Search Results for: map 2015 unemployment rate

October 2016 minus October 2015 Unemployment Rate

Has unemployment gotten better or worse in the past year in most communities in our state? This map tries to answer that question. In most regions of the state the unemployment picture has gotten better with fewer people looking for work, but growth is uneven. The bright spots are Montgomery County/Amsterdam and Riverhead in eastern Long Island. On the other hand, Johnstown has seen it's unemployment rate increase, and unemployment has ticked up slightly in Niagara Falls, North Tonawada, and Lewis County.

NYS Local Unemployment Rate, December 2016

This interactive map shows the 160 communities where Local Area Unemployment Statistics are generated. All 62 counties in New York have an unemployment rate calculated monthly, along with the 98 cities, towns, and villages with a population greater then 25,000. Monthly numbers are not seasonally adjusted, and in some regions of the state unemployment rises during certain periods of the year. You should only compare like months (e.g. October 2015 vs October 2016). You can download the data going back to 1970s here: https://www.labor.ny.gov/stats/LSLAUS

October 2016 Unemployment Rate

This interactive map shows the 160 communities where Local Area Unemployment Statistics are generated. All 62 counties in New York have an unemployment rate calculated monthly, along with the 98 cities, towns, and villages with a population greater then 20,000. Monthly numbers are not seasonally adjusted, and in some regions of the state unemployment rises during certain periods of the year. You should only compare like months (e.g. October 2015 vs October 2016). You can download the data going back to 1970s here: https://www.labor.ny.gov/stats/LSLAUS.shtm

December 12, 2016 8 AM Update

Good morning, round two! That snow is remarkably slick, as experience shows walking down to the bus stop. Nearly slip and fell a couple times on the walk down there. Then again the soles are getting warn down on my boots. I waterproofed the boots, hopefully they won’t smell like persistent organic compounds all day. So far the bus stop hasn’t been shoveled out but I assume it will melt by mid day. I ended up standing in the gas station parking lot and somebody with serious boots stayed right at the stop and flagged the bus down, and I walked in the road.

The snow has stopped and we are now above freezing with temperatures aroundΒ 34 degrees in Delmar. There is a south breeze at 9 mph. Cloudy now and while we might get a few rain showers, eventually the skies will clear around sunset. The snow will be quickly gone.

The sun will set at 4:22 pm with dusk around 4:54 pm, which is 10 seconds later than yesterday. Today will have 9 hours and 5 minutes of daylight, a decrease of 37 seconds over yesterday.

Tonight will be partly cloudy, with a low of 27 degrees at 6am.Β A fairly mild evening after the snow, which I expect will be mostly gone by then. Five degrees above normal. West wind 8 to 15 mph. With that wind it might be a bit cold, but I don’t expect to miss my evening walk. In 2015, it got down to 43 degrees with periods of rain. The record low of -6 occurred back in 1988.

That January holiday is rapid approaching, with only fiveΒ weeks until Martin Luther King Day when the sun will be setting at 4:49 pm with dusk at 5:20 pm. On that day in 2016, we had rain, snow and temperatures between 40 and 29 degrees. Typically, the high temperature is 30 degrees. We hit a record high of 62 back in 1995. I might go camping during that long weekend. Depends on the weather.

Today in 1991, the Russian federation breaks off from the USSR,Β essentially meaning the end of the Soviet Union. The era of communism was no longer to be.

I will be posting the interactive Google Map of the 160 communities in New York State that have Local Area Unemployment Statistics generated for them on a monthly basis,Β later on today. This map is pretty neat as you can click on any municipality (town, city, or village) population and find out the unadjusted monthly unemployment rate going back a year, along with the change over the past year and last year’s average.