Wednesday, February 2, 2022

Common DOT Codes -- Sedentary Unskilled -- Telephone Quotation Clerk

Sedentary work that does not exceed six hours of sitting in an eight-hour day represents a small window.  The DOT and the regulations define sedentary work as involving standing or walking not more than occasionally, 2.3 hours.  Sedentary work as depicted by a residual functional capacity question with a lower limit of 5.7 hours an upper limit of 6.0 hours constitutes a slender reed.  

 Understanding sedentary work rests on the difference between and and or.  Light work exists (1) when it requires walking or standing to a significant degree; OR (2) when it requires sitting most of the time but entails pushing and/or pulling of arm or leg controls; AND/OR (3) when the job requires working at a production rate pace entailing the constant pushing and/or pulling of materials even though the weight of those materials is negligible.  

Sedentary work exists when the work (1) when it does not require walking or standing to a significant degree; AND (2) when it requires sitting most of the time and does not involve pushing and/or pulling of arm or leg controls; AND (3) when the job requires working at a production rate pace but does not entail the constant pushing and/or pulling of materials even though the weight of those materials is negligible.  Transgressing the standing/walking, lifting/carrying, pushing/pulling with the arms or legs, or production rate pace strips away any hope for that sedentary label.  

The cadre of vocational experts rely on 16 different DOT codes in the sedentary range.  Ignoring obsolescence and industry, the question is whether the occupations are unskilled, sedentary, and do not exceed 6.0 hours of sitting in a full-time workday.  

15.  Telephone Quotation Clerk (DOT 237.367-046)

Receptionists and information clerks (SOC 43-4171) is a mostly unskilled, mostly sedentary, occupational group of about 1 million jobs.  The Occupational Requirements Survey reports almost 60% of the jobs as unskilled and an overlapping 70% as sedentary.  

SVP

SVP

Value

SVP 1

2.6%

SVP 2

57.3%

 

Strength

Strength

Value

Sedentary

70.4%

Light Work

23.5%

Medium Work

3.9%


The hours of reported sitting and the percentage of the day sitting do not match up to eight-hour days in the ORS data set:

Hours Sitting Required

Hours of Day

Percentile

5.82

Mean

2.0

10th

4.75

25th

6.8

50th

7.2

75th

7.92

90th


Percent of Day Sitting Required

% Of Day

Percentile

<= 79.2%

Mean

<= 50%

10th

<= 75%

25th

<= 90%

50th

<= 95%

75th

<= 100%

90th


Assuming that the more sitting is required the more likely it is that the occupation requires sedentary exertion, our focus is on the 30th to the 100th percentiles.  Interpolating between 4.75 hours and 6.8 hours of sitting at the 25th and 50th percentiles, a reasonable inference that some jobs sit 6.0 hours per day as a maximum and engage in sedentary work exists.  Interpolating between 75% of the workday and 90% of the workday, the inference disappears.  

If we assume that the sedentary jobs exists above 27th percentile, that all of the light and medium jobs require the least sitting, there are no receptionists and information clerks, including telephone quotation clerk, that sit less than or equal to 6.0 hours per day.  This occupation also requires an industry analysis.  

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Suggested Citation:

Lawrence Rohlfing, Common DOT Codes -- Sedentary Unskilled -- Telephone Quotation Clerk, California Social Security Attorney (February 2, 2022)  https://californiasocialsecurityattorney.blogspot.com   


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