecturer position. We are seeking candidates that are committed to excellence in undergraduate teaching, mentoring and service. We are also seeking a candidate that is committed to creating a diverse and inclusive environment.
Candidates with a PhD in chemistry and experience teaching first-year and sophomore-level undergraduate chemistry courses with demonstrated excellence in teaching are strongly encouraged to apply.
A normal teaching load for lectures is two introductory courses per semester. The expectation for this position is to teach general and organic chemistry and laboratory courses with multiple sections.
The expected start date is Fall 2021
To apply please submit a letter of application, CV, summary of teaching experience, diversity statement and three confidential letters of reference should be submitted at http://apply.interfolio.com/89838 by July 26, 2021.
Best wishes to those interested.
The 2021 Chemistry Faculty Jobs List (curated by Andrew Spaeth and myself) has 341 research/teaching positions and 76 teaching assistant professor positions. We will continue tracking until August 31, 2021.
Want to help out? Here's a Google Form to enter positions.Don't forget to click on "load more" below the comment box for the full thread.
The Academic Staff Jobs list has 27 positions.
This list is curated by Sarah Cady and @nmr_chemist. It targets:Cool article in the San Diego Union-Tribune:
It’s not an accident that Bounaud has explored new solutions to turning his abstract concepts into visual reality. The San Diego-based ceramic artist — born and raised in the Provence region, about an hour north of Marseille — had a longtime career as a research chemist with a Ph.D. in chemistry from New York’s SUNY Stonybrook. He moved to San Diego to work at the Scripps Research Institute and then at a biotech company.
“But I was getting burned out doing research and I needed an outlet,” Bounaud said. “I needed something else to take my mind off the pressure. My mom recently retired from being a schoolteacher and had taken up pottery and she would tell me about it. I had a chance encounter at the Hillcrest Farmers Market with a pottery teacher who had a booth there. She was teaching at the Educational Complex Center. I took her flyer and thought, ‘Why not try it?’ I did, and got hooked right away.”
Interesting how so many former bench chemists get their kicks out of creating in other media.
From the inbox, a position at Genentech:
The Department of Protein Chemistry within the division of Large Molecule Drug Discovery in Genentech Research has an opening for a Senior or Principal Scientist to lead efforts on protein engineering of cell therapies. The Scientist will be responsible for discovery and implementation of new technologies, managing and developing a research group, and leading cross-functional project teams. They will be expected to work independently, but also integrate closely with project teams, to generate and communicate results that drive project decisions. The successful candidate will also be expected to author and contribute to high-impact publications related to their responsibilities, and present at scientific conferences annually.
For reference, it is expected that successful candidates will have 5-10 years of experience or academic training beyond their doctoral degree.
Full ad here. Best wishes to those interested.
From the inbox, a position with ProteoVant Therapeutics in Philadelphia:
Reporting to: Head of Discovery Chemistry
Key Responsibilities
Requirements
Full ad here. Best wishes to those interested.
From the inbox, a position with ProteoVant Therapeutics in Philadelphia:
Reporting to: Head of Discovery Chemistry
Key Responsibilities
Requirements
I hope your (short?) week was great, and that summer is treating you well. Have a great weekend, and see you on Monday.
Via chemistry Twitter, this interesting comment from a lab head at NIH:
What is happening with chemistry in America? We're losing postdocs to pharma after less than 1 year in our med chem labs. Is the job market that hot in chemistry?
I certainly have seen an uptick in hiring behavior over these past few months. My best insights into the pharma/biotech market is seen via Organic Chemistry Jobs, and it's quite clear that hiring has not slacked at all in 2021. My admittedly very conservative take is that the industrial job market is "better than it has been for a while" and "much better than 2009-2014."
Readers, what do you think? What's your sector, and how has it been?
*as a normative position, I think PIs having difficulty hanging onto postdocs is a good thing, and the situation that PIs should be put in by the employment market for chemists. High wages and strong market demand (as measured by higher real wages and more benefits) for chemists in the United States and elsewhere is a good thing, perhaps the best thing.
Faced not only with the immediate unsolved security questions, but also with the longer-term challenge of improving intelligence collection on climate change, Avril D. Haines, the director of national intelligence, has pushed agencies to more aggressively recruit undergraduate and graduate students with an extensive range of scientific knowledge.“The D.N.I. believes that the changing threat landscape requires the intelligence community to develop and invest in a talented work force that includes individuals with science and technology backgrounds,” said Matt Lahr, a spokesman for Ms. Haines. “Without such expertise, we will not only be unable to compete, we will not succeed in addressing the challenges we face today.”
Will be interesting to see if this translates itself into more biologically/chemically-trained PhDs entering the employ of the Intelligence Community.
Common Organic Chemistry is resolving some technical difficulties, but has ported over the list to Google Drive for now. There are 30 new positions for July 7, 34 new positions for July 4 and 23 new positions for July 1.
Don't forget to check out the Common Organic Chemistry company map, a very helpful resource for organic chemists looking for potential employers.
Via the Taipei Times, this news:
A massive explosion at a Taiwanese firm’s chemical factory on the outskirts of Bangkok early yesterday killed at least one person, injured dozens more and damaged scores of homes, while prompting the evacuation of a wide area over fears of poisonous fumes and the possibility of additional detonations.
