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 Job starting with L 

Laborers and freight, stock, and material movers, hand
Category: Transportation and material moving occupations
Manually move freight, stock, or other materials or perform other unskilled general labor. Include all unskilled manual laborers not elsewhere classified. Exclude "Material Moving Workers" (53-7011 through 53-7199) who use power equipment. Exclude "Construction Laborers" (47-2061) and "Construction Trades Helpers" (47-3011 through 47-3019).

Landscape architects
Category: Architecture and engineering occupations
Plan and design land areas for such projects as parks and other recreational facilities, airports, highways, hospitals, schools, land subdivisions, and commercial, industrial, and residential sites.

Landscaping and groundskeeping workers
Category: Building and grounds cleaning and maintenance occupations
Landscape or maintain grounds of property using hand or power tools or equipment. Workers typically perform a variety of tasks, which may include any combination of the following: sod laying, mowing, trimming, planting, watering, fertilizing, digging, raking, sprinkler installation, and installation of mortarless segmental concrete masonry wall units. Exclude "Farmworkers and Laborers, Crop, Nursery, and Greenhouse" (45-2092).

Lathe and turning machine tool setters, operators, and tenders, metal and plastic
Category: Production occupations
Set up, operate, or tend lathe and turning machines to turn, bore, thread, form, or face metal or plastic materials, such as wire, rod, or bar stock.

Laundry and dry-cleaning workers
Category: Production occupations
Operate or tend washing or dry-cleaning machines to wash or dry-clean industrial or household articles, such as cloth garments, suede, leather, furs, blankets, draperies, fine linens, rugs, and carpets. Include spotters and dyers of these articles.

Law clerks
Category: Legal occupations
Assist lawyers or judges by researching or preparing legal documents. May meet with clients or assist lawyers and judges in court. Exclude "Lawyers" (23-1011) and "Paralegals and Legal Assistants" (23-2011).

Law teachers, postsecondary
Category: Education, training, and library occupations
Teach courses in law. Include both teachers primarily engaged in teaching and those who do a combination of both teaching and research.

Lawyers
Category: Legal occupations
Represent clients in criminal and civil litigation and other legal proceedings, draw up legal documents, and manage or advise clients on legal transactions. May specialize in a single area or may practice broadly in many areas of law.

Lay-out workers, metal and plastic
Category: Production occupations
Lay out reference points and dimensions on metal or plastic stock or workpieces, such as sheets, plates, tubes, structural shapes, castings, or machine parts, for further processing. Include shipfitters.

Legal secretaries
Category: Office and administrative support occupations
Perform secretarial duties utilizing legal terminology, procedures, and documents. Prepare legal papers and correspondence, such as summonses, complaints, motions, and subpoenas. May also assist with legal research.

Legal support workers, all other
Category: Legal occupations
All legal support workers not listed separately.

Legislators
Category: Management occupations
Develop laws and statutes at the Federal, State, or local level. Include only elected officials.

Librarians
Category: Education, training, and library occupations
Administer libraries and perform related library services. Work in a variety of settings, including public libraries, schools, colleges and universities, museums, corporations, government agencies, law firms, non-profit organizations, and healthcare providers. Tasks may include selecting, acquiring, cataloguing, classifying, circulating, and maintaining library materials; and furnishing reference, bibliographical, and readers' advisory services. May perform in-depth, strategic research, and synthesize, analyze, edit, and filter information. May set up or work with databases and information systems to catalogue and access information.

Library assistants, clerical
Category: Office and administrative support occupations
Compile records, sort and shelve books, and issue and receive library materials such as pictures, cards, slides and microfilm. Locate library materials for loan and replace material in shelving area, stacks, or files according to identification number and title. Register patrons to permit them to borrow books, periodicals, and other library materials.

Library science teachers, postsecondary
Category: Education, training, and library occupations
Teach courses in library science. Include both teachers primarily engaged in teaching and those who do a combination of both teaching and research.

