According to job counts from the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development’s (DEED’s) Quarterly Census of Employment & Wages program, the forestry and logging industry in Minnesota was made up of 211 establishments providing an average of just over 1,000 jobs in 2017. Home to most of the state’s forest land, it is not surprising that almost half of the state’s employment in forestry and logging is located in the seven-county Northeast Minnesota region.
Despite some fluctuations, forestry and logging industry employment is up 8.7 percent statewide since 2000, including a gain of nearly 100 net new jobs in the past 10 years, despite a decline in the number of firms.
The industry has experienced similar trends in the Arrowhead, regaining 55 jobs since 2013, even while losing employer establishments. After briefly surpassing 500 jobs in 2016, the region is now home to 94 firms providing 488 jobs, with a total payroll of $21 million in 2017.
High school graduates and other job seekers will be important in filling the workforce pipeline in the forestry and logging industry, which relies on a seasoned workforce. In 2017, data from the Quarterly Workforce Indicators program shows over one-fourth of workers in the industry were 55 years or older, up from just 10.6 percent of the workforce back in 2000.
In contrast, less than 10 percent of workers in the industry were under 25 years of age, down from 13.4 percent in 2000.
Further demographic data from the QWI program shows that the forestry and logging industry is relatively non-diverse: Males account for 89 percent of workers, and more than 97 percent reporting white as their race. Those percentages have remained virtually unchanged since 2000, with both shifting less than 1.5 percent despite much more rapid changes in the overall labor force.
Forestry and logging employers may need to tap into new labor pools to attract talent and continue growing.
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