Only
10 out of 337 metropolitan areas added construction jobs between February 2009
and 2010, the
Associated General Contractors of America reported, citing data
from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Even worse, 230 metro areas
experienced double-digit declines in construction employment while only two
cities experienced a double-digit increase, association officials noted.
“In
virtually every area, construction workers continued to suffer the brunt of the
recession,” said
Ken Simonson, the association’s
chief economist. “Job losses in far too many cities were simply, and sadly,
staggering.”
The
construction economist said that Houston lost more construction jobs (25,500,
13 percent) than any other metro area between February 2009 and 2010. Monroe,
Mich., meanwhile, lost the highest percentage of construction jobs (41 percent,
900 jobs). Other areas experiencing a high number of job losses include Chicago
(25,200, 20 percent); Los Angeles (23,000, 19 percent); Las Vegas (22,900, 31
percent); and Phoenix (20,600, 20 percent).
Among
the 10 metro areas adding construction jobs during those 12 months (12 metro
areas experienced no change in employment), three added only 100 jobs (Ithaca,
N.Y.; Grand Forks, N.D.; and Bismarck, N.D.). Eau Claire, Wis., added more jobs
and a higher percent of jobs than any other city in America (600, 29 percent).
Other
areas adding jobs include El Paso, Texas (400 , 3 percent); Haverhill-North
Andover-Amesbury, Mass.-N.H. (300, 9 percent); Syracuse, N.Y. (300, 3 percent);
and Lafayette, La. (200, 3 percent).
Simonson
noted that the industry continues to suffer from weak demand for new
construction activity. Annual construction spending declined to an eight-year
low in February. He said that single-family homebuilding and the federal
stimulus should help boost construction employment in a number of metro areas
this spring, but high vacancy rates and shrinking state and local budgets will
keep construction employment from rising in most areas.
In
addition to low spending levels, association officials cautioned that federal
and state regulatory and spending decisions were having an impact on the
industry. They cited confusion about the impact of the health care legislation,
unfunded mandates in California and New York forcing contractors to retrofit or
replace current equipment and infrastructure spending cuts in states like New
York and Florida.