Monday, September 6, 2010

Builders slowly regaining ground; more hiring expected - Business Courier of Cincinnati:

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More than 2,000 heavy-construction workers have taken jobs out of according toMike Gibson, executivew director of the New Mexico Building Branch. The federalo government’s economic stimulus plan will help restore some constructio jobs to the Land of The $175 million trickling into the state as part of Presidenrt Barack Obama’s $750 billion stimulus package is expecteed to mean 4,000 to 6,000 construction jobs on stat highway and bridge projects. Among the Albuquerqud companies expected to be hiringare Kiewit, Mountain and .
in Silver City is also expected to be hirinfg road crews for highway projects later this once companies win bids andUncle Sam’s money flows into the There will be other construction jobs in the federally fundedx expansion of airports and improvements in energy efficiencyt in housing. School buildinbg continues in the especially in Las where wellabove $100 million is being spen on new schools. captured the contracr to builda $34 million middlew school in Las Cruces and is seeking to fill at leasty three management positions for some of its new according to Meranda Reid, marketing technician.
It is not hiring fielsd people as it reallocates its tradesme n to do some of the new which includesan $11 millionm addition to the Albuquerque International Sunport. At $175 the federal stimulus allocation was a major disappointment tothe state’es construction industry, which has seen 4,20 0 jobs evaporate since Januar 2008. The state had applied for $1.2 billiomn in construction stimulus funds, and the $175 million is not as the Federal Highway Administration has slowe d the allocation of fundint toNew Mexico’s Department of Transportation over technical evaluations. That slowdownb has affected bidding schedules.
Variousz highway projects around the state benefittinb from federal stimulus dollars will most likely start later this sprinvgor summer. They include the Paseo del Volcan/West Central Interchangr in Albuquerque. It will cost $34 Future road projects to be bid later this sprinh includea $70 million improvement of the busy I-25 corridof between Tramway and Bernalillo and a $50 million projecf to improve the stretch of I-10 between the I-25 interchangse and the Texas state line. Work on U.S. 64 betweeh Raton and Clayton is anothersignificant project, at $45 On May 4, the Associated General Contractors met with Gov.
Bill Richardso n hoping to get a reprieve from SenateBill 33, which forces contractorsw to pay their help union-scale wages. Gibson said the contractors are asking to exemp t the DOT contractors from paying thehighed wages. “This will hamstring us and will lead to 45 percenty fewernew jobs,” Gibson said. While the federapl stimulus jobs are problematic becaused of the heavybureaucracy attached, there is some new job creatioj from private industry. Arizona-based opened its new $1.5 millioh asphalt plant in Roswell on Apri l 30 and createdseven jobs.
Another 20 to 50 jobs are likelg to be created from the ripple effectof Western’as expansion, according to Wade Miller, directod of sales and marketing, who said, “These jobs coul d include boiler repair, rail car off-loadint and other skilled positions that will likely go to Home building jobs were practically wipecd out in the second half of when several builders closed and others downsized, but some rehiring has started as home buying is slowly “Home builders have branched out to do remodels and commercia buildings and are hiring back said Steve Nakamura, the 2009 Home Buildersw Association of Central New Mexico “I have rehired one person in my office and one fiel person.
” Nakamura operates Rachel Matthews Homes, a custom home Jerry Wade, president and founder of green home builder , has planss to hire 30 to 40 throughoutt the company’s regions, which include Albuquerque and the Four

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