Forty-four US states added construction jobs between January 2018 and January 2019, while 33 states added construction jobs between December and January, according to an analysis by the Associated General Contractors of America of Labor Department data released today. Association officials cautioned that the employment gains may not last without an increase in the number of people trained for construction careers.
“Contractors began 2019 by adding employees in nearly all parts of the country,” stated chief economist Ken Simonson. “These figures are consistent with the optimism contractors expressed about workloads and hiring plans in our association’s recent survey. But finding workers to execute those projects is likely to be an ongoing challenge.”
Nearly four out of five construction firms expect to add employees in 2019, the economist said, based on the 2019 Construction Hiring and Business Outlook Survey the association conducted with Sage and released on January 2. At the same time, 78 percent of the survey’s 1,312 respondents said their firm was having a hard time filling positions, and two-thirds of the respondents reported they expect it will as hard or harder to hire workers in 2019.
California added the most construction jobs over the year (28,500 jobs, 3.4 percent), while West Virginia (17,500 jobs, 51.6 percent) added the highest percentage of construction jobs over 12 months.
Six states and the District of Columbia shed construction jobs over the latest 12 months. The largest decline occurred in South Carolina (-3,900 jobs, -3.8 percent), while Vermont had the steepest percentage job loss over the 12-month period (-4.6 percent, -700 jobs).
Among the 33 states with one-month job gains between December and January, North Carolina had the largest pickup (6,200 jobs, 2.8 percent), while West Virginia (3,900 jobs, 8.4 percent) added the highest percentage of construction jobs for the month.
Construction employment decreased from December to January in 15 states and was unchanged in Hawaii, Minnesota and D.C. Texas lost the largest number of construction jobs for the month (-4,800 jobs, -0.6 percent), while the largest percentage losses of construction jobs—1.1 percent—occurred in Rhode Island (-200 jobs) and Oklahoma (-900 jobs).