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Background:
Hurricane Florence made landfall on Friday, September 14, just south of Wrightsville Beach, North Carolina. The powerful and long-lived hurricane caused severe damage to the Carolinas, primarily as a result of freshwater flooding. Florence dropped a maximum total of 35.93 inches of rain in Elizabethtown, North Carolina, becoming the wettest tropical cyclone recorded in North Carolina and the eighth-wettest overall in the contiguous United States. The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) declared 28 counties in North Carolina and 6 counties in South Carolina eligible for individual and public federal disaster assistance as of October 2, 2018.
Summary:
BLS analysis suggests that it is possible that payroll employment in some industries was affected by Hurricane Florence for September 2018. However, it is not possible to quantify the net impact because the CES survey is not designed to isolate effects from catastrophic events on CES employment, hours, and earnings.
BLS closely monitored, and continues to monitor, collection rates in the affected areas. For the preliminary September 2018 estimates, collection rates were within the normal range for the affected areas. As such, BLS did not modify its methodology.
The remainder of this webpage provides answers to questions related to Hurricane Florence and September 2018 payroll data.
According to BLS’ s Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages, about 1.1 million workers were employed in March 2018 in the FEMA-designated disaster counties. Not all workers are within the scope of the CES survey. Farm laborers, the self-employed, and workers in households, for example, are excluded from the CES.
State | Establishments* | Employment* |
---|---|---|
North Carolina |
55,370 | 873,499 |
South Carolina |
13,083 | 187,142 |
Total |
68,453 | 1,060,641 |
*Establishments and employment for March 2018 represent actual counts from the Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages. |
BLS collected data from businesses using normal collection procedures. However, BLS will continue to monitor data collection within the affected areas for the final estimates. The CES sample has just under 2,500 active reporting units in the disaster areas.
State | Worksites |
---|---|
North Carolina |
1,952 |
South Carolina |
517 |
Total |
2,469 |
Over 60 percent of the sample in the affected areas is collected by means of Electronic Data Interchange (EDI). EDI is a method of collection which involves multi-establishment firms. Under EDI, the firm provides an electronic file to CES each month in a prescribed file format, which includes data for all of the firm's establishments. This one file transmitted to CES each month is sent from a single source. Since these sources are located mostly outside of the impacted areas, BLS expected and received normal EDI response in September.
Data are also collected by CES Data Collection Centers primarily through computer-assisted telephone interviews (CATI), representing 25 percent of the active sample in the affected areas. Self-reporting via the web accounts for another 13 percent of the sample in these areas. Nonresponse prompts are typically emailed to respondents approximately 10 days prior to the initial collection deadline; a week before the initial collection deadline, those who have not responded will also receive a phone call reminder. A final round of nonresponse email prompts are sent the morning of the initial collection deadline. BLS expected, and received, normal CATI and web-based response in September.
Collection method | Worksites | Percent distribution |
---|---|---|
CATI |
612 | 25 |
EDI |
1,503 | 61 |
Web |
326 | 13 |
Other |
28 | 1 |
Total |
2,469 | 100 |
The hurricane caused large-scale evacuations and severe damage to many homes and businesses. In the CES survey, employees who are not paid for any part of the pay period that includes the 12th of the month are not counted as employed. Consider, for example, that an establishment is completely destroyed and there is no place to work. If the company pays workers during the designated pay period, CES still considers those workers to be employed. If, on the other hand, an individual does not work or receive pay for any part of the reference pay period, that individual is not counted as employed.
Was there a surge in the employment caused by paid emergency workers that went to the disaster area?Emergency workers are counted by their employer’ s established location, even if they are working in the disaster area. Volunteer workers are not counted as employed if they are not paid. Individuals called to active duty for the National Guard are considered to be on active military duty and are outside of the scope of the CES survey. If they were employed when called to duty, their pay status determines whether or not they are counted. If the employer pays the individuals for any part of the reference pay period, they are counted as employed. The paid individual is counted as employed regardless of the type of pay, such as pay for actual work time, paid leave, or a pay adjustment to make up the difference between an employee’ s regular pay and their military pay.
Did CES estimation procedures change or will they change in upcoming releases of September 2018 data?The CES program reviewed, and continues to review, all aspects of its estimation procedures to determine if any changes are necessary. For the release of September 2018 preliminary estimates, the CES program determined that no modifications to current methodology would be made because the collection rates in the affected areas were within normal ranges. BLS will continue to monitor the situation and any modifications to the methods for state and area CES estimates will be explained with the upcoming releases, as appropriate.
Last Modified Date: October 19, 2018