Industry sector · NAICS 35

Other

H-1B wages, OSHA safety and layoff activity across 5 employers in Other.

5
Employers
0
H-1B filings

The sector at a glance

Other spans 5 tracked employers and 0 H-1B filings on record, against an average DART injury rate of 2.88.

5
employers
0
H-1B filings
2.88
avg DART injury rate

What the data says about this industry

Industry pages on PlainEmployers exist to answer one question that a single employer profile cannot: is what you are seeing at one company normal for its sector, or an outlier? Every figure below is computed from the same three federal datasets that power individual profiles, the Department of Labor H-1B disclosures, OSHA injury records, and state WARN Act notices, aggregated across every employer we map to this industry. Read the sector numbers first, then judge any one employer against them.

PlainEmployers tracks 5 distinct employers operating in the Other sector (NAICS prefix 35), each pulled from U.S. Department of Labor and OSHA public disclosures rather than self-reported corporate profiles. Position-level H-1B wage data for this industry is limited, which typically reflects limited visa sponsorship or early-stage dataset coverage. No H-1B filings are currently aggregated for this industry, often meaning these employers staff primarily through domestic labor markets.

On workplace safety, the Other peer group shows an average DART rate of 2.88 injuries per 100 full-time workers, a standardized OSHA metric counting days away, restricted duty, or job transfer from workplace injuries. That number is the benchmark every individual employer profile is scored against, so an employer with a DART of 3.5 against a 2.0 industry average is running roughly 75% above the norm. The metric self-corrects for company size, which is why it is more meaningful than raw injury counts: a 300,000-worker retailer and a 400-worker machine shop can be compared on equal footing, and industry-wide patterns (construction and warehousing skewing high, finance and professional services skewing low) are visible here.

The employer roster for Other is still being indexed. Industry-level figures on this page are computed from whatever employers are currently in the database, so the numbers stabilize and become more representative as the ETL pipeline pulls additional disclosures. In the meantime, visitors can browse the broader employer index and the metro-level pages to see how Other compares against other sectors on wages, safety, and layoff frequency.

Industry-level totals combine every employer record mapped to this sector, drawn from WARN Act notices and US Department of Labor filings. They are most useful for spotting trends and comparing sectors, and least useful for judging any single employer within the industry: a high sector total does not mean every firm is cutting jobs, and a low total does not rule out significant layoffs at individual companies. Where an employer spans multiple sectors it is assigned to its primary activity. Treat these aggregates as a starting point, then drill into the individual employer records and the source filings before drawing conclusions.

What this means for Other jobseekers

Use Other's top sponsors and safety benchmarks as the yardstick for any single employer in the sector.

  • An employer’s DART rate above 2.88 runs higher than the Other norm; read its grade in context. How grades work
  • Wages are tied to the metro prevailing wage, so cross-reference the metro page for the same role. Browse metros

Sector totals combine every employer mapped to this industry's primary activity; multi-sector firms are counted once.