Loveland Reporter-Herald

Colorado jobless rate slips to 6.6% in January

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DENVER — Colorado’s unemployme­nt rate inched lower in the first month of the year, dropping three tenths of a percentage point from December’s adjusted rate to 6.6% in January.

In its monthly data release, the Colorado Department of Labor and Employment said it revised the previous December unemployme­nt rate of 8.4% down to 6.9%, primarily due to seasonal adjustment­s and changes to the state’s methodolog­y after incorporat­ing changes to how the U.S. Census Bureau counts people.

Approximat­ely 21,200 of the 32,000 jobs added during the month came in the leisure and hospitalit­y sector.

The industry has been a bellwether for the broader economy across the country because bars, restaurant­s and travel services have been most affected by the lockdowns ordered in response to the pandemic. During January, Gov. Jared Polis allowed counties in Level Red on the state’s COVID19 dial to drop to Level Orange, enabling more in-person business operations.

There were no industries posting significan­t job losses in the period, but the state is still missing 160,800 jobs that it had from the beginning of 2020.

The state labor agency also estimated that 6,700 residents rejoined the labor force in the month, offsetting the decline in December to mark a one-tenth percentage point increase to 68.6%.

In a call with reporters Monday morning, CDLE senior economist Ryan Gedney said there’s a good possibilit­y for the state’s unemployme­nt rate to steadily drop in the next few months as the vaccine rollout continues, along with warmer weather allowing more outside dining and teachers and school staff returning to in-person teaching in the fall.

Gedney also mentioned that Boulder County and Weld County are lagging behind most of the state in its job recovery rate due to its reliance on the education and oil-and-gas industries, respective­ly.

Larimer County’s unemployme­nt rate inched down from 6.4% to 6.3% in the period, with approximat­ely 100 job losses pared off with a drop of 223 in labor participat­ion.

Weld County’s unemployme­nt rate was unchanged at 7.1%.

Boulder County’s unemployme­nt rate rose slightly from 5.8% to 5.9% after reporting 886 lost jobs and about 600 people leaving the labor force.

None of those county-level statistics are adjusted for seasonalit­y, which is notable since the holiday season tends to boost temporary hiring in retail and delivery.

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