
Twenty-Five Sates and the District of Columbia
Adds Jobs in August; Ten Add Jobs in the Last Year
September 22, 2010
Construction jobs were added in half the states in August, while
the number of states with year-over-year job gains rose to ten from
just six in July, the Associated General Contractors (AGC) reported
in an analysis of state employment data released by the Labor Department.
The AGC noted that number of states that increased construction
employment over 12 months was the largest since October 2008.
"National construction employment has been flat since March,
and more areas have seen an upturn in employment, while job losses
in the remaining states are less severe than previously," said
Ken Simonson, chief economist for the construction trade association.
"But the gains may be fleeting unless Congress and the Administration
enact long-term infrastructure funding bills before the current
stimulus funds are exhausted."
Simonson said the largest year-over-year increase was in New Hampshire,
where construction employment rose 9.6 percent (2,100 jobs), followed
by Oklahoma (9.5 percent, 6,300 jobs); Kansas (4,600 jobs, 8.1 percent);
District of Columbia (3.7 percent, 400 jobs); and Arkansas (3.5
percent, 1,800 jobs).
The largest percentage job decrease compared to August 2009 was
in Nevada, 19.6 percent (14,700 jobs), followed by Vermont (14.1
percent; 1,900 jobs); Idaho (13.1 percent, 4,300 jobs); and Colorado
(12.2 percent, 15,300 jobs). California again lost the most jobs
since August 2009 (44,700 or 7.6 percent), and also over the last
month, losing 3,900 jobs, a 0.7 percent decline.
Illinois gained the most jobs in August with 14,200 new jobs, or
a 7.7-percent increase. Illinois gains were followed by Rhode Island
(900 jobs, or 5.6 percent increase); and Oklahoma (2,700 jobs, 3.8
percent increase). Meanwhile, Alaska had the largest monthly decline,
losing 1,100 jobs, or 6.7 percent, followed by New Mexico (1,700
jobs, 3.8 percent) and Minnesota (2,500, 3.0 percent).
Additional details about state
construction employment figures are also available online.
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