Boston Herald

Unemployme­nt rises, Mass. sits on ARPA funds

- BY STATE HOUSE NEWS SERVICE

The statewide unemployme­nt rate rose from 5% to 5.2% in September, while employers reported adding 11,900 jobs last month, labor officials announced Friday.

September’s unemployme­nt rate was the highest in Massachuse­tts since the 6.4% reported in April, and it landed more than 3 percentage points below the 8.9% labor officials recorded a year ago.

Job growth rebounded somewhat from the revised figure of 3,400 positions reported in August, though the pace of growth remains middling.

Since May 2020, Massachuse­tts has added 474,700 jobs, clawing back 72% of the losses experience­d in April 2020 amid the COVID-19 crisis.

The largest industry-specific gains in September occurred in education and health services (6,400 jobs), other services (5,300), trade, transporta­tion and utilities (3,900) and leisure and hospitalit­y (3,300).

Constructi­on, profession­al and business services, and government all shed positions last month.

Gov. Charlie Baker has been pushing lawmakers to invest a substantia­l portion of state government’s $4.8 billion in remaining American Rescue Plan Act funding toward workforce training and other economic developmen­t initiative­s.

Legislativ­e leaders are still working on an ARPA spending bill, which is expected in the new few weeks, and have also yet to produce a plan to allocate $1.5 billion in unobligate­d tax revenues left over from fiscal 2021.

 ?? NANCY LANE / HERALD STAFF ?? STILL NO ARPA: The state added the most jobs in education and health services, and other services in September.
NANCY LANE / HERALD STAFF STILL NO ARPA: The state added the most jobs in education and health services, and other services in September.

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