http://www.ext.colostate.edu/mg/Gardennotes/101.html#PHC
Basically, it's kind of like a doctor for plants. There's a shortage of workers in the industry but given the pay, anyone can see why. They've even started hiring internally with people with no idea of what they are doing in almost every major business. If you ever wonder why there are huge bee kills and other problems, this is the reason. Under qualified people who have no idea how each chemical class works against pests. It won't be long before resistance pops up among other things.
http://news.discovery.com/earth/plants/25000-dead-bees-in-target-parking-lot-130621.htm
The label on the products says "do not spray on plants in the flowering stage or with the potential to flower within 38 hours". It's against the law not to follow the label but who cares, right? Just spray it on a tree while it's in flower.
But in reality, I would be on a rig spraying pesticides, fertilizing, identifying pests and problems, injections, pruning, releasing biologicals... as fast as possible!
The pay in the entire industry sucks. My last job paid a $28K salary in which I ended up working 50-70 hours a week (no vacation or benefits too). I had to run a scheduling system in Corel Paradox (who uses that anymore...), mix nutrient tanks/pH, write and spray pesticide schedules, tune the system for PAR and weather, log sales and get the orders on a plane... And do the production work when they were short staff.
I also had to work with Sulfuric acid over head with no goggles - luckily two drops only burned giant holes in my pants.
I saw one job ad a few years ago that required a 4 year degree, 2 years experience, CDL license, pesticide license, heavy equipment experience for a whopping $11 an hour. (Florida)
Thanks for everyone's input, I think I'll take a pass on yet another interview!