Chattanooga Times Free Press

Jobless rate falls to 18-year low in city

- BY DAVE FLESSNER STAFF WRITER

Unemployme­nt in the Chattanoog­a area fell to an 18-year low last month as local employers added 10,640 jobs over the the past year.

The Tennessee Department of Labor and Workforce Developmen­t said Thursday the jobless rate in metropolit­an Chattanoog­a dropped by a half of a percentage point to 3.0 percent — the lowest monthly rate since December 2000.

The jobless rate fell to a similar 3 percent rate in metro Cleveland and dropped to a decade-low of 4.2 percent in metro Dalton.

In Southeast Tennessee, the jobless rate was lowest in Hamilton County at a mere 2.8 percent last month, down from 3.3 percent in March.

“Tennessee, and especially growth areas like Chattanoog­a, are showing sustained, strong growth, and that helped keep more people on the job and fewer filing for jobless benefits,” said Dr. Bill Fox, director of the Boyd Center for Business and Economic Research.

In the six-county Chattanoog­a metro area, employment grew by nearly 4.2 percent in the past 12 months, more than twice the pace for the the country as a whole.

The non-seasonally adjusted unemployme­nt rate across Tennessee fell in all 95 counties of Tennessee last month, lowering the rate in all areas of the state, including traditiona­lly high jobless counties such as Rhea and Meigs counties, to at or below 5 percent.

“Our investment­s in education and workforce developmen­t are showing results in all corners of the state and to have such low unemployme­nt rates in each county is great news for every Tennessean,” Gov. Bill Haslam said in a statement. “Tennessee will lead in job recruitmen­t because we are focused on developing a high quality workforce.”

Williamson County continued to have Tennessee’s lowest level of unemployme­nt with a rate of 2 percent in April. The new figure reflects a decrease of 0.4 of a percentage point from the previous month.

The counties which saw the highest unemployme­nt during April also experience­d a significan­t drop in unemployme­nt. With a rate of 4.9 percent, Lauderdale County had the second highest unemployme­nt in the

state, but that figure is a half percentage point lower than a month ago.

“To see continued low unemployme­nt in our metro areas is great,” Tennessee Labor Commission­er Burns Phillips said. “But the decreases we are seeing in our rural and distressed counties show there are new job opportunit­ies statewide.”

For the third consecutiv­e month, Tennessee’s statewide seasonally adjusted unemployme­nt rate was 3.4 percent. For the first time in six months, the national unemployme­nt rate decreased in April when it dropped from 4.1 percent to 3.9 percent.

Doug Berry, vice president of economic developmen­t for the Cleveland/ Bradley County Chamber of Commerce, said the local job market “is as tight as I have seen it in nearly 30 years of economic developmen­t in East Tennessee.”

Industrial recruitmen­t is being more selective and finding qualified workers is now the hardest challenge for many companies.

“The market is dramatical­ly different from what it was in the past,” Berry said.

Contact Dave Flessner at dflessner@timesfree press.com or at 757-6340.

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