Really, we haven't seen much change since May.
It depends on what measure of size you're looking at. Is it payroll? Is it employment? Is it industrial output?
Jobs are growing just fast enough to absorb the new entrants into the labor market but no faster.
We're not throwing darts at a dart board. There is a methodology that's been developed over the last 30 or 40 years.
With a different model and a different analyst, two different studies will come up with different figures.
The taxes on businesses are generating substantial funds.
We wanted to do something as a couple.
We like to have work zones as safe as possible. As a union we are here to do what we can to make work life better.
A lot of the wholesale (jobs) increase is not just serving this area, but areas nationwide.
Employers seem to be prospering, businesses seem to be doing well, but they're not hiring as many additional folks as what we'd would like to see.
After they are out there for 90 to 100 days, we can go back to the city and find out what worked for them and do some fine tuning.
Clearly, this is a part of the state that is doing really well right now, in terms of manufacturing and just about every thing else.
For some of them, it's pretty straightforward. Like manufacturing. That's its own classification in the employment statistics.