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McHenry County employment picture evolving

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Potential employees fill out online Walmart applications at the McHenry County Workforce Network. (Shaw Media file photo)

WOODSTOCK – Despite lower unemployment rates, McHenry County's job outlook remains muted.

Unemployment stood at 7.5 percent in November, down from 8.7 percent from the prior year. In September, the rate had fallen to 7 percent, the lowest since December 2008, when it was 7 percent.

But those figures mask some of the challenges area businesses and workers could face in the coming years, according to a report by the McHenry County Workforce Network Board.

Businesses throughout McHenry County are expected to hire more workers, but they may not have enough skilled laborers as older workers retire and younger workers are retrained.

McHenry County's manufacturing sector, which accounts for 16.7 percent of all jobs in the county, will likely continue to shrink.

Though other industries, such as health care, could see double-digit growth, many of those new jobs will pay less, according to the 2012 McHenry County Labor Report, released in the fall.

There were 16,767 manufacturing jobs in the county in 2012 with average earnings per worker of $68,080. This key sector, which accounts for nearly a quarter of the county's gross regional product, is projected to shrink 7 percent by 2015, shedding some 1,112 jobs.

"What we're seeing is more evolved manufacturing," said Pam Cumpata, president of the McHenry County Economic Development Corp. "As manufacturing becomes more efficient, we may see a decline in the number of positions."

Conversely, health care and social assistance jobs will increase 10 percent by 2015, bringing 1,091 new jobs. But the average 2012 earnings per worker in this segment was $51,840, about $16,000 less than in manufacturing, according to the report.

Adjusted for inflation, the county's per capita income dropped 8.6 percent between 2000 and 2010, the labor report found.

The report predicted job growth in McHenry County would increase by 2.8 percent, going from 122,746 jobs in 2012 to 126,198 in 2015. That's slower than the projected statewide job growth of 3.1 percent for the same time period and well below the national increase of 4.3 percent.

Even so, the job growth is welcome, said Jeffery Poynter, director of the McHenry County Workforce Network Board.

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