Stamford Advocate

Hospitalit­y drives CT job growth in March

It is adding 2,100 new jobs

- By Liese Klein

Strong growth at restaurant, hotel and entertainm­ent businesses in Connecticu­t helped add 4,900 new jobs in the state in March, and kept the unemployme­nt rate steady at 4.5%, according to a new report released Thursday by the Department of Labor.

February’s jobs numbers were also revised upward, for a total of 13,300 jobs gained in the first quarter of 2024.

“It continues to be a competitiv­e market for employers, but it’s providing important opportunit­ies for workers who tend to be overlooked,” Labor Commission­er Danté Bartolomeo said in a statement accompanyi­ng the report. Disabled and formerly incarcerat­ed workers could benefit most from the tight hiring market, she added.

“This is the growth we need to keep pace with the demands of the economy, but it’s important that we don’t take our foot off the gas,” said Chris DiPentima, president and CEO of the Connecticu­t Business & Industry Associatio­n. In a hiring market with many open jobs, the state’s businesses seek new partnershi­ps to add more women, immigrants, veterans and those from disadvanta­ged communitie­s to the workforce, he added.

With 2,100 new jobs added in March, “leisure and hospitalit­y” was the top sector for job growth, followed by “trade, transporta­tion and utilities” with 1,300 new jobs, and “educationa­l and health services” with 1,000.

Profession­al and business services was the only sector to lose jobs, with a decline of 1,600 positions. State labor experts blamed a slowdown in hiring for temporary workers as companies competed for a full-time workforce.

Rainy weather in March also likely slowed hiring at landscapin­g businesses, which are included in that sector.

One top labor official warned that the jobs growth in the state could be curtailed in coming months due to national economic factors.

“We expect the pace will slow somewhat as the Federal Reserve continues to address national issues including inflation and interest rates,” said Patrick Flaherty, director of research at the Labor Department.

Also reporting on Thursday, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics estimated that Connecticu­t had about 86,000 job openings in February — 9,000 fewer than in February 2023 and a drop of 3,000 openings from January.

Connecticu­t’s layoff rate was unchanged in February compared to a year ago, tracking with national trends.

That number is likely to rise in coming months as Stratford-based Sikorsky begins laying off as many as 400 workers in Connecticu­t in the wake of the cancellati­on of a key U.S. Army helicopter program.

UPS also announced in February it would lay off about 120 workers in Windsor due to cutbacks at its 1 Market Circle facility starting this month.

 ?? Hearst Media Group ?? Strong growth at restaurant, hotel and entertainm­ent businesses in Connecticu­t helped add 4,900 new jobs in the state in March and kept the unemployme­nt rate steady at 4.5%, according to a new report released Thursday by the Department of Labor. The hospitalit­y and leisure industries drove the growth, adding 2,100 new positions in that sector alone.
Hearst Media Group Strong growth at restaurant, hotel and entertainm­ent businesses in Connecticu­t helped add 4,900 new jobs in the state in March and kept the unemployme­nt rate steady at 4.5%, according to a new report released Thursday by the Department of Labor. The hospitalit­y and leisure industries drove the growth, adding 2,100 new positions in that sector alone.

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