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Date Posted: March 22 2013

Three-year high for construction jobs

The construction industry added 48,000 jobs in February, the ninth consecutive month of job growth for the sector, as more people are working in construction than at any point in the last three and a half years, according to a March 8 analysis of new government data by the Associated General Contractors of America.

Association officials cautioned, however, that employment gains remain tenuous and could be undermined if Washington officials fail to reach a deal on federal investment levels later this month.

“With construction employment increasing by the largest amount for a single month in nearly six years, the steady improvement in construction hiring is particularly encouraging,” said Ken Simonson, the association’s chief economist. “The job gains are coming from every part of the construction industry and while the sector’s unemployment rate remains stubbornly high, it is heading in the right direction.”

Construction firms employed 5.78 million people in February, a gain of 48,000 from January and 140,000 or 2.5 percent from a year ago, Simonson noted. The industry unemployment rate, which is not seasonally adjusted and thus is typically high in February, fell from 17.1 percent in February 2012 to 15.7 percent last month.

Both residential and nonresidential construction added jobs for the month and year. Residential construction – building and specialty trade contractors – added 19,400 jobs in February and 64,200 (3.1 percent) over 12 months.

Nonresidential construction – building, specialty trade, and heavy and civil engineering construction – expanded by 29,000 employees in February and 75,700 (2.1 percent) over the year-ago level.

“Both single- and multi-family homebuilding have been accelerating for several months and should continue to add jobs in the near future,” Simonson said, noting that he expects construction employment may increase by 250,000 in 2013. “On the private nonresidential side, there will likely be strong growth in power and energy-related projects, manufacturing and distribution facilities and private college construction. However, public construction remains weak.”

Association officials said that recent improvements in construction employment could be undermined if Congress and the Obama administration fail to reach an agreement to fund federal operations known as a continuing resolution by the time the current one expires on March 27. Should Washington officials fail to enact a new continuing resolutions, tens of billions of dollars worth of federal investments in infrastructure and construction projects could be shut down.

“While the new employment figures are encouraging, the construction industry’s recovery remains fragile,” said Stephen E. Sandherr, the association’s chief executive officer, noting that the construction firms employ nearly two million fewer people today than in 2006. “Putting billions of dollars worth of construction projects on hold because Washington officials can’t set a budget threatens to undermine the sector’s recovery just as it is starting to heat up.”

National Construction Rate Declines 2.1% In January

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, in January total construction put in place throughout the nation dropped 2.1% below December ’s revised estimate. January set an annual rate of $883.3 billion. The revised December rate was $902.6 billion.

The January rate was figured at 7.1% above the annual rate for January 2011.

Spending on private construction in January 2013 reported by the Census Bureau was at an annual rate of $614.2 billion, 2.6% below the revised December estimate of $630.9 billion. Residential construction was at a rate of $304.6 billion, about the same as the revised estimate of $304.7 billion for December . Nonresidential construction was at a rate of $309.7 billion, 5.1% below the revised December rate of $326.2 billion.

Public construction during January was at a rate of $296 billion, 1% below the December estimate of $271.7 billion. Education construction, at a rate of $63.7 billion, was 3.5% below the revised December rate of $63.7 billion. The highway construction rate was up 0.9% at $79.1 billion, compared to the revised December estimate of $78.4 billion.

The Census Bureau is scheduled to release its Febuary 2013 data on April 1st.