Nevada Has Largest 12-Month Percentage Gain and Florida Adds
Largest Number of Jobs, As New Jersey Experiences Deepest Losses; Delaware and
Virginia Top One-Month Lists, While California, Nebraska Lag
Construction firms added jobs in 39 states from July 2013 to
July 2014 and in 34 states from June to July, according to an analysis today of
Labor Department data by the Associated General Contractors of America.
Association officials said the employment gains are good news, but that the
pipeline of skilled craft workers, supervisors and other employees appears to
be emptying rapidly.
"The overall trend in construction employment has been
very consistent in 2014, with more than three-fourths of states adding jobs
each month on a year-over-year basis," said Ken Simonson, the
association's chief economist. "However, growing numbers of contractors
say they are having trouble finding skilled workers or subcontractors that can
supply such workers."
Nevada experienced the largest percentage increase in
construction employment between July 2013 and July 2014 (13.4 percent, 7,500
construction jobs), followed by Delaware (13.3 percent, 2,600 jobs) and Florida
(11.1 percent, 40,600 jobs). Florida again led all states in the number of
construction jobs added in the latest 12 months, followed by Texas (23,600
jobs, 3.8 percent) and California (22,600 jobs, 3.6 percent).
The District of Columbia and 11 states shed construction
jobs during the past twelve months, with New Jersey again losing the highest
percentage and total (-6.5 percent, -8,900 jobs). Other states that lost a high
percentage of jobs include West Virginia (-5.8 percent, -2,000 jobs),
Mississippi (-5.6 percent, -2,900 jobs) and Arizona (-4.8 percent, -5,900
jobs). Arizona lost the second-highest number of construction jobs during the
year, followed by Mississippi, then West Virginia.
Delaware had the largest percentage gain (5.7 percent, 1,200
jobs) among the 34 states that added construction workers to payrolls between
June and July. Other states adding large percentages of workers in the month
included Alabama (4.9 percent, 3,800 jobs), Kentucky (3.4 percent, 2,200 jobs),
New Mexico (3.1 percent, 1,200 jobs), and Virginia (2.6 percent, 4,700 jobs).
Virginia added the most workers during the month, followed by Florida (4,400
jobs, 1.1 percent), Texas (4,000 jobs, 0.6 percent) and Alabama.
Fifteen states and D.C. lost construction jobs between June
and July, while construction employment was unchanged in Rhode Island.
California lost the most construction jobs during the month (-6,400 jobs, -1.0
percent). Other states with large monthly declines in total construction
employment included New York (-3,500 jobs, -1.1 percent), Georgia (-1,500 jobs,
-1.0 percent), Nebraska (-1,400 jobs, -3.0 percent) and Kansas (-1,100 jobs,
-1.8 percent). Nebraska had the highest monthly percentage decline, followed by
West Virginia (-1.8 percent, -600 jobs) and Kansas.
Association officials said it is encouraging that a large
majority of states added construction jobs for the year and the month. However,
they cautioned that construction firms in many parts of the country appear to
be experiencing varying amounts of labor shortages. They said that while worker
shortages appear most severe in fast-growing states like Colorado and Texas,
there is still time for elected officials to act on the association's workforce
development suggestions before shortages become more widespread.
"We are at real risk of going from a situation where
firms couldn't hire because there wasn't enough demand to firms not being able
to hire because there aren't enough qualified workers," said Stephen E.
Sandherr, the association's chief executive officer.
Source: AGC
of America
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