Another week of life during the COVID-19 outbreak, and unemployment continues to rise. Here’s a look at what happened between the weeks ended 5/2/20 and 5/9/20:
This is the list of the week’s metro areas with the highest unemployment rate:
#20: Norwich-New London, Connecticut | 42.79% (new to the top 20 this week)
#19: Hammond, Louisiana | 42.96% (#15 last week)
#18: Hinesville, Georgia | 44.11% (new to the top 20 this week)
#17: Elizabethtown-Fort Knox, Kentucky | 44.15% (#16 last week)
#16: Albany, Georgia | 45.13% (#19 last week)
#15: Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Roswell, Georgia | 45.66% (#18 last week)
#14: Columbus, Georgia-Alabama | 45.76% (#14 last week)
#13: Lexington-Fayette, Kentucky | 46.05% (#9 last week)
#12: Owensboro, Kentucky | 46.5% (#8 last week)
#11: Savannah, Georgia | 47.06% (#13 last week)
#10: Macon-Bibb County, Georgia | 47.35% (#11 last week)
#9: Brunswick, Georgia | 47.45% (#12 last week)
#8: Warner Robins, Georgia | 47.55% (#10 last week)
#7: Bowling Green, Kentucky | 47.75% (#6 last week)
#6: Rome, Georgia | 48.70% (#14 last week)
#5: Gainesville, Georgia | 50.13% (#5 last week)
#4: Kahului-Wailuku-Lahaina (Maui), Hawaii | 50.36% (#1 last week)
#3: Valdosta, Georgia | 50.4% (#4 last week)
#2: Athens-Clarke County, Georgia | 51.84% (#3 last week)
#1: Dalton, Georgia | 53.51% (#2 last week)
A few notes:
This is the list of the week’s micropolitan areas with the highest unemployment rate:
#20: Bardstown, Kentucky | 44.2% (new to the top 20 this week)
#19: Waycross, Georgia | 44.6% (new to the top 20 this week)
#18: Americus, Georgia | 44.8% (new to the top 20 this week)
#17: Dublin, Georgia | 45.9% (new to the top 20 this week)
#16 (tied): Toccoa, Georgia (new to the top 20 this week); Milledgeville, Georgia (new to the top 20 this week); Campbellsville, Kentucky (#13 last week); Summerville, Georgia (new to the top 20 this week); Glasgow, Kentucky (#12 last week) | 46.2%
#15 (tied): Tifton, Georgia (new to the top 20 this week); Middlesborough, Kentucky (#11 last week) | 46.3%
#14: Danville, Kentucky | 46.5% (#10 last week)
#13: Somerset, Kentucky | 46.6% (#9 last week)
#12: St. Marys, Georgia | 46.9% (#20 last week)
#11: London, Kentucky; Thomaston, Georgia | 47.0% (#8 last week)
#10: Richmond-Berea, Kentucky; Calhoun, Georgia | 47.2% (#7 last week)
#9: Mount Sterling, Kentucky | 47.3% (#6 last week)
#8 (tied): Cornelia, Georgia (#15 last week); Thomasville, Georgia (#14 last week) | 47.6%
#7: Douglas, Georgia | 47.7% (#15 last week)
#6: LaGrange, Georgia | 49.1% (#7 last week)
#5: Murray, Kentucky | 49.3% (#4 last week)
#4: Cedartown, Georgia | 50.6% (#5 last week)
#3: Statesboro, Georgia | 50.7% (#3 last week)
#2: Cordele, Georgia | 52.4% (#2 last week)
#1: Kapaa (Kauai), Hawaii | 54.3% (#1 last week)
A few notes:
Unemployment figures offer useful information in many ways. The more you know about where your potential workforce is, the better you can plan ahead. As you think ahead to the rest of this year and what it might bring, contact SiteSeer. We offer a full suite of site selection, market planning, mapping and other tools that can help you make intelligent, data-driven decisions about where to expand and locate your next store or site. Request a demo today.
Thanks to our data partner, Applied Geographic Solutions, we’re offering free unemployment data as a layer in SiteSeer. We’ll be updating the top metropolitan and micropolitan areas in the country every week here on the SiteSeer blog during the coronavirus pandemic. Want to learn more? Contact us!