The fire broke out at about 3am at a foam and plastic pellet manufacturing factory just outside Bangkok near Suvarnabhumi Airport, with the explosion blowing out windows of surrounding homes and sending debris raining from the sky.
The explosion could be heard for kilometers and surveillance footage from a nearby house captured the bright flash and boom, followed by the damage to the property and the one next door from the shock waves.
The main blaze at the Ming Dih Chemical Co (明諦化å¸) factory had been brought under control by mid-morning, but an enormous tank containing the chemical styrene monomer continued to burn, disaster prevention official Chailit Suwannakitpong said.
Late in the afternoon, dense clouds of black smoke continued to billow from the site and helicopters tried to navigate close enough to dump fire retardant onto it, initially with little apparent success.
Authorities said 62 people had been injured, including 12 involved in the firefighting and rescue efforts, and one person had been confirmed killed.
Styrene monomer, a hazardous liquid chemical used in the production of disposable foam plates, cups and other products, can produce poisonous fumes when ignited.
I'll be honest, I didn't know that there was a polymer industry in Thailand, but I suppose I shouldn't be surprised.
The 2022 Chemistry Faculty Jobs List (curated by Andrew Spaeth and myself) has 22 research/teaching positions.
Want to help out? Here's a Google Form to enter positions.Don't forget to click on "load more" below the comment box for the full thread.
The 2021 Chemistry Faculty Jobs List (curated by Andrew Spaeth and myself) has 341 research/teaching positions and 74 teaching assistant professor positions. We will continue tracking until August 31, 2021.
Want to help out? Here's a Google Form to enter positions.Don't forget to click on "load more" below the comment box for the full thread.
The Academic Staff Jobs list has 27 positions.
This list is curated by Sarah Cady and @nmr_chemist. It targets:
Monday is the observation of the July 4 Independence Day holiday in the United States - we'll see you on tomorrow.
Well, we made it. Hope you had a good week, and I hope you have a phenomenal weekend. See you on Tuesday.
From Chemical and Engineering News, this news (article by Rick Mullin):
WuXi STA, the small-molecule drug arm of WuXi AppTec, one of the world’s largest pharmaceutical services firms, plans to build a plant in Middletown, Delaware. WuXi STA announced the project on Monday after the state of Delaware approved a $19 million grant supporting it.
Expected to open in 2024 and employ about 500 people by 2026, the project is a major step in WuXi STA’s international expansion effort. The business is based in China and operates several facilities there. In 2016 it opened a small facility in San Diego. Earlier this year it agreed to buy a Bristol Myers Squibb plant in Switzerland.
In addition to unspecified capacity for making active pharmaceutical ingredients, the Delaware plant will feature testing labs and facilities for packaging of solid-dose and sterile drugs. WuXi says its long-term plans call for creating 1,000 jobs at the site, which is being developed on about 75 hectares in an industrial region 50 km south of Wilmington.
“Delaware’s highly trained pharmaceutical manufacturing workforce and proximity to many of our customers provide tremendous opportunities to support the region’s economic growth and efforts to advance pharmaceutical development and manufacturing,” WuXi STA CEO Minzhang Chen says in a press release.
By further expanding outside of China, WuXi STA is following the lead of other WuXi AppTec businesses. WuXi AppTec opened an immunotherapy facility in Philadelphia in 2014 and earlier this year acquired Oxgene, a UK-based cell and gene therapy specialist. WuXi also purchased US lab testing and clinical research businesses in recent years.
I did not expect to live in a world where the major Chinese CRO/CMO was trying to set up API manufacturing in the United States, but... here we are. (For the record, I am skeptical this will actually come to pass, but we shall see.)
Common Organic Chemistry is resolving some technical difficulties, but has ported over the list to Google Drive for now. There are 14 new positions for June 27 and 25 new positions for June 25.
Don't forget to check out the Common Organic Chemistry company map, a very helpful resource for organic chemists looking for potential employers.
From the inbox:
Job Description
This position offers you the opportunity to make a difference at a growing health and wellness company as you assume the role of in-house expert in powder formulations, powder filling operations including encapsulation, sachet, and tablet machinery, and other solid-dose formulations. You will work in a collaborative environment and our team is made up of passionate professionals who deliver to high standards but also have fun in the process. While R&D is a strategic driving force in our organization, the R&D team is relatively small, so your successes will be visible and instrumental to the business.
The Dietary Supplement Formulation Scientist is responsible for research and development activities of numerous formulations for encapsulation, powder filling, and tableting applications.
Responsibilities:
To perform this job successfully, an individual must be able to perform each essential job duty. Essential job functions and duties include, but are not limited to:
Job Type: Full-time
Pay: From $70,000.00 per year
Interested? Contact Meghan Robinson at mrobinson@healthgenesis.com with a resume and a cover e-mail.
What's the job market like for chemists? Dude -- it's always bad.*
How bad is it? How the heck should I know? Quantifying the chemistry job market is what this blog is about. That, and helping chemists find jobs.
E-mail chemjobber with helpful tips, career questions or angry comments at chemjobber -at- gmail dotcom. All correspondence is kept confidential. (Didn't get an e-mail back? It's okay to try again.) Please address correspondence to "Chemjobber" or "CJ."
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(*For the literal-minded, this is a joke. Mostly.)