Yuma Sun

Jobless rates for Yuma, state tick up

People entering workforce outstrip jobs created

- BY HOWARD FISCHER CAPITOL MEDIA SERVICES AND MARA KNAUB SUN STAFF WRITER

In Yuma County, the seasonally adjusted jobless rate in February experience­d an uptick from the previous month, which was recorded at 11.8% rate. But it was still less than the same time a year ago when the rate was 12.0%, as reported by the Arizona Office of Economic Opportunit­y.

The number of people who sought help finding a job rose in February over the previous month, according to the Arizona@Work Yuma County Career Centers. The centers were visited by 1,843 job seekers during the month of January compared to 2,161 in February of 2020. These numbers include virtual contacts, noted Mariana Martinez, the engagement liaison for Arizona@Work based in San Luis, Arizona.

Arizona’s seasonally adjusted jobless rate ticked up two-tenths of a point last month as the state continues its efforts to recover from the pandemic-caused hit to the economy.

The 6.9% figure comes as the Office of Economic Opportunit­y reports the state added 17,100 jobs between January and February, including 13,500 in the private sector.

At the same time, though, the number of people entering the workforce far outstrippe­d the number of jobs created. That sent the unemployme­nt rate up.

But Doug Walls, the agency’s labor market informatio­n director, said that’s a good sign.

“You see individual­s more

optimistic about their opportunit­ies or new population­s coming to the state and joining the workforce,’’ he said.

Still, the number of Arizonans working is 122,300 less than the same time a year ago, with losses pretty much across the board.

The one notable exception is in the segment of the economy that includes transporta­tion and warehousin­g, much of that composed of the online shopping sites that Arizonans turned to during the COVID-19 restrictio­ns and the trucks that delivered the items. It has added 18,800 jobs in the past year, a 16.8% increase.

All that, however, comes at the expense of many brick and mortar retailers.

Employment at department stores now is 12.2% less than a year earlier. And more than one job out of every five at stores that sell clothing and accessorie­s are gone.

Also continuing to struggle is the state’s leisure and hospitalit­y industry.

There are some signs of life.

Bars and restaurant­s added 2,500 workers in February. But that’s still 31,000 below where they were a year ago.

And while hotels and resorts hired 400 more people last month, total employment is still a third less than the same time last year.

Walls said he could not predict how much of that might change in the wake of the decision by Gov. Doug Ducey to lift all restrictio­ns on businesses. But he said there are indication­s, at least on the national level, that things may get better.

One of those is the number of people who are flying.

In early March of last year, the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion was clocking nearly 2.2 million travelers a day. That dropped to fewer

than 105,000 a month later.

And while there have been some ups and downs this year, the latest figure is more than 1.5 million daily.

The other indicator is how many people are going to restaurant­s.

OpenTable, an online restaurant reservatio­ns firm, watched the number of diners evaporate entirely in the first two months of the pandemic.

It still is below where

it was in early February 2020. But Arizona reservatio­ns are down from that level by just 22.8% compared with 40% nationally.

Elsewhere in the economy, Walls reports a continued upward trend in the number of permits granted for new private housing units in Arizona.

Overall, Walls said Arizona has regained about 64% of the jobs it has lost since the beginning of the recession.

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