Florida and Nevada Have Largest 12-Month Gains, New
Jersey Has Biggest Annual Percent and Total Declines; Nebraska and California
Top Monthly Rankings, South Dakota and Ohio Shed Most Jobs in August
Construction firms added jobs in 36 states between August
2013 and August 2014 while construction employment increased in 28 states
between July and August, according to an analysis today of Labor Department
data by the Associated General Contractors of America. Association officials
noted that construction activity continues to spread across most of the nation
even as employment gains remain uneven by month and state.
"The number of states with increases in construction
employment over the last 12 months moderated in August but remained strongly
positive as construction activity continues to spread across most of the
nation," said Ken Simonson, the association's chief economist. "While
most states remain far below pre-recession peak employment levels, more states
are approaching previous highs and more contractors have been reporting
difficulty in hiring qualified workers. These trends are likely to intensify if
the recovery in construction continues."
Florida added more new construction jobs (43,500 jobs,
11.8 percent) between August 2013 and August 2014. Other states adding a high
number of new construction jobs for the past 12 months included California
(35,600 jobs, 5.6 percent), Texas (27,700 jobs, 4.5 percent), Illinois (11,100
jobs, 5.8 percent) and Pennsylvania (10,800 jobs, 4.8 percent). Nevada (12.8
percent, 7,200 jobs) added the highest percentage of new construction jobs
during the past year, followed by Florida, Utah (11.4 percent, 8,400 jobs),
Delaware (10.7 percent, 2,100 jobs) and North Dakota (9.4 percent, 3,200 jobs).
Twelve states and the District of Columbia shed
construction jobs during the past twelve months, with construction employment
unchanged in Idaho and New Hampshire. New Jersey lost the highest percentage
and total, (-8.1 percent, -11,300 jobs). Other states that lost a high
percentage of jobs include Mississippi (-7.1 percent, -3,700 jobs), West
Virginia (-5.3 percent, -1,800 jobs) and Arizona (-4.4 percent, -5,400 jobs).
Besides New Jersey, other states that lost the most construction jobs between
August 2013 and August 2014 included Arizona, Mississippi and West Virginia.
Twenty-eight states added construction jobs between July
and August. California (13,600 jobs, 2.1 percent) added the most jobs, followed
by Texas (6,900 jobs, 1.1 percent), Florida (6,100 jobs, 1.5 percent) and
Minnesota (2,500 jobs, 2.3 percent). Nebraska (4.0 percent, 1,800 jobs) had the
highest percentage increase for the month, followed by Maine (3.4 percent, 900
jobs), North Dakota (3.3 percent, 1,200 jobs) and Alaska (3.2 percent, 500
jobs).
Twenty-one states and the District of Columbia lost
construction jobs for the month, while construction employment was unchanged in
Arizona. Ohio (-3,500 jobs, -1.9 percent) lost the most construction jobs
between July and August. Other states experiencing large monthly declines in
total construction employment included Pennsylvania (-3,000 jobs, -1.2
percent), New York (-2,700 jobs, -0.8 percent) and New Jersey (-1,600 jobs,
-1.2 percent). South Dakota (-4.1 percent, -900 jobs) experienced the highest
monthly percentage decline, followed by Mississippi (-2.4 percent, -1,200
jobs), Idaho (-2.3 percent, -800 jobs) and Ohio.
Association officials said the employment gains were
welcome news, but continued to urge elected and appointment officials to act on
the measures outlined in the association?s workforce development plan.
"Labor shortages are likely to become more severe without a better
pipeline for preparing new workers," said Stephen E. Sandherr, the
association's chief executive officer.
Source: AGC
of America
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