Fewer jobless in Thurston County; 900 found work

C.R. ROBERTS | Staff writer • Published March 13, 2013

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The unemployment rate in Thurston County showed a decline, with January’s 8.4 percent down from 8.5 percent a year ago. With 97,500 workers employed last month, the number of persons employed rose by 900 workers from the 96,400 noted in January 2012.

Pierce County also saw a reduction in its unemployment ranks to 9.4 percent in January, down from 9.7 percent in January 2012 and well below the 10.7 percent recorded in January 2011, the state Employment Security Department reported Tuesday. Fully 268,700 workers were employed in January, the department reported. This is up from 262,300 people employed the year before.

Important sectors of the economy showed improvement in January’s figures, leading one regional economist to call the trend “optimistic.”

“I think what you’re seeing is a continuing trend of a gradually improving labor market,” said state regional economist Paul Turek.

“The numbers this month are pretty optimistic.”

Still, the numbers did show a decline of workers employed from December of last year to January.

“We lost 3,100 jobs in Pierce County in a month,” Turek said. “How could you say things are improving?”

Every year, he said, economists expect to see a decline in employment from December to January as workers leave following the holiday season.

“When we look at the last six or seven years, what we average is a decline of 6,300 jobs in January. We’re seeing about half of that occurring,” he said. “If you look at it from that angle, it’s actually a good month that we’ve had.”

The county-based numbers are not seasonally adjusted for seasonal employment, but if they were, Turek said, “it would translate into a gain of 1,400 jobs.”

Particularly gratifying Tuesday were the numbers from particular sectors.

In Thurston County from January 2012 to January 2013:

 • Total private employment was up 1.6 percent;

 • Trade, transportation and utilities employment was up 3.7 percent;

 • Professional and business services were up 7.5 percent;

 • State government employment fell 0.4 percent;

 • Local government employment rose 1.8 percent.

“We tend to be a little more cautions of our celebration of this,” Turek said of the positive data. “Last year we also had a significant improvement, and that was revised downward. These are estimates based on partial observation. We’re going to wait and see over successive months whether that is just a blip.”

Statewide numbers released before the county numbers on Tuesday showed that state employers added 24,100 jobs, while the unemployment rate, 7.5 percent, was unchanged. The statewide numbers have been adjusted for seasonal changes.

C.R. Roberts: 253-597-8535 c.r.roberts@ thenewstribune.com

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