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Construction Employment Declines By 61,000 In February As Severe Weather Compounds Falling Demand For Nonresidential Projects

Association Officials Urge Congress and Biden Administration to Focus on New Infrastructure Funding, Address Rising Materials Prices and Avoid Disruptive Measures like the PRO Act to Stem Sector Job Losses

Construction employment declined by 61,000 in February, while the sector鈥檚 unemployment rate soared to 9.6 percent amid severe winter weather and continuing weakness in new nonresidential projects, according to an analysis by the Associated General Contractors of America of government data released today. Association officials urged Congress and the Biden administration to focus on new infrastructure funding, address rising materials prices and avoid disruptive measures like the PRO Act to stem further construction job losses.

鈥淭he steep decline in construction employment in February continues a downward trend in nonresidential activity that began before the disruptions caused by last month鈥檚 freezes and power losses,鈥 said Ken Simonson, the association鈥檚 chief economist. 鈥淒espite recovery in some parts of the economy, private nonresidential construction is still experiencing many canceled and postponed projects and few new starts.鈥

Construction employment slumped by 61,000 from January to February, the first overall decline since April 2020. Employment totaled 7,340,000, a decrease of 308,000 or 4.0 percent from the most recent peak in February 2020.

The job loss was concentrated in nonresidential construction, with a decline of 60,800 jobs in February, following a dip of 400 jobs in January. The February 2021 total was 316,000 jobs or 6.8 percent less than a year earlier. Only half the jobs lost in the first two months of the pandemic had been regained by February. In the latest month, nonresidential building contractors shed 3,300 jobs and nonresidential specialty trade contractors lost 5,500 workers, while heavy and civil engineering construction firms鈥攖he category most likely to be affected by winter storms鈥攍ost 20,800 employees.

Residential construction employment鈥攃omprising residential building and specialty trade contractors鈥攊nched down by 200 jobs in February. But the sector鈥檚 employment remained slightly higher than a year ago.

Unemployment in construction soared over the past 12 months. A total of 921,000 former construction workers were unemployed, up from 531,000 a year earlier and the highest for February since 2014. The industry鈥檚 unemployment rate in February was 9.6 percent, compared to 5.5 percent in February 2020.

Association officials urged members of Congress to work with the Biden administration to quickly pass needed new infrastructure investments. They also urged the president to take steps to address soaring construction materials prices, including for lumber and steel, by easing tariffs and exploring steps to boost domestic production. They added that Congress should drop plans to impose the PRO Act, which would harm workers and undermine the fragile economic recovery.

鈥淲ashington officials can鈥檛 change the weather, but they can help boost demand for infrastructure, address spiking steel and lumber prices and avoid anti-recovery measures like the PRO Act,鈥 said Stephen E. Sandherr, the association鈥檚 chief executive officer. 鈥淪tripping workers of their privacy and denying them the absolute right to secret ballot elections, as the PRO Act does, won鈥檛 boost demand for construction or put more people to work.鈥

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