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Construction Employment Expands In 29 States Between September, October

Wed November 24, 2010 - National Edition
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Construction employment expanded in 29 states between September and October, while fewer people are working in construction compared to last year in 39 states, the Associated General Contractors of America reported in an analysis of state employment data released by the Labor Department.

The new figures continue a nearly year-long trend of ups and downs in construction employment as the industry performs stimulus-funded work yet grapples with broad market uncertainty.

“Considering that most states adding construction jobs in October had shed workers in September, it is safe to say that construction employment remains volatile,” said Ken Simonson, the association’s chief economist.

“Construction is no longer in free fall, but the industry remains fragile as improvements vary greatly by state and project type.”

Arizona (4.4 percent, 5,000 jobs) experienced the largest one-month seasonally adjusted percentage increase and Texas (2.3 percent, 8,800 jobs) the largest one-month total increase in construction employment between September and October.

Other states adding large numbers of construction jobs during October included Illinois (1.5 percent, 3,000 jobs); Washington (2.1 percent, 3,000 jobs); South Carolina (3.2 percent, 2,500 jobs); and Colorado (1.6 percent, 1,800 jobs).

Simonson noted 20 states plus the District of Columbia lost construction jobs during the past month, while construction employment remained unchanged in Rhode Island.

Minnesota (minus 2.7 percent, minus 2,300 jobs) lost the highest percent of construction jobs for the month while Florida lost the most jobs (minus 2.4 percent, minus 8,600 jobs).

Among other states losing construction jobs between September and October were Pennsylvania (minus 1.0 percent, minus 2,200 jobs); Maryland (minus 1.3 percent, minus 1,900 jobs); Georgia (minus 1.2 percent, minus 1,800 jobs); and Massachusetts (minus 1.4 percent, minus 1,500 jobs).

Eleven states and D.C. added construction jobs for the year, Simonson added.

The largest year-over-year percentage increase was in Kansas, where construction employment rose 9.0 percent (5,100 jobs), followed by Oklahoma (8.1 percent, 5,400 jobs); Arkansas (5.1 percent, 2,600 jobs); D.C. (4.6 percent, 500 jobs); and West Virginia (3.3 percent, 1,100 jobs).

Among the 39 states that lost construction jobs over the past twelve months, Nevada experienced the largest percentage decline (minus 19.5 percent, minus 14,500) while California lost the most jobs (minus 45,700, minus 7.9 percent). Other states experiencing large declines for the year include Idaho (minus 15.2 percent, minus 5,000 jobs); Vermont (minus 13.4 percent, minus 1,800 jobs); Montana (minus 10.5 percent, minus 2,500 jobs); and Missouri (minus 10.3 percent, minus 11,900 jobs).

Association officials said that temporary stimulus funding has helped the industry, but that most firms were worried about business levels for next year. They added that private, state and local demand for construction remains weak, while long-term federal infrastructure programs and tax rates remain in limbo.

“We won’t see sustained job growth until the private sector picks up and long-term federal plans are clear,” said Stephen E. Sandherr, the association’s chief executive officer.




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