Florida near the middle of the nation for COVID-19 construction employment losses: AGC
Florida ranks near the middle of the nation in the loss of construction jobs during […]
Florida ranks near the middle of the nation in the loss of construction jobs during the pandemic, according to government data compiled by the Associated General Contractors (AGC) of America.
Overall, in the 17 months between February 2020 and July 2021, the state lost 6,100 jobs, a 1.1% decrease to 571,100 from 558,700. The state ranked 22nd overall. Conditions improved slightly in the month between June and July, with a gain of 500 jobs (0.1%) but this still left the state 30th in the nation for the most recent surveyed month.
Nationally, construction employment in July remained below the levels reached before the pre-pandemic peak in February 2020 in 36 states, AGC reported on Aug. 20. Association officials said construction employment would benefit from new federal infrastructure investments and urged the House to quickly pass the bipartisan infrastructure bill.
“This data shows that full recovery remains elusive for construction in most states,” said Ken Simonson, the association’s chief economist. “In fact, the fast-spreading COVID-19 delta variant may make it harder to find employees eligible to work on restricted sites and may also depress demand if some owners defer projects.”
From February 2020—the month before the pandemic caused project shutdowns and cancellations—to last month, construction employment increased in only 14 states and was flat in the District of Columbia. Texas shed the most construction jobs over the period (-56,200 jobs or -7.2 percent), followed by New York (-52,600 jobs, -12.9 percent) and California (-35,100 jobs, -3.8%). Louisiana recorded the largest percentage loss (-15.3 percent, -21,000 jobs), followed by Wyoming (-13.5 percent, -3,100 jobs) and New York.
Of the states that added construction jobs since February 2020, Utah added the most (7,900 jobs, 6.9 percent), followed by North Carolina (5,700, 2.4 percent) and Idaho (4,400 jobs, 8.2 percent). The largest percentage gain was in Idaho, followed by South Dakota (7.5 percent, 1,800 jobs) and Utah.
From June to July construction employment decreased in 18 states, increased in 30, and was unchanged in Kansas, Tennessee, and D.C. The largest decline over the month occurred in Colorado, which lost 1,600 construction jobs or 0.9 percent, followed by a loss of 1,500 jobs each in Oklahoma (-1.9 percent), Texas (-0.2 percent), and Pennsylvania (0.6 percent). The steepest percentage declines since June occurred in New Hampshire (-2.2 percent, -600 jobs), followed by 1.9 percent losses in Oklahoma and Arkansas (-1,000 jobs).
North Carolina added the most construction jobs between June and July (4,300 jobs, 1.8 percent), followed by New Jersey (4,000 jobs, 2.7 percent) and Illinois (3,700 jobs, 1.7 percent). The largest percentage gains were in New Jersey and Connecticut (2.7 percent, 1,500 jobs), followed by South Carolina (2.4 percent, 2,600 jobs).
Association officials warned that construction employment was being impacted in many parts of the country because of supply chain challenges and growing market uncertainty caused by the resurgent Delta variant. They said new federal infrastructure investments would provide a needed boost in demand and help put more people to work in construction careers.
“New federal infrastructure investments will help put more people to work in high-paying construction careers,” said Stephen E. Sandherr, the association’s chief executive officer. “The House can help put Americans back to work by immediately approving the infrastructure measure that passed the Senate with broad, bipartisan support.”
View state February 2020-July 2021 data and rankings, 1-month rankings.