Government salary transparency for Texas — how we built it

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Texas Job Titles — Letter Q

There are 8 Texas state job titles in OpenPayrolls whose names start with the letter Q. Together they cover 20 employee records and roughly $1,333,974 in annualized base pay. The largest by headcount is QUALITY ASSURANCE SPEC I with 5 employees, and the highest individual salary in this slice is $99,658 at QUAL INTEL DISABILITY PROF IV.

Job TitleEmployeesAverage payHighest pay
QA Automation Analyst 2 $98,338 $98,890
QUAL INTEL DISABILITY PROF II 3 $57,518 $58,657
QUAL INTEL DISABILITY PROF III 2 $79,646 $87,045
QUAL INTEL DISABILITY PROF IV 2 $87,630 $99,658
QUALITY ASSURANCE SPEC I 5 $53,569 $58,532
QUALITY ASSURANCE SPEC II 1 $66,000 $66,000
QUALITY ASSURANCE SPEC III 4 $54,587 $77,400
QUALITY ASSURANCE SPEC IV 1 $78,000 $78,000

About this slice of Texas state government

This page collects every Texas state job title in OpenPayrolls beginning with the letter Q. The slice is not a category in any official sense — it is just an alphabetical browsing aid — but it does surface a useful cross-section of agencies and roles that you might not otherwise discover through topical navigation. Together the 8 entries here represent 20 employee records (0.3% of the OpenPayrolls dataset for Texas state government) and roughly $1,333,974 in annualized base compensation, averaging $66,699 per record.

The largest entry on this page by headcount is QUALITY ASSURANCE SPEC I, which alone accounts for 5 records — 25% of this letter slice. The highest individual salary reported anywhere on this page is $99,658 at QUAL INTEL DISABILITY PROF IV. The average annual pay across all 20 records here is $66,699, which compares to a statewide average of $112,904 across the full OpenPayrolls dataset. Slices like this are most useful as a complement to category-based browsing; for sector-level analysis, see our full agencies index or the full job-titles index.

Texas publishes its statewide payroll under open-records law, and OpenPayrolls re-presents that data in a browsable, link-friendly format so that any Texan — journalist, researcher, taxpayer, prospective employee — can navigate it without writing SQL. Each entry above links to a full record page with a salary distribution, the largest individual paychecks, the agencies (or, for titles, the cities) involved, and a longform narrative explaining what the numbers do and don’t represent. For the methodology behind these aggregates, including which fields are excluded from the “annual pay” figure, see the methodology page.