Florida Scores the Biggest Percentage and Total 12-Month
Gains, West Virginia and New Jersey Have Most Severe Losses; Ohio and North
Dakota Lead Monthly Gainers, While Texas and New Mexico Shed the Most Jobs
Construction firms added jobs in 38 states over the past 12
months, although job gains leveled off between February and March, according to
an analysis today by the Associated General Contractors of America of Labor
Department data. Association officials said the ongoing year-over-year pickup
points to the urgency of revitalizing and initiating programs to encourage
workers and graduating students to get construction careers.
"The widespread gains in employment from a year ago are
encouraging, given the tough winter many states endured right through
March," said Ken Simonson, the association's chief economist. "The
never-ending winter of 2014 may account for the dip in the number of states
that added construction jobs in the latest month, but it is also possible that
single-family homebuilders are not adding workers as some forecasters
expected."
Simonson said he expects private nonresidential construction
to continue adding workers, especially in states with large oil and gas
activity, such as North Dakota, Louisiana, Colorado, Texas and Oklahoma. He
cited apartment construction as another growth area but said single-family homebuilding
may stall at a relatively low level.
Florida again led all states in both percentage and total
construction gains with an 11.5 percent rise and 41,000 new jobs between March
2013 and March 2014. Other states adding a high percentage of new construction
jobs for the past 12 months included Oregon (10.8 percent, 7,800 jobs) and
Minnesota (10.4 percent, 10,200 jobs). After Florida, California added the most
new construction jobs for the year (37,100 jobs, 5.9 percent), followed by
Texas (17,100 jobs, 2.8 percent) and Minnesota.
Eleven states and the District of Columbia shed construction
jobs between March 2013 and March 2014, while employment was constant in
Alaska. The largest number of losses occurred in New Jersey (-4,600, -3.4
percent), followed by Kentucky (-1,900 jobs, -2.8 percent) and West Virginia
(-1,700 jobs, -4.9 percent). West Virginia had the highest percentage decline
in construction employment, followed by New Jersey and the District of Columbia
(-2.9 percent, -400 jobs).
Two dozen states and D.C. added jobs between February and
March, led by Ohio (4,600 jobs, 2.5 percent), which rebounded from even greater
job losses in the previous, winter-wracked month. North Dakota had the highest
percentage increase (3.4 percent, 1,100 jobs) for the month. Louisiana ranked
second in the number and percentage of monthly job gains (4,300 jobs, 3.3
percent).
Construction employment declined in 23 states and remained
unchanged in Montana, South Dakota and Wyoming between February and March.
Texas lost the most jobs (-5,300 jobs, -0.8 percent), followed by Illinois
(-2,800, -1.4 percent). New Mexico experienced the highest monthly percentage
decline (-4.2 percent, -1,800 jobs), followed by Alaska (-2.9 percent, -500
jobs) and Kentucky (-2.2 percent, -1,500 jobs).
Association officials said that the construction industry is
prepared to add many more workers but that training programs and other
initiatives to draw workers into construction need to be beefed up. The
association recently unveiled a multi-point workforce development plan
to address these needs.
"With each passing month, it becomes clearer that
contractors in most states are hiring both experienced and new workers,"
said Stephen E. Sandherr, the association's chief executive officer. "It
is essential for federal, state and local officials to clear roadblocks and
adopt policies that will attract more workers into the industry."
Source: AGC
of America
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