Florida and Nevada Have Largest 12-Month Gains, New
Jersey and Arizona Have Biggest Annual Percent and Total Declines; Mississippi
and Texas Top Monthly Rankings, Maine and Pennsylvania Shed Most Jobs in
September
Construction firms added jobs in 39 states between
September 2013 and September 2014 while construction employment increased in 34
states and the District of Columbia between August and September, according to
an analysis today of Labor Department data by the Associated General
Contractors of America. Association officials noted that the construction job
gains come as more construction firms report having a hard time finding
qualified workers to fill key positions.
"Construction firms in most states have been
expanding during the past year," said Ken Simonson, the association's
chief economist. "But as those firms expand, they have to work harder to
attract their skilled craft workers and key construction professionals."
Florida added the most construction jobs of any state (41,900
jobs, 11.2 percent) between September 2013 and September 2014. Other states
adding a high number of new construction jobs for the past 12 months included
California (38,300 jobs, 6 percent), Texas (31,800 jobs, 5.2 percent), Illinois
(11,700 jobs, 6.1 percent) and Louisiana (11,000 jobs, 8.4 percent). Nevada
(12.8 percent, 7,300 jobs) added the highest percentage of new construction
jobs during the past year, followed by Delaware (12.7 percent, 2,500 jobs),
Florida, Utah (10.7 percent, 7,900 jobs) and North Dakota (10 percent, 3,400
jobs).
Ten states shed construction jobs during the past 12
months, with construction employment unchanged in D.C. and New Mexico. The
largest percentage and total losses occurred in New Jersey (-8.0 percent,
-11,200 jobs), Arizona (-6.2 percent, -7,600 jobs) and West Virginia (-5.9
percent, -2,000 jobs).
Thirty-four states and D.C. added construction jobs
between August and September. (Texas (5,400 jobs, 0.8 percent) added the most
jobs, followed by California (4,400 jobs, 0.7 percent), Michigan (3,100 jobs,
2.3 percent) and Washington (2,900 jobs, 1.9 percent). Mississippi (3.9
percent, 1,900 jobs) had the highest percentage increase for the month,
followed by Hawaii (3.3 percent, 1,000 jobs), Michigan (2.3 percent, 3,100 jobs)
and Iowa (2.3 percent, 1,600 jobs).
Fifteen states lost construction jobs for the month,
while construction employment was unchanged in Wyoming. Pennsylvania (-5,000
jobs, -2.1 percent) lost the most construction jobs between August and
September. Other states experiencing large monthly declines in total
construction employment included Arizona (-2,700 jobs, -2.3 percent), Virginia
(-1,500 jobs, -0.8 percent) and Maryland (-1,400 jobs, -0.9 percent). Maine
(-3.7 percent, -1,000 jobs) experienced the highest monthly percentage decline,
followed by New Hampshire (-2.7 percent, -600 jobs), Arizona and Pennsylvania.
Association officials said the new employment figures
show that the industry continues to add new workers after its years-long
downturn. But they cautioned that more and more firms are reporting labor
shortages. They added that the association will release
the results of a new, nationwide, construction workforce survey tomorrow that
measures the extent of worker shortages, their impact on firms' operations and
some of the causes of the worker shortages.
"Hard as it is to imagine, given what this industry
has been through the past few years, but many firms are very worried about
their ability to find, recruit and retain qualified workers as the industry
continues to rebound," said Stephen E. Sandherr, the association's chief
executive officer.
Source: AGC
of America
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