County’s preliminary unemployment rate for March decreases

Published 5:11 pm Friday, April 18, 2014

Chilton County’s preliminary unemployment rate for March 2014 decreased 0.4 percent from the revised February 2014 rate.

The county’s preliminary rate for March was 6.2 percent, compared to February’s revised rate of 6.6 percent and 5.8 percent for March 2013.

Alabama’s unemployment rate for March increased 0.3 percent from February’s rate of 6.4 percent, and above March 2013’s rate of 6.6 percent.

The seasonally adjusted preliminary unemployment rate for March is 6.7 percent, which represents 144,628 unemployed people, compared to 137,232 in February and 141,015 in March 2013.

“The unemployment rate increased this month because we saw the labor force grow by more than 14,000, and we saw the number of working Alabamians increase by nearly 7,000,” said Alabama Department of Labor Commissioner Tom Surtees in a release. “These employment numbers are the highest they’ve been in at least nine months, which indicates increased confidence in the job market and that people are getting back to work.”

The number of people in the labor force increased to 2,148,148 in March from 2,133,948 in February.

The number of people employed increased to 2,003,520 in March from 1,996,716 in February.

The last time the number of people in the labor force was at or above March’s number was in April 2013, when it was 2,149,576. The last time the number of people employed was at or above March’s number was June 2013, when it was 2,004,249.

“Additionally, employers reported more than 12,000 more jobs this month, and the construction industry showed a gain for the first time in months,” Surtees said in a release. “This data, along with the nearly 20,000 jobs we are consistently reporting on www.JobLink.alabama.gov, the state’s free online jobs database, tells us that employers are hiring in Alabama.”

Wage and salary employment increased 12,400 over the month, with gains in the leisure and hospitality industry (+5,500), the trade, transportation, and utilities industry (+2,300), the government industry (+2,200), and the construction industry (+1,800).

The state’s Help Wanted Online (HWOL) data, which tracks online job postings throughout the state, shows that more than 48,700 job ads were placed online in March.

Truck drivers, supervisors of retail sales workers and registered nurses top the most in-demand jobs in Alabama.

The counties with the lowest unemployment rates are: Shelby County at 4.8 percent, Lee County at 5.7 percent and Cullman and Cherokee counties at 5.9 percent.

The counties with the highest unemployment rates are Wilcox County at 16.4 percent, Perry County at 13.2 percent and Dallas County at 12.5 percent.