Originally posted by: binister
The reason for the post was because a friend of mine and I disagreed about how much a librarian in the Library of Congress made annually. I said it was easily over $100k, especially at the higher levels.
He claimed it was under $100k because they were government employees and subject to the same ol' GS tiers as everyone else.
I was right.
Supervisory Librarian (Vacancy #: 070287)
GS-1410-14 ? Library Services (Collections & Services, Humanities and Social Sciences Division, Local History and Genealogy Reading Section) ? $93,822.00 - $121,967.00
Opening Date: Oct 10, 2007
Closing Date: Oct 31, 2007
The librarians I know are very intelligent and would be excellent contestants on Jeopardy.
I don't think I would take the job though. I know I wouldn't be very good at it because I have a horrible memory although I do like to read. I think I will stick to IT...
Now the "Digital Projects Specialist" position listed on that page would be cool but doesn't seem like it has much potential for growth.
Well, he was right on at least one point. The salary is on the GS pay system, and in fact, the position you listed has the GS level right on it! It is a lvl 14, which ranges from ~90k to ~120k depending on the location. So yes, librarians at the Library of Congress are on the GS. And 14 is pretty high, seeing as the scale only goes to GS15 (within each GS level, there are 10 "steps," explaining the wide range a GS14 might receive.)
