The Mercury News

Blue-collar hiring in Trump Country reaches 30-year high

- By Heather Long and Andrew Van Dam

Blue-collar jobs are growing at their fastest rate in more than 30 years, helping fuel a hiring boom in many small towns and rural areas that are strong supporters of President Donald Trump ahead of November’s mid-term elections.

Jobs in goods-producing industries — mining, constructi­on, and manufactur­ing — grew 3.3 percent in the year preceding July, the best rate since 1984, according to a Washington Post analysis.

Blue collar jobs, long a small and shrinking part of the U.S. economy, are now growing at a faster clip than those in America’s much larger service economy. Many factors collided to pro-

duce the blue-collar boom. Some are tied to short-term boom-and-bust cycles, but others may endure.

The rapid hiring in blue collar sectors is delivering benefits to areas that turned out heavily for Trump in the 2016 election, according to the Brookings Institutio­n, a shift from earlier in this expansion, when large and mid-sized cities enjoyed most of the gains.

The biggest drivers of the blue-collar hiring surge are the rebound in oil prices, the need to rebuild after disasters such as Hurricanes Irma and Harvey, and rising demand generated by a growing economy.

“I could work from sunup to sundown seven days a week,” said Steve Klebenow, a 30-year-old who owns and operates Gallatin Valley Welding in Churchill, Montana, a town of fewer than 900 people that had only two roads — one of them dirt — when he was growing up.

As wealthy families from California, Oregon and Washington flood into the area looking for mountain views and a lower cost of living, the region is transformi­ng, and Klebenow is helping to build it.

Klebenow started welding at the tail end of the housing boom, while he was still in high school. After the recession hit, he went to North Dakota to weld pipes and build bridges in the oil fields. He reckons his part of the country is a few years behind the economic cycle on the East Coast.

“All I know right now is that we’re all busy. It’s going to stay that way for a couple years, and then it’s going to go back down,” he said at the end of another 12-hour day.

Job gains in smaller towns and rural areas accelerate­d last year, and continued to build in early 2018.

Rural employment grew at an annualized rate of 5.1 percent in the first quarter. Smaller metro areas grew 5.0 percent.

That’s significan­tly larger than the 4.1 percent growth seen in large urban areas that recovered earlier from the Great Recession, according to an analysis by the Brookings Institutio­n’s Metropolit­an Policy Program of a separate set of Labor Department data released on Wednesday.

In the past year, the economy has added 656,000 blue-collar jobs, compared to 1.7 million added in the services sector. But the rate of growth in blue-collar jobs is speeding up, while service-sector job growth has hovered around 1.3 percent over the past year.

“Small towns and rural America are finally winning a little,” said Mark Muro, a senior fellow at Brookings, but he added: “Very little of the favorable economic shift likely owes to President Trump’s erratic flailing and bluster.”

In a sign of revitaliza­tion in an area previously hit hard by the decline of coal and steel production, the Appalachia­n town of Ashland, Kentucky, recently broke ground on a new aluminum mill. Owned by Braidy Industries, the mill will eventually employ over 500 people.

Hiring has already started for constructi­on positions, and the local community college is training people for the high-tech manufactur­ing jobs.

“I had 24 cities and towns bid for this project. Ashland was by far the poorest of them all,” said Craig Bouchard, the chief executive of Braidy Industries. “I chose Appalachia for one reason: They have eight time more available metalworki­ng families than any other place in the country. I’ve already got 7,000 job applicatio­ns.”

For Michael Tackett, who has lived in eastern Kentucky all his life, the factory offers an unexpected second chance.

“This is massive for us. We’ve been in an economic downturn for years, actually decades, but this could bring an economic boom to the area,” said Tackett, who is program coordinato­r of the Advanced Integrated Technology program at Ashland Community and Technical College.

The good times might not last. Some economists warn the long-term trends still favor big cities and digitally focused industries. There are signs growth may be tapering off in some blue-collar sectors: Home sales have cooled this summer and manufactur­ers are fearful Trump’s trade war will erase their competitiv­e edge.

Still, the gains in goodsprodu­cing industries over the past year are wide-ranging, with a strong increase in oil and gas extraction, machinery manufactur­ing, transporta­tion equipment manufactur­ing, electrical equipment manufactur­ing and constructi­on.

Manufactur­ing output is near a record level and optimism is at an all-time high with over 95 percent of manufactur­ers reporting a “positive outlook” for their business, according to the latest survey by the National Associatio­n of Manufactur­ers.

“In 2016, manufactur­ing was close to a recession. We’ve come out of that with a lot of enthusiasm,” said Chad Moutray,” chief economist at NAM. He thinks there’s a good chance this turnaround lasts, largely because manufactur­ers held onto cash during the recession and global headwinds of 2015 and 2016. But now the “floodgates are open and you’re seeing a lot more activity,” he said.

An uptick in once-struggling areas could make a significan­t difference in voters’ perception­s of the economy since people tend to view growth relative to their own recent past, and their neighbors’ situation, Muro said.

Trump frequently touts manufactur­ing job growth since he took office as a sign he is delivering on his promises to grow good-paying jobs,

“This election is about jobs, it’s about safety and jobs,” Trump said at a rally Thursday in Montana.

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