California and Arkansas Add Most Jobs for the Year, Ohio
and West Virginia Have Biggest Annual Decline; Florida and Alaska Top Monthly
List of Gainers, North Carolina and Montana Have Largest One-Month Drop
Construction employment expanded in 35 states and the
District of Columbia between September 2014 and September 2015 yet only 23
states added jobs between August and September, according to an analysis
released today of Labor Department data by the Associated General Contractors
of America. Association officials said the fact as many states lost
construction jobs as added them last month was likely due to a combination of
labor shortages and uncertainty about a host of federal investment programs.
“Depending on the kind of work they perform, many
contractors either can’t find enough workers, or they can’t find enough work,”
said Stephen E. Sandherr, chief executive officer for the association. “While
overall demand for construction continues to grow and sap the pool of available
labor, firms that work on federally-funded projects are dealing with a lot of
uncertainty.”
California added the most new construction jobs (43,900
jobs, 6.4 percent) between September 2014 and September 2015. Other states
adding a high number of new construction jobs for the past 12 months include
Florida (26,700 jobs, 6.6 percent), Washington (11,400 jobs, 7.1 percent) and
Pennsylvania (11,300 jobs, 4.9 percent). Arkansas (16.1 percent, 7,400 jobs)
added the highest percentage of new construction jobs during the past year,
followed by Alaska (11.2 percent, 1,900 jobs), Kansas (9.5 percent, 5,600 jobs)
and South Carolina (9.0 percent, 7,400 jobs).
Fourteen states shed construction jobs during the past 12
months, while construction employment was unchanged in Oregon. West Virginia (-16.9 percent, -5,800 jobs)
lost the highest percent of construction jobs. Other states that lost a high
percentage of jobs for the year include Rhode Island (-10.9 percent, -1,800
jobs), Ohio (-6.3 percent, -12,400 jobs) and Mississippi (-5.1 percent, -2,400
jobs). The largest job losses occurred in Ohio, West Virginia, Minnesota
(-2,700 jobs, -2.5 percent) and Mississippi.
Florida (3,200 jobs, 0.8 percent) added the most
construction jobs between August and September. Other states adding a high
number of construction jobs include Louisiana (3,100 jobs, 2.2 percent), New
Jersey (2,800 jobs, 1.9 percent) and Texas (2,700 jobs, 0.4 percent). Alaska
(3.9 percent, 700 jobs) added the highest percentage of construction jobs
during the past month, followed by New Mexico (3.2 percent, 1,300 jobs), South
Dakota (2.6 percent, 600 jobs), Utah (2.5 percent, 2,000 jobs) and Louisiana.
Twenty-three states lost construction jobs during the
past month while construction employment was unchanged in four states and the
District of Columbia. North Carolina (-3,300 jobs, -1.7 percent) shed more
construction jobs than any other state, followed by Colorado (-2,200 jobs, -1.4
percent), Massachusetts (-2,000 jobs, -1.5 percent), New York (-1,800 jobs,
-0.5 percent) and Oregon (-1,800 jobs, -2.2 percent). Montana (-4.4 percent,
-1,100 jobs) lost the highest percentage of construction jobs between August
and September, followed by Idaho (-2.5 percent, -1,000 jobs) and Oregon.
Association officials said that ongoing construction
labor shortages in many markets are making it hard for many firms to fill
positions. They noted that many firms indicated a low opinion of the pipeline
for recruiting and training new construction workers. “One of our top
priorities is finding ways to rebuild the pipeline for new workers in our
industry,” said Sandherr.
Source: AGC
of America
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