Library technicians
Category: Education, training, and library occupations
Assist librarians by helping readers in the use of library catalogs, databases, and indexes to locate books and other materials; and by answering questions that require only brief consultation of standard reference. Compile records; sort and shelve books; remove or repair damaged books; register patrons; check materials in and out of the circulation process. Replace materials in shelving area (stacks) or files. Include bookmobile drivers who operate bookmobiles or light trucks that pull trailers to specific locations on a predetermined schedule and assist with providing services in mobile libraries.

Licensed practical and licensed vocational nurses
Category: Healthcare practitioners and technical occupations
Care for ill, injured, convalescent, or disabled persons in hospitals, nursing homes, clinics, private homes, group homes, and similar institutions. May work under the supervision of a registered nurse. Licensing required.

Life scientists, all other
Category: Life, physical, and social science occupations
All life scientists not listed separately.

Life, physical, and social science technicians, all other
Category: Life, physical, and social science occupations
All life, physical, and social science technicians not listed separately.

Lifeguards, ski patrol, and other recreational protective service workers
Category: Protective service occupations
Monitor recreational areas, such as pools, beaches, or ski slopes to provide assistance and protection to participants.

Loading machine operators, underground mining
Category: Transportation and material moving occupations
Operate underground loading machine to load coal, ore, or rock into shuttle or mine car or onto conveyors. Loading equipment may include power shovels, hoisting engines equipped with cable-drawn scraper or scoop, or machines equipped with gathering arms and conveyor.

Loan counselors
Category: Business and financial operations occupations
Provide guidance to prospective loan applicants who have problems qualifying for traditional loans. Guidance may include determining the best type of loan and explaining loan requirements or restrictions.

Loan interviewers and clerks
Category: Office and administrative support occupations
Interview loan applicants to elicit information; investigate applicants' backgrounds and verify references; prepare loan request papers; and forward findings, reports, and documents to appraisal department. Review loan papers to ensure completeness, and complete transactions between loan establishment, borrowers, and sellers upon approval of loan.

Loan officers
Category: Business and financial operations occupations
Evaluate, authorize, or recommend approval of commercial, real estate, or credit loans. Advise borrowers on financial status and methods of payments. Include mortgage loan officers and agents, collection analysts, loan servicing officers, and loan underwriters.

Locker room, coatroom, and dressing room attendants
Category: Personal care and service occupations
Provide personal items to patrons or customers in locker rooms, dressing rooms, or coatrooms.

Locksmiths and safe repairers
Category: Installation, maintenance, and repair occupations
Repair and open locks; make keys; change locks and safe combinations; and install and repair safes.

Locomotive engineers
Category: Transportation and material moving occupations
Drive electric, diesel-electric, steam, or gas-turbine-electric locomotives to transport passengers or freight. Interpret train orders, electronic or manual signals, and railroad rules and regulations.

Locomotive firers
Category: Transportation and material moving occupations
Monitor locomotive instruments and watch for dragging equipment, obstacles on rights-of-way, and train signals during run. Watch for and relay traffic signals from yard workers to yard engineer in railroad yard.

Lodging managers
Category: Management occupations
Plan, direct, or coordinate activities of an organization or department that provides lodging and other accommodations. Exclude "Food Service Managers" (11-9051) in lodging establishments.

Log graders and scalers
Category: Farming, fishing, and forestry occupations
Grade logs or estimate the marketable content or value of logs or pulpwood in sorting yards, millpond, log deck, or similar locations. Inspect logs for defects or measure logs to determine volume. Exclude "Purchasing Agents and Buyers, Farm Products" (13-1021).

Logging equipment operators
Category: Farming, fishing, and forestry occupations
Drive logging tractor or wheeled vehicle equipped with one or more accessories, such as bulldozer blade, frontal shear, grapple, logging arch, cable winches, hoisting rack, or crane boom, to fell tree; to skid, load, unload, or stack logs; or to pull stumps or clear brush.

Logging workers, all other
Category: Farming, fishing, and forestry occupations
All logging workers not listed separately.

Logisticians
Category: Business and financial operations occupations
Analyze and coordinate the logistical functions of a firm or organization. Responsible for the entire life cycle of a product, including acquisition, distribution, internal allocation, delivery, and final disposal of resources.



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