The state shed 4,300 jobs in July — the most since 2021.
As the rest of the U.S. continues to add jobs, though at an increasingly slower rate, Oregon just saw its unemployment rate hit a post-pandemic high as major employers continue to shed positions.
Oregon employers dropped 2,700 non-farm jobs in July, bringing the state’s unemployment rate to 5%, according to the latest figures released by the Oregon Employment Department. Over the past year, the state has lost 24,600 jobs, for a 1.2% decline.
The financial activities sector was hit hard with 2,700 jobs lost, as was business services, which lost 1,400. Private health care and social assistance — which have held steady nationwide — were also down in Oregon, losing 1,100 jobs in July.
Manufacturing saw the steepest decline of any sector in July, with 9,400 jobs lost or a decrease of 5%.
The overall state economic picture looks weaker, state employment economist Gail Krumenauer said at a news conference last week, adding that vacancies remain stable at pre-pandemic levels.
“Unemployment continues to rise in Oregon,” she said. “We’ve seen little change from month to month but the bigger effect has been a slight increase in the unemployment rate from 4.3% at the end of last year to 5%.”
A number of high-profile Oregon employers have trimmed staff this year. They include Intel, which has eliminated 3,700 jobs in Oregon over two rounds of layoffs. Wells Fargo has cut 700 jobs in the state.
Bright spots include the field of construction, which added 2,900 jobs in July. And though it was down last month, health care and social assistance have added 10,000 jobs year-to-date, more than any other sector. And leisure and hospitality has added 2,000 jobs.
Oregon’s 5% unemployment rate is higher than the national rate of 4.2%, which is unchanged from a year ago.
Oregon’s labor force participation rate — the percent of those above age 16 who are employed or looking for work — kept steady at 62.8%.
Earlier this month, Trump fired Erika McEntarfer, former commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, after the latest revisions showed job growth slowed considerably in the U.S. this summer. Krumenauer told Oregon Business the agency will continue to provide data to the BLS.
“Those collaborative and really positive working relationships still exist and they’re still functioning,” she said.
For years, claimants in Oregon have endured long wait times to settle unemployment claims and receive assistance from staff. Issues with the state’s online tax and benefit system, Frances, came to a head during the pandemic when unemployment in Oregon spiked at 14% and many newly out-of-work Oregonians sought assistance.
OED has experienced considerable change as of late. Longtime agency head Dave Gerstenfeld left in June to become Gov. Tina Kotek’s revenue director. Gerstenfeld’s replacement, Andrew Stolfi, previously served as director of Consumer and Business Services, and for the past seven years, as a state insurance commissioner.
Kotek has given Stolfi a set of expectations for his first 150 days, he told reporters at a news conference in July. Chief among those expectations are to conduct an agencywide review to improve service and efficiency and oversee upgrades to Frances and the agency’s customer service operations.
Stolfi has already made a few key personnel changes, promoting Karen Madden Humelbaugh to deputy director and creating a new position — agency chief of staff — filled by former Kotek advisor Sarah Foster.
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