Construction employment increased in 232, or 65 percent, of 358 metro areas between July 2023 and July 2024, according to an analysis by the Associated General Contractors of America (AGC) of new government employment data. Association officials noted that their latest workforce survey shows contractors are still eager to hire more employees but face difficulty finding qualified workers.
“It is heartening that nearly two-thirds of metro areas have added construction workers in the past year,” said Ken Simonson, the association’s chief economist. “But contractors’ struggles to fill open positions suggest many more metros would have job gains if there were enough qualified applicants available.”
Houston-The Woodlands-Sugar Land, Texas added the most construction jobs (11,700 jobs or 5 percent) between July 2023 and July 2024, followed by Las Vegas-Henderson-Paradise, Nev. (9,700 jobs, 12 percent); Baton Rouge, La. (7,400 jobs, 16 percent); Northern Virginia (7,200 jobs, 9 percent); and Miami-Miami Beach-Kendall, Fla. (6,400 jobs, 11 percent). The largest percentage gain—19 percent—occurred in Anchorage, Alaska, which added 2,400 jobs. The pickup in Anchorage was followed by a 17 percent gain in Anniston-Oxford-Jacksonville, Ala. (200 jobs) and Danville, Ill. (100 jobs).
Construction employment declined over the year in 74 metro areas and was unchanged in 52 areas. The largest job loss occurred in New York City (-9,100 jobs or -6 percent), followed by Denver-Aurora-Lakewood Colo. (-4,700 jobs or -4 percent); Minneapolis-St. Paul-Bloomington Minn.-Wis. (-4,200 jobs or -4 percent); Orange-Rockland-Westchester N.Y. (-3,100 jobs or -6 percent); and San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara Calif. (-2 ,600jobs or -5percent). The largest percentage decrease occurred in Duluth Minn.-Wis., with a decline of10percent(-1 ,100jobs), followed by an8percentlossinIthaca N.Y.andGrantsPass Ore.(both-100jobs).
Association officials noted they and Arcoro will be releasing new data tomorrow showing the severity of workforce shortages across the country and in many states.The survey results will also show how infrastructure and other construction projects are being impacted by construction labor shortages.Association officials added that they will call on Washington leaders to take a range of steps to help.
“This new data will give us a sense of how the construction labor market has evolved during the past year and what that means for the broader economy,” said Jeffrey D.Shoaf,the association’s chief executive officer.“The best way to fix workforce shortages in the construction industry is to start with a good understanding of where the pain points are what is causing them,and how they impact firms’ ability to build projects.”
Note to reporters: AGC will release the2024AGC/Arcoro Workforce Survey,tomorrow,during a virtual media briefing at2p.m.Eastern Daylight Time.
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