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Employment
In the
calendar year 1997,
logging companies and sawmills
employed an annual
average of 1900 workers, peaking
at
2,400 at the height of the logging season in August and September.
Sawmills and secondary
manufacturers, which
provide more seasonally
stable employment than
logging, account for
292 and 91 positions,
respectively, of that
total. The Ketchikan
Pulp Corporation pulp
mill
employed an annual average of 217 persons as it ramped down pulp
production due to the
cancellation of its
long-term contract with the United
States Forest Service
(USFS). Using the USFS
indirect employment
multiplier of .73, these directly
employed workers created
another 1530 positions
in closely-related
industries such as trucking and
road-building as
well as jobs supported by industry workers take-home pay. Annual
payroll figures for the calendar year 1997 were $78.8 million for
logging, $10.2 million for primary sawmills, and $2 million for secondary
processors. This totals $84 million in annual payroll for logging
and solid wood products. As suggested by the decline in harvest levels,
the industrys employment levels are at comparable lows. In
1990, the average annual employment by logging companies, sawmills,
and
pulp mills totaled 4,000. The 1997 total represents a decline of
53%.

Source:
Alaska Department of Labor, Research and Analysis Section.
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