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Reshaping the Construction Industry

Construction pay rises at fastest rate since 2008, BLS finds; cost reports for July varyEditor’s note: Construction Citizen is proud to partner with AGC America to bring you AGC Chief Economist Ken Simonson's Data DIGest. Check back each week to get Ken's expert analysis of what's happening in our industry.Compensation costs (wages, salaries and benefits, including required employer payments such as unemployment and workers compensation) in private industry in the second quarter of 2016 (Q2) increased 0.6%, seasonally adjusted (and also 0.6% in Q1), and 2.4% over 12 months, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported today. Wages and salaries rose 0.6% in Q2 (vs. 0.7% in Q1) and 2.6% over 12 months. Compensation in construction increased 0.8% in Q2 (vs. 0.5% in Q1) and 2.5% over 12 months, the largest three- and 12-month increases since 2008.   
Ken Simonson's picture
August 01, 2016
Hi there. The Chamberlin Man here.Man alive! During those last few weeks of late spring to early summer, the rain had really been coming down. Widespread flooding had been headline news. Plus, many homes and businesses experienced water infiltration from the top down.Fact of the matter is the incidence of roof failure rises with the rain gauge, too. And a roof failure can be devastating to interior finishes and costly to repair. Not to mention the potential cost of replacing inventory or belongings lost to a wet mess.It’s bad news!  So allow me to share a silver lining.  While you certainly can’t control how much rain falls from the sky, there are measures within your control to help prevent roof leaks and failures.  
The Chamberlin Man's picture
July 29, 2016
In the construction industry, productivity and profit are always doing a dance. They are always partners no matter whether your firm is a global giant or a local sub. Whether productivity and profit perform well enough to make it onto the professional stage or just at the local club depends on both productivity and profit doing a well-choreographed performance. If the productivity on the jobsite is good, then your profit is likely better. If your work crews are not performing and productive, then your profits are likely not performing well either.McKinsey & Company recently did a study authored by members of their team titled “Beating the low-productivity trap: How to transform construction operations” that focuses on 30 major UK infrastructure engineering and construction firms over the decade from 2005-2015 to measure their growth and to determine whether they either performed or underperformed in their markets.Even though this study was about infrastructure engineering and construction firms centered in the UK, the points made and the tips offered can apply to every company doing the productivity-profit dance, no matter what your size, should “read and heed.”  
Jim Kollaer's picture
July 28, 2016
A construction foreman working at a jobsite next to a children’s hospital created an 8-foot “Waldo” and placed it at various locations on the site for the amusement of the patients.
Elizabeth McPherson's picture
July 27, 2016
A tough city ordinance in Philadelphia is so strict against employers who commit wage theft, that some have criticized it as “draconian.”  Others have applauded the city’s aggressive stance.
Scott Braddock's picture
July 26, 2016
June construction jobs grow year-over-year in 39 states; starts are mixed, Dodge saysEditor’s note: Construction Citizen is proud to partner with AGC America to bring you AGC Chief Economist Ken Simonson's Data DIGest. Check back each week to get Ken's expert analysis of what's happening in our industry.Seasonally adjusted construction employment rose in 39 states from June 2015 to June 2016 and declined in 11 states and the District of Columbia, an AGC analysis of Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) data released today showed. The highest percentage gains again occurred in Hawaii (16%, 5,500 jobs), Iowa (16%, 12,200), Oklahoma (8.9%, 6,900), Arizona (8.7%, 11,000) and Nevada (8.7%, 6,000). Iowa and Oklahoma set new records. California again added the most jobs (32,300 jobs, 4.5%), followed by Florida (25,500, 5.9%), Colorado (13,200, 8.9%), Washington (12,500, 8.9%), Iowa and Georgia (12,200, 7.3%). North Dakota again lost the highest percentage and number of construction jobs (-12%, -4,300), followed in percentage lost by Wyoming (-6.6%, -1,500), Maine (-6.5%, -1,700), and Kansas (-6.1%, -3,700), and followed in number of jobs lost by Kansas and Alabama (-2,100, -2.6%). From May to June, seasonally adjusted construction employment increased in 23 states and D.C., shrank in 25 states, and was unchanged in Illinois and Vermont.  
Ken Simonson's picture
July 25, 2016
As Kiley muses about the character of the two presumptive nominees in this year’s presidential election, he says proudly that “character still counts in the construction industry.”
Pat Kiley's picture
July 22, 2016
How do we fix a problem born from the business practice where a contractor must be the lowest bidder in order to win work?  C3 offers an owner-driven strategy.
Chuck Gremillion's picture
July 21, 2016
The Construction Citizen team is interested to see what long-term effect the recent vote by the Brits to leave the European Union will have on the building industry in the U.K. So far, there is no doubt things will be worse at least in the short term.Via Bloomberg News:Building output fell 2.1 percent in May, almost double the decline forecast in a Bloomberg survey of economists, figures from the Office for National Statistics showed Friday. There were falls in almost every category of work, with private housing down the most in more than a year.  
Scott Braddock's picture
July 20, 2016
Hi there. The Chamberlin Man here.A project doesn’t have to be large in scale to present challenges that require attention to detail, expertise and teamwork.  In fact, May’s Chamberlin News covers a project that didn’t cover a particularly large amount of square footage but still required the team at Chamberlin Roofing & Waterproofing to employ all its assets.The details made all the difference at INTEGRIS Baptist Medical Center in Oklahoma City, where Chamberlin installed waterproofing to a split slab condition at the hospital entrance, leaving the area watertight and the medical equipment protected in the basement below.  The project took just two weeks thanks to a little overtime and an effective phasing solution initiated by Chamberlin.  
The Chamberlin Man's picture
July 19, 2016