Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Fits and Starts: San Diego

All this week, Capital Public Radio and K-P-C-C have brought us stories on how the strength of California’s uneven economic recovery varies depending on where you live. Capital Public Radio’s Katie Orr wraps up our series “Fits and Starts” with a look at San Diego, where the recession took a toll on the construction industry – but biotech is leading the rebound.

***

(Sound of bar)

Electrician Dennis Gittens grabs a beer after getting off his construction job. He’s working on a new hospital being built in San Diego and his days start early. But as Gittens takes a seat on the deck of a popular British pub, he says it’s nice to be needed again. When he first moved to San Diego in 2012 and signed on with the union, it was three months before he got a job and health insurance. He says being out of work was tough.

Gittens: “There’s credit card payments that keep coming in. There’s rent, there’s gas, there’s car payments, everything. Insurance, insurance was the biggest deal. I’ve never in my life been without insurance.”

And even once he got a job, things weren’t easy. After working for a while he got laid off again. And even though the construction industry has started to rebound, Gittens says there’s still an uneasy feeling among his co-workers.

Gittens: “Over the past five years the trust and the belief that you’re going to be steadily working for life without too much time off has changed.”

Some of those worries might be justified. San Diego’s construction industry was among the region’s hardest hit during the recession.

Cox: “We lost a lot of jobs.”

Economist Marney Cox is with the San Diego Association of Governments.

Cox: “Going into the recession we were one of those areas that had high growth in our construction sector and housing. And so housing was hit dramatically. For example, we peaked at about 96 thousand jobs in our construction sector and it dropped all the way down to about 58 thousand jobs.”

The industry has added back just a fraction of those construction jobs since the economy improved. Cox says the San Diego region lost more than 100 thousand jobs overall, which is disproportionally high given its national economic impact. Housing prices also took a hit. The region’s median price fell more than 40 percent from a pre-recession high of $535 thousand. Values have only rebounded by about 25 percent. Still, Cox says, it could have been worse.

Cox: “The military and the visitor industry here are stabilizers. During the recession, for example, the construction industry would have even been worse had it not been for military construction here.”

(Sound of lab)

In recent years San Diego has also become known for biotech companies. Experiments and tests are conducted in labs across the region. A job in the industry drew lab scientist Andrea Clouser-Roche and her husband to San Diego in 2007. For three and a half years she had steady work, and then her lab was closed. Clouser-Roche was unemployed for a year.

Clouser-Roche: “That was pretty painful. A lot