
Twenty-Six States Add Construction Jobs During November;
North Dakota Sees Increase
December 21, 2009
According to according to an analysis of new employment data released by the
Bureau of Labor Statistics, construction employment increased in 26 states this
November during a period of warm, dry weather. The analysis, conducted by the
Associated General Contractors of America (AGC), however, found construction employment
decreased everywhere except North Dakota over the past 12 months.
"It is too early to say if the pickup reflects improving economic conditions
or a short-lived break in the weather," says Ken Simonson, chief economist
for the association. "Only eight of the states with gains in November had
increases the month before."
Simonson noted that from October to November, 23 states and the District of
Columbia shed construction jobs, 26 added construction jobs, and Delaware remained
stable. That compares with the month-over-month change from September to October
2009, when 33 states (including D.C.) lost, 17 added and one had no change in
the number of construction jobs. He noted that Virginia had the largest total
monthly construction job gain (2,900) while Florida had the largest monthly decline
(9,200).
The largest monthly percentage gains were a 3.3-percent rise in Kansas (1,900
jobs); 2.7- percent in Nebraska (1,300 jobs); 2.0-percent in Arkansas (1,000 jobs);
1.9-percent in Idaho (700 jobs); and 1.8-percent in South Dakota (400 jobs). The
largest percentage losses for the month were a 3.8-percent decline in Vermont
(500 jobs); a 2.8-percent decline in Washington (4,600 jobs); 2.3-percent declines
in Arizona (3,100 jobs) and New Hampshire (500 jobs); and 2.2-percent declines
in Florida (9,200 jobs) and Hawaii (700 jobs).
Only states with back-to-back employment gains are showing even tentative signs
of ending their construction slumps, Simonson noted. Eight states made that list
in the September-to-November period, led by Kansas, with a two-month gain of 5
percent. West Virginia and Indiana added 4 percent to their construction rolls
over two months and Wisconsin tacked on 3 percent. There were increases of about
2 percent over two months in Arkansas, Georgia and Ohio, and minimal gains both
months in Massachusetts.
Meanwhile, the five biggest percentage losses in construction employment over
the year occurred in Nevada (24.7 percent, or 27,000 jobs), Arizona (22 percent,
or 37,100 jobs), Tennessee (21.6 percent, or 28,300 jobs), Kentucky (20.9 percent,
or 17,500 jobs) and Maryland (18.3 percent or 31,400 jobs). Simonson noted that
36 states saw double-digit percentage decreases in construction employment for
the year. Construction employment, meanwhile, only expanded in North Dakota during
the past year, with an increase of 4.3 percent, totaling 900 jobs.
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