California
and Arkansas Add Most Jobs for the Year, Ohio and West Virginia Have Biggest
Annual Decline; Texas and Iowa Top Monthly List of Gainers, New Mexico and
Michigan Have Largest One-Month Drop
Construction
employment expanded in 36 states and the District of Columbia between August
2014 and August 2015 while only 25 states added jobs between July and August,
according to an analysis today of Labor Department data by the Associated
General Contractors of America. Association officials noted that job gains may
be lagging as many firms report they are having a hard time finding qualified
workers to employ.
“While
half the states added construction jobs in August, construction spending data
and industry reports suggest demand for projects remains very strong,"
said Ken Simonson, chief economist for the association. “The apparent
softness in hiring likely reflects contractors’ difficulty in finding qualified
workers.”
California
added the most new construction jobs (43,800 jobs, 6.5 percent) between August
2014 and August 2015. Other states adding a high number of new construction
jobs for the past 12 months include Florida (25,700 jobs, 6.4 percent), North
Carolina (13,200 jobs, 7.4 percent) and Washington (12,800 jobs, 8.0 percent).
Arkansas (13.6 percent, 6,200 jobs) added the highest percentage of new construction
jobs during the past year, followed by Idaho (10.0 percent, 3,600 jobs), South
Carolina (9.1 percent, 7,500 jobs) and Iowa (8.9 percent, 6,700 jobs).
Thirteen
states shed construction jobs during the past 12 months, while construction
employment was unchanged in North Dakota. West Virginia (-15.1 percent,
-5,100 jobs) lost the highest percent of construction jobs. Other states that
lost a high percentage of jobs for the year include Rhode Island (-7.9 percent,
-1,300 jobs), Mississippi (-7.4 percent, -3,600 jobs) and Ohio (-5.7 percent,
-11,300 jobs). The largest job losses occurred in Ohio, West Virginia,
Mississippi and Indiana (-3,600 jobs, -2.9 percent).
Texas
(3,200 jobs, 0.5 percent) added the most construction jobs between July and
August. Other states adding a high number of construction jobs include Ohio
(2,700 jobs, 1.5 percent), North Carolina (2,700 jobs, 1.4 percent) and New
York (2,600 jobs, 0.7 percent). Iowa (2.6 percent, 2,100 jobs) added the
highest percentage of construction jobs during the past month, followed by Utah
(1.6 percent, 1,300 jobs), Georgia (1.5 percent, 2,400 jobs), Hawaii (1.5
percent, 500 jobs), Nebraska (1.5 percent, 700 jobs) and Ohio.
Twenty-four
states and the District of Columbia lost construction jobs during the past
month while construction employment was unchanged in Louisiana. Michigan
(-4,700 jobs, -3.0 percent) shed more construction jobs than any other state,
followed by Virginia (-3,200 jobs, -1.7 percent), New Mexico (-2,300 jobs, -5.4
percent), Washington (-2,000 jobs, -1.1 percent) and Mississippi (-2,000 jobs,
-4.3 percent). New Mexico lost the highest percentage of construction jobs
between July and August, followed by Mississippi and Michigan.
AGC
officials noted that the association released a survey last week that showed 86 percent of
contractors reported trouble filling hourly or salaried professional positions.
They added that these shortages appear to be having an impact on the sector’s
recovery and urge federal, state and local officials to act on the measures
outlined in the association’s Workforce Development Plan to reinvigorate the
craft worker training pipeline.
“While
construction employment increased in more than two-thirds of the states over
the past year, these gains may fade in the near future unless the industry can
attract more people to try construction as a career,” said Stephen E. Sandherr,
the association’s chief executive officer.
Source: AGC
of America
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