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Construction employment declines in 20 states and D.C. in March, in line with industry survey showing growing job losses for the sector

Market Data

Construction employment declines in 20 states and D.C. in March, in line with industry survey showing growing job losses for the sector

New monthly job loss data foreshadows more layoffs amid project cancellations and state cutbacks in road projects as association calls for more small business relief and immediate aid for highway funding.


By AGC | April 17, 2020

Courtesy Pixabay

Construction employment declined in 20 states and D.C. in March, aligning with the results of a recentĀ surveyĀ by the Associated General Contractors of America that found growing layoffs amid new project cancellations and state funding constraints. Association officials warned that these cancellations mean massive job losses are likely to occur soon in even more states unless Congress helps cover rapidly declining state revenues, adds funding for Paycheck Protection Program loans and takes other measures to help the industry recover.

ā€œWhile construction employment declined in many parts of the country last month, far more states, local governments and project owners have halted construction in the five weeks since the government collected this data,ā€ said Ken Simonson, the associationā€™s chief economist. ā€œOur two latest surveys show a steep rise in cancellations of scheduled projects, which is leading to furloughs and terminations for both jobsite and office workers.ā€

The association released anĀ analysisĀ of new government data that showed construction employment decreased in 20 states and the District of Columbia. from February to March, held steady in six states and increased in 25 states. The economist noted the figures represented a rapid deterioration in a previously vibrant job market for construction. Over the 12 months ending in March, construction employment declined in only six states and D.C., held steady in two states, and increased in 41 states. He added that the data is based on employment as of March 12, before most states or owners began curtailing construction.

In the associationā€™s latest onlineĀ survey, conducted April 6-9, 53 percent of the 830 respondents reported that a project owner had ordered a halt or cancellation to a current or upcoming project. The share of respondents reporting cancellations jumped to 19 percent from 7 percent a week earlier, suggesting that the volume of work will shrink rapidly once current projects finish. Another impediment to constructionā€”listed by 27 percent of respondentsā€”comes from state and local officials who have ordered construction shutdowns.

The survey also found that 40 percent of respondents had furloughed or terminated workers by April 9, an increase from 31 percent just a week earlier. While 36 percent of firms reported furloughs or terminations of jobsite workers, layoffs also affected office and other workers at 18 percent of firms.

Association officials warned that construction job losses were likely to accelerate in many states amid the coronavirus pandemic. They added those job losses will get worse now that several states have canceled or significantly delayed planned highway projects because the pandemic has resulted in dramatic declines in gas tax revenues. They urged Congress and the Trump administration to provide funding to cover the lost revenue to protect existing jobs and make sure roads are repaired at a time when traffic is relatively light. They also urged Washington officials to invest more funds in the now-depleted Paycheck Protection Program and other forms of infrastructure.

ā€œThere is a historic opportunity to repair aging roads and other types of infrastructure,ā€ said Stephen E. Sandherr, the associationā€™s chief executive officer. ā€œWithout more funding from Washington, government officials will not have the resources necessary to improve the nationā€™s infrastructure and protect tens of thousands of construction jobs.ā€

View the state employmentĀ data,Ā rankings, andĀ highs and lows.

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