Down from half a million in recent years, the estimate could prove conservative as construction workers retire and political ...
FMI expects construction spending to end 2026 up 1% from 2025, reflecting a market where growth remains selective rather than broad-based. While overall activity continues, performance is diverging ...
U.S. construction employment declined by 11,000 jobs in December, according to BLS data analyzed by Associated Builders and ...
The construction industry is looking to AI and AI agents to make project managers’ lives easier, and eventually address an ...
Construction Safety Week is a celebration of our industry’s commitment to health and safety—a commitment that has driven ...
The industry needs approximately 349,000 new workers in 2026 to balance supply and demand, primarily due to retirements and modest spending growth forecasts. Key challenges include an aging workforce, ...
The construction industry has faced labor shortages over the last decade, with a decline in younger adults entering the industry. To combat this shortage, construction businesses and labor groups have ...
More than one in five U.S. construction workers is over the age of 55. And when they retire—often without passing on what they’ve learned—they take with them decades of field-tested knowledge that can ...
Observed September 8–12, 2025, Construction Suicide Prevention Week highlights the industry’s urgent mental health crisis while promoting peer support, awareness, and life-saving resources for workers ...
Changes will be made to everything from procurement to workplace health and safety legislation as the state government seeks ...