7 minute read
Employment numbers bring good news for Colorado
from 6-22-23 Villager
by The Villager
BY FREDA MIKLIN STAFF WRITER
In a June 15 press release, the Colorado Department of Labor & Employment (CDLE) reports that the state’s unemployment rate in May remained at 2.8%, where it has been for the past year, other than three months when it varied to 2.7% or 2.9%.
CDLE noted that, in contrast, “The national unemployment rate increased three-tenths of a percentage point to 3.7% between April and May (2023).”
Labor force participation in Colorado’s rose to 68.7% in May, slightly ahead of April’s rate of 68.6%, while the nationwide quotient held steady at 62.6%, 6.1% beneath that of Colorado, CDLE tells us.
The actual number of Coloradans employed in May was 3,154,500, which approximates the number from January 2020, just before the pandemic.
Colorado Jobs and Labor Force Update, a June 16 report from the Common Sense Institute (CSI), a local nonprofit nonpartisan research group focused on the state’s economy, authored by CSI Research Analysts Cole Anderson and Erik Gamm, says that, as of May 2023, “Colorado’s leisure and hospitality sector has added the most jobs of any private sector industry, adding 8,600 jobs cumulatively in April and May, and, “With 91,700 jobs added in the 26 months from January 2021 to May 2023, that sector is up 3%, or 10,500 jobs above its January 2020 pre-pandemic level.
Overall, CSI tells us, our state’s, “Total employment level is up 2.41% (78,600 jobs) above the pre-pandemic level,” although even those numbers result in Colorado ranking 20th among all states in terms of May 2023 job levels relative to January 2020. That is good news for our state and even better news for our country.
On a less positive note, Anderson and Gamm tell us that, “Since January 2020, employment in the mining and logging sector has decreased by 18.7%, reducing its share of state employment by 20.9%, though this is likely the result of a combi- nation of global trends and state policy.”
They also share that, as of the end of both April and May, the U.S. Census Bureau’s Bureau of Labor Statistics household survey reports that, overall, “Colorado has recovered to its pre-pandemic
Supporting older adults employment level.”
Finally, it will surprise no one to hear that, “As a share of Colorado’s total employment, the professional and business services sector has grown by almost 7.3% since the start of 2020,” according to the CSI report. In a presentation to CSI’s
Eggs and the Economy Group on June 16, CSI Senior Economist Steve Byers, Ph.D, said that the professional and business services sector, “saw the most job growth (+45,700 jobs) and is equal to 58.14% of Colorado’s total job growth.” fmiklin.villager@gmail.com
The Arapahoe County Council on Aging (ACCoA)advocates for the older adults in our community by supporting funding opportunities and promoting programs and services for our residents.
Check out upcoming events and programs at accoa.info
I enjoyed visiting with my three daughters and son on Father’s Day. ! am blessed to have four wonderful children who have grown to be successful, talented, and caring adults. All live in the area, and their mother and I enjoy their company, along with keeping track of our two grandchildren, who are super busy building careers and a third one, who will be a senior in high school next year seeking out college opportunities.
BY BOB SWEENEY
While all four of our children have been involved in the publishing business, my grandchildren have “left the farm,” so to speak and are pursuing other occupations. One possible reason for this is that they witnessed their parents and grandparents working 7/24 in the newspaper business and chose to pursue other careers. Believe me, the news business is a demanding lifestyle of writing stories, going to meetings, taking messages, and staying abreast of current events. Most of our readers have no idea what it takes to round up news on a short deadline and publish it all correctly on deadline. I’ve loved the business for over 6 decades and I like the involvement with people from all walks of life.
Newspapers record and write history as it happens, witnessing the events and writing about the people involved. We have bound volumes of all the newspapers that we have every printed in our long careers. In my hometown of Craig, the volumes have been given to the local museum.
In Gilpin County, where we own and operate the oldest newspaper in Colorado, started in 1862, the newspaper volumes are stored safely in mayor Spellman’s office, never to leave the county. The “ancient” documents contain some of the best history about early-day history when we were just a Kansas territory. Gold was discovered in 1859, and miners arrived by the thousands seeking fortunes. Early-day newspapers flourished, but only the Weekly Register-Call remains as a historic treasure. News reports last week relate that The Pueblo Chieftain, the oldest daily newspaper in Colorado, started in 1867, was closing it’s printing plant and would print at the Denver Post plant. They currently print 72 publications who will have to relocate to the few remaining newspaper print sites. This may impact some of the Colorado Media publications that print in Pueblo. We print our newspapers in Berthoud that is the Loveland press operated by Prairie Mountain, a division of The Denver Post
In the old days newspapers would run news from the little communities in the circulation territory. The news items were sent to the newspaper by rural, resident reporters who knew what was happening, who went to town, who had Sunday dinners, who got married, and who died. These items were printed under the headings, Maybell News, Lay News, Hamilton News, Baggs Wyoming News, et. al. It all came together when the editor read the letters and gave them to the linotype operator, who would set the stories in lead type and prepared the pages for the newspaper printing press.
After the Watergate scandal, and the rise of investigative reporting, news focused more on government and less on Sunday dinners, and who went to town on Saturday afternoons.
Hungry for local news, it gave rise to talk radio and eventually the rise of social media that we live with today. Being somewhat old-fashioned at our newspapers we still like to cover events and report on local people. Obituaries about friends and neighbors are also appreciated by family and friends. Did you ever think about the fact that newspapers report on your birth and your death? That’s quite a responsibility and it’s been said with some truth “That is the only time you want your name to appear in print.” However, mainly that applies to police reports. Otherwise, our news stories adorn many refrigerator doors and scrapbooks to this day. The printed word lasts forever and is not going away, even with the world of technology.
Some years back a young lady called me to ask not to print her name in the police report on a minor traffic incident. “Please don’t print my name in the paper she said, “my dad doesn’t know about the ticket.” What she didn’t know is that we didn’t print minor’s names anyway, but I agreed to not print her name if she would tell her father about the incident. She agreed, and her name never appeared. Another incident occurred in Hayden, Co. where our editor of the Hayden Valley Press went elk hunting out of season with some friends. Back in the 1960s it was not a heinous crime like today. They were successful and were apprehended by a game warden with a minor fine, but a news story. My guilty editor asked that we leave it out of the newspaper, I responded, “No Nick, not only that, but we’re going to put it on the front page for all to see. You are not above the law.” Where have we heard that phrase recently?
He was angry about the decision, but the story appeared in his hometown paper. He framed the story and placed it on the wall above his desk. Down through the years, when someone didn’t like a story or wanted it out of the newspaper, he would point to the story on the wall and say, “No dice, what was good enough for me is good enough for you.”
He thanked me in time for the decision and the story quickly went away. Transparency in the news business is essential for all. Local newspapers have always been the best source for accurate news reporting because we’re part of the community. Today, with so many sources of information, it is difficult to sort fact from fiction. I worry about what will happen if newspapers disappear and only Facebook, blogs, and social media continue with personal bias and opinions. News sources have become partisan and fragmented.
I had one other experience in my old hometown of Craig, where I cut my teeth in the newspaper world. The week of Christmas, I had a call from a weeping woman. The wife of a male classmate of mine had drifted into alcoholism leaving his wife and two children in poverty. She related that she had been apprehended at the local grocery store stealing toys for her children. The report arrived from the local police report, but I didn’t print her name. I still feel good about that decision, right or wrong. In small towns one’s name and reputation mean a great deal.
Father’s Day is a time to remember family and friends. It is a great day to honor fathers and share family time together.
EDITOR
Gerri Sweeney gerri@villagerpublishing.com
PUBLISHER
Robert Sweeney bsween1@aol.com
CREATIVE MARKETING DIRECTOR
Susan Sweeney Lanam 720-270-2018 susan@villagerpublishing.com
VICE PRESIDENT/MARKETING
Sharon Sweeney sharon@villagerpublishing.com
LEGALS
Becky Osterwald legal@villagerpublishing.com
NEWS EDITOR Gerri Sweeney 303-773-8313 gerri@villagerpublishing.com
GOVERNMENTAL REPORTER Freda Miklin fmiklin.villager@gmail.com 303-489-4900
REPORTER Robert Sweeney bsween1@aol.com
FASHION & LIFESTYLE Scottie Iverson swan@denverswan.com
DESIGN/PRODUCTION MANAGER
Tom McTighe production@villagerpublishing.com
ADVERTISING CONSULTANTS
Susan Lanam — 720-270-2018 susan@villagerpublishing.com
Sharon Sweeney — 303-503-1388
Gerri Sweeney — 720-313-9751 gerri@villagerpublishing.com
Scottie Iverson swan@denverswan.com
Linda Kehr — 303-881-9469 linda@villagerpublishing.com
Valerie LeVier — 303-773-8313 valerie@villagerpublishing.com
SUBSCRIPTIONS
Susan 720-270-2018
PHOTOGRAPHER
Stefan Krusze — 303-717-8282 octaviangogoI@aol.com
EDITORIAL COLUMNIST
Robert Sweeney bsween1@aol.com
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Reverend Martin Niemoller
“In Germany, the Nazis first came for the communists and I didn’t speak up because wasn’t a communist. Then they came for the Jews and didn’t speak up because I wasn’t a Jew. Then they came for the trade unionists and didn’t speak up because wasn’t a trade unionist. Then they came for the Catholics and I didn’t speak up because was a Protestant. Then they came for me and by that time there was no one left to speak for me!”
2020 Member