Archive for October, 2008

Anchorage Alaksa Jobs

Are you trying to find Anchorage Alaska Jobs? Well you’re in luck, as Alaska is a state with a lot of opportunities for trained engineers of all types.

Attracting quality engineers to work in Alaska can be a tough sell- the winters are long, the daylight hours are disproportionately dark, and there is a relatively lower standard of living throughout the state. Even with those drawbacks, Alaska has experienced growth over the last 50 or 60 years- the population of Anchorage has grown from 20 thousand in 1950 to over a quarter of a million people today, due to massive feats of engineering such as paving roads to cut down on dust, gravity sewers, and a clean, safe, non-frozen water supply. The natural gas pipeline run down from the Kenai fields was also instrumental in providing a safe, clean, reliable source of energy to the professional community working in Anchorage, supplanting the floor stove, which was susceptible to flooding and overheating, leading to many fires. What did all of these projects have in common? They needed skilled engineers to be successfully carried out!

As the state’s environmental challenges ensure that there will always be large-scale engineering projects to take on, engineers remain in high demand in that state. All one has to do is look at any industry-specific publication, Association web site, or engineering job board to determine that engineers and surveyors are always going to be in demand in America’s northernmost state. There are surely more Alaska engineering jobs available than there are people to fill them, as people in the industry are reporting an increase in the amount of firms trying to lure them away from positions they already hold to work %LINK2%  instead. This is just further evidence that engineering is a recession-proof job- engineers are always in demand, no matter the economic outlook!

The future outlook for %KEYWORD1%  is rosy, if for nothing else than the fact that the Federal government is constantly increasing funds sent there to develop and acquire new sources of oil and natural gas. Expansion of infrastructure, construction of utility pipelines and the desire to exploit new sources of oil and natural gas ensure that there will be many large-scale engineering projects going on in Alaska, and for quite a while as well. Among young people, engineering isn’t really seen as a “cool” or desirable profession, so as older veteran engineers retire, there are fewer college graduates coming in behind them to take their jobs.

Along with Alaska’s limited transportation and road system, there’s a pretty extreme climate, too. All of these factors combine to form a need for increased ingenuity from the Alaska engineer- at the same time, working in Alaska means not working in a cube, but working in a climate on the cutting edge of design, and it also means respect from others in the industry that know of the difficulty of working in Alaska.

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