STORYLINE Overweight Police?

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Will the Construction Market Continue to Slide in Sac?

by Manny Miramontes, published on June 15, 2009 at 12:50 AM

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The construction market in Sacramento is at a 16 year low. Unemployment rates are continuing to rise in 2009 and what may seem like “light at the end of a tunnel” is beginning to be going out.

After the financial meltdown in the fall, private financing for construction has almost disappeared. That has left contractors scrambling for public works projects until the financial markets get right again.

According to a recent article in www.californiaconstruction.com, it is estimated that next year at this time, the California Construction Top Projects list may feature road projects, military work and public office buildings instead of retail centers, hotels and office complexes. Contractors in Sacramento are being affected with the types of projects they are building, how they bid and the bids of their competitors.

Another thing is clear: companies that are prepared to work on public projects, especially with more federal stimulus projects being available this summer, will be in much better shape than those who have relied on privately-funded infrastructure.

Joe Bean, a human resource manager for Teichert Construction, a “big player” in the Sacramento area, says, “The construction industry is cyclical. It typically booms for about seven years, then slumps from one to two years. However this last upswing lasted about 12 years of the market being good and some believe, we might have to accept the market to be bad a little longer than usual.”

Advice for the current contractor? Bid smart! Take into consideration prevailing wages and be efficient when constructing. Even if the profit margins are lower, keep work active for employees relying on you to make ends meet. And until the financial markets become stable again, pick your projects carefully and strive for public projects.

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June 15, 2009 | 9:39 AM
Manny, this is an interesting story, and covers an area we would like to have covered in much greater detail and depth. I would encourage you to continue looking into the construction field, particularly downtown and the city center, and tell us more about what you find. It's a crucial part of our economy, and one that will most likely signal our return to normalcy.
As an aside, this story showed up in the "Overweight Cops" story you posted awhile back. You can create a new Storyline - construction industry, or construction issues, or something like that - and post future stories under that Storyline, so that readers can go see everything you've written on that subject.
We hope that you write many more stories on that subject!
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June 16, 2009 | 10:50 AM
As a reporter for California Construction and Engineering News-Record, I can tell you that I am hearing bids on everything from roads to wastewater treatment are coming in as much as 30 percent under estimates. Because of the shovel-ready requirements in the ARRA stimulus funds, many are sped up timelines on projects that would have started later in the year or next year, but some - including smart signs on Sacramento freeways - are projects that might have languished on the shelf for many years without a funding source. The hope is that state dollars freed up by the federal funds will be used to refill the pipeline with designed, approved projects that can be funded with a second round of stimulus or saved local dollars so it isn't a one-time hit.
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