Construction Employment Increases in 194 of 339 Metro Areas Between August 2012 and 2013

Construction employment expanded in 194 metro areas, declined in 88 and was stagnant in 57 between August 2012 and August 2013, according to a new analysis of federal employment data released today by the Associated General Contractors of America. Association officials added that despite the widespread gains, construction employment reached peak levels for August in only 19 of 339 metro areas.

“It has been a tough decade for much of the construction industry, considering that many areas experienced peak employment levels in the middle of the last decade,” says Stephen Sandherr, the association’s CEO. “More troubling, it will take a lot more growth before significantly more metro areas get back to peak employment levels in construction.”

Los Angeles-Long Beach-Glendale, Calif. added the largest number of construction jobs in the past year (8,900 jobs, 8 percent); followed by Boston-Cambridge-Quincy, Mass. (8,700 jobs, 16 percent); Houston-Sugar Land-Baytown (8,200 jobs, five percent) and Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Marietta, Ga. (8,100 jobs, nine percent). The largest percentage gains occurred in Pascagoula, Miss. (36 percent, 1,500 jobs); Eau Claire, Wis. (30 percent, 1,000 jobs); Fargo, N.D.-Minn. (25 percent, 2,100 jobs) and Lake Charles, La. (22 percent, 2,100 jobs).

The largest job losses from August 2012 to August 2013 were in Sacramento-Arden-Arcade-Roseville, Calif. (-4,900 jobs, -12 percent); followed by Gary, Ind. (-4,100 jobs, -18 percent); Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, Calif. (-3,400 jobs, -5 percent) and Northern Virginia (-3,300 jobs, -5 percent). The largest percentage decline for the past year was in Gary, Ind., Rockford, Ill. (-17 percent, -800 jobs); Modesto, Calif. (-14 percent, -1,000 jobs); Shreveport-Bossier City, La. (-13 percent, -1,100 jobs) and South Bend-Mishawaka, Ind.-Mich. (-13 percent, -600 jobs).

Fargo, N.D.-Minn. experienced the largest percentage increase among the 19 cities that hit a new August construction employment high from the prior 2008 peak (22 percent higher), while Corpus Christi, Texas added the most jobs since reaching its prior August peak in 2012 (3,600 jobs). Phoenix-Mesa-Glendale experienced the largest drop in total construction employment compared to its prior, August 2006, peak (-86,800 jobs) while Lake Havasu City-Kingman, Ariz. experienced the largest percentage decline compared to its August 2005 peak (-74 percent).

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