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            Illinois adds 3,800 jobs in January  122,900 
			private sector jobs added since recovery began  Send a link to a friend
 
			
            
            [March 02, 2012] 
            
            CHICAGO -- Illinois added 3,800 jobs in 
			January and the unemployment rate fell 0.3, to 9.4 percent, 
			according to preliminary data released Thursday by the U.S. Bureau 
			of Labor Statistics and the Illinois Department of Employment 
			Security. This is the fifth consecutive monthly decline and the 
			largest decline since September 1992. The data is seasonally 
			adjusted. | 
		
            |  "January adds another month in the long-term trend of putting people 
			back to work," said IDES Director Jay Rowell. "Adding private sector 
			jobs in 21 of the past 25 months and recording the largest monthly 
			decrease in the unemployment rate in nearly 20 years is progress 
			that people can see." Illinois has added 122,900 private sector jobs since January 
			2010, when job growth returned to Illinois after 23 consecutive 
			months of declines. Since January 2010, leading growth sectors in 
			Illinois are professional and business services, up 66,400; 
			educational and health services, up 29,700; manufacturing, up 
			26,000; and trade, transportation and utilities, 17,800. Government 
			has lost the most jobs since January 2010, down 24,700. Historically, the national unemployment rate is lower than the 
			state rate. Only seven times since January 2000 has the state rate 
			been lower than the nation's. That period includes times of economic 
			expansion and contraction. In January 2012, the number of unemployed 
			individuals was down for the fifth consecutive month, decreasing 
			18,100, or 2.8 percent, to 620,300. Total unemployed has declined 
			132,500, or 17.6 percent, since January 2010, when the state 
			unemployment rate peaked at 11.4 percent. The rate identifies those who are out of work and seeking 
			employment. People who exhaust their benefits, or are ineligible, 
			still will be reflected in the unemployment rate if they actively 
			seek work. 
			[to top of second column] | 
 
              
            The IDES supports economic stability by administering unemployment 
			benefits, collecting business contributions to fund those benefits, 
			connecting employers with qualified job seekers, and providing 
			economic information to assist career planning and economic 
			development. It does so through nearly 60 offices, including 
			Illinois workNet centers. 
              
            ___ 
              
            See tables: Seasonally Adjusted Unemployment 
			Rates and Illinois Seasonally Adjusted Non-farm Jobs – by Major 
			Industry 
            [Text from 
            
			Illinois 
			Department of Employment Security 
			file received from 
			the
			Illinois Office of 
			Communication and Information] 
            
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