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Construction sector adds jobs in November

Still, the Associated General Contractors of America warns that project cancellations and looming Paycheck Protection Program tax bills will undercut future job gains. Keep Reading

Crushed stone, sand and gravel rail traffic down

Compared to November 2019, carloads of crushed stone, sand and gravel were down about 10 percent this November. Keep Reading

Lessons learned from a pandemic – and looking forward

While 2020 presented challenges for Luck Companies, John Pullen, the company's chief growth officer, says there are reasons to be optimistic about 2021 and beyond. Keep Reading

Assessing the aggregate industry as 2020 nears its end

Producers persevered through a pandemic and a recession this year, and many maintain glass-half-full attitudes about 2021. Keep Reading

Report: Construction employment slipping downward

Employment in the construction industry dropped in 209 of 358 metro areas between October 2019 and October of this year, according to the Associated General Contractors of America. Keep Reading

Part 1: Catching up with Bond Construction’s Karen Hubacz-Kiley

Bond Construction Corp.'s Karen Hubacz-Kiley offers perspective on the state of U.S. infrastructure, 2020 industry challenges, and more in Part 1 of a two-part P&Q interview. Keep Reading

A picture forms about construction materials in the new year

If there are no major policy changes, SC Market Analytics' David Chereb says construction activity will decrease by modest amounts in 2021 – with almost all of it attributed to nonresidential. Keep Reading

The Georgia Senate runoffs and their potential impact

The U.S. Senate is still up for grabs, and the outcomes of those two runoffs would have dramatically different effects on aggregate producers across the nation. SC Market Analytics’ David Chereb explains. Keep Reading

What Biden’s election means for the aggregate industry

SC Market Analytics’ David Chereb joins Pit & Quarry to discuss the outcome of the 2020 presidential election and what Joe Biden becoming president means for the prospects of an infrastructure bill and, ultimately, aggregate demand. Keep Reading

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