Construction Employment Declined in 164 Metro Areas Between May 2011 and 2012

Ongoing cuts to public construction budgets have resulted in less construction activity and an increase in loss of construction jobs compared to earlier in 2012

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Construction employment declined in 164 out of 337 metropolitan areas between May 2011 and May 2012, increased in 126 and stayed stagnant in 47, according to a new analysis of federal employment data released today by the Associated General Contractors of America. Association officials said that construction employment suffers even as Congress continues to debate the possible replacement for a highway and transit bill that expired over three years ago and other infrastructure and economic measures languish.

“The number of metro areas losing construction jobs continues to increase compared to earlier this year,” said Ken Simonson, the association’s chief economist. “Considering the ongoing cuts to public construction budgets, there just isn’t enough construction activity in many areas to sustain the same employment levels as last year.”

The largest job losses were in:

  • Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, Fla. (-7,100 jobs, -14 percent)
  • Chicago-Joliet-Naperville, Ill. (-6,900 jobs, -6 percent)
  • New York City (-5,100 jobs, -5 percent)
  • St. Louis, Mo. (-4,900 jobs, -8 percent)
  • Nassau-Suffolk, N.Y. (-4,700 jobs, -8 percent)
  • Anchorage, Alaska (-28 percent, -2,700 jobs) lost the highest percentage. 
  • Monroe, Mich. (-24 percent, -500 jobs)
  • Springfield, Mass.-Conn. (-19 percent, -1,800 jobs)
  • Montgomery, Ala. (-18 percent, -1,200 jobs).

The areas with the largest amount of jobs added were:

  • Bakersfield-Delano, Calif. added the highest percentage of new construction jobs (22 percent, 3,000 jobs)
  • Indianapolis-Carmel, Ind. (20 percent, 8,000 jobs)
  • Knoxville, Tenn. (19 percent, 3,100 jobs)
  • Phoenix-Mesa-Glendale, Ariz. (7,400 jobs, 9 percent)
  • San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, Calif. (4,900 jobs, 16 percent)
  • Baton Rouge, La. (4,900 jobs, 13 percent)
  • Seattle-Bellevue-Everett, Wash. (4,300 jobs, 7 percent)

Association officials urged members of a congressional conference committee working on a new federal highway and transit bill to complete negotiations before current funding expires on June 30. They noted that many vital transportation improvement projects will likely remain on hold until a longer term measure is passed that allows state officials to plan for and finance complex projects.

“While there are many factors contributing to the ongoing construction employment losses, the lack of a highway and transit bill is certainly not helping,” said the association’s chief executive officer, Stephen E. Sandherr. “Passing a bill soon will save a lot of construction jobs and help the industry hang on until private sector demand heats up and state and local budgets get stronger.”

View construction employment figures by state and rank.

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