President Barack Obama proposed a $3.8 trillion budget on …
Ida Warfield, of Detroit, views an application while attending a job fair in Detroit Wednesday, Feb. 10, 2010. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)
Ida Warfield, of Detroit, views an application while attending a job fair in Detroit Wednesday, Feb. 10, 2010. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)
Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc. says it is cutting nearly half of…
Updated: Wednesday, 10 Mar 2010, 7:28 PM CST
Published : Wednesday, 10 Mar 2010, 12:43 PM CST
WASHINGTON (AP) - Unemployment rose in 30 states in January, the Labor Department
said Wednesday, evidence that jobs remain scarce in most regions of
the country.
The data is somewhat better than December, when 43 states
reported higher unemployment rates, but worse than November, when
rates fell in most states.
Still, five states reported record-high joblessness in
January: California, at 12.5 percent; South Carolina, 12.6 percent;
Florida, 11.9 percent; North Carolina, 11.1 percent; and Georgia,
10.4 percent.
Michigan's unemployment rate is still the nation's highest,
at 14.3 percent, followed by Nevada, with 13 percent and Rhode
Island at 12.7 percent. South Carolina and California round out the
top five.
There were some signs of job creation. Thirty-one states
added jobs in January, up from only 11 in the previous month. But
the job gains weren't enough, in many cases, to lower the
unemployment rate.
For example, California reported the largest job gains, of
32,500, though its unemployment rate also rose. Illinois, New York,
Washington state and Minnesota reported the next highest totals of
new jobs.
The lowest unemployment rates are still found in upper Plains
states, with North Dakota's jobless rate of 4.2 percent the lowest
in the nation. Nebraska and South Dakota had the next lowest rates,
at 4.6 percent and 4.8 percent, respectively.
In January, the national unemployment rate fell to 9.7
percent from 10 percent the previous month. Last week, the Labor
Department said the national rate was unchanged in February at 9.7
percent, a better reading than most analysts expected.
State unemployment data for February won't be released until
later this month.
Here are the states with the highest and lowest jobless rates:
Higest Jobless Rates:
Lowest jobless rates: