County jobless rate inches up
Brian Walker | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 12 years AGO
POST FALLS - It was bound to turn soon.
After Kootenai County's jobless rate fell for seven straight months, it increased in March to 6.8 percent, according to a report released on Friday by Idaho Department of Labor.
The rate is up from 6.6 percent in February.
"The number of unemployed had dropped 3.7 percent from 6,739 in July 2012 to 4,822 in March," said Alivia Metts, regional labor economist.
Idaho's rate, meanwhile, remained unchanged in March at 6.2 percent, the result of the continuing decline in the labor force and caution on the part of the state's employers.
Nationally, unemployment dropped another tenth of a point in March to 7.6 percent. The national rate remained above the state rate for the 138th month - eleven and a half years.
Only three of the state's 44 counties posted double-digit unemployment rates in March - Shoshone (10.3), Benewah (10.5) and Clearwater (12.5). Twenty-four counties had rates under 6 percent.
Metts said local seasonal employment, including at Silverwood Theme Park, will likely be reflected more in next month's report.
"It really depends on the weather," she said.
A declining labor force has been the biggest factor recently in the job market, analysts say.
Another 1,400 people left Idaho's labor force in March, the largest one-month exodus since the heart of the recession three years ago and the third straight monthly decline, according to the report. More than 2,600 people have dropped out of Idaho's labor force since December 2012, leaving it at more than 772,000 and erasing any gains made since January 2012 when the economy was struggling to begin its recovery.
Idaho employers hired 13,000 workers in March for both new and replacement jobs - about 500 fewer than they hired in March 2012 and well below pre-recession hiring levels. While March's job creation was about twice the average during the past five years, it was below normal economic times, much less a robust recovery.
As a result, total employment fell for the second month in a row, dropping more than 600 to 724,500.
Government jobs continued contracting, albeit modestly during March. Government has been shedding jobs in the recession's aftermath as tax revenues tighten, the report states.
MORE IMPORTED STORIES
ARTICLES BY BRIAN WALKER

Two arrests made in heroin trafficking case
POST FALLS — Two Shoshone County men were arrested in a heroin trafficking case during a traffic stop on Interstate 90 at Post Falls last week.

Ingraham charged with first-degree murder
The 20-year-old nephew of a Post Falls man found dead in Boundary County in September has been charged with first-degree murder of his uncle.
Is arming teachers a good idea or over-reaction?
No movement in region to go that route to enhance school safety
While the idea of arming teachers, as a means to increase school safety, is catching on in some areas, there’s no such momentum in Kootenai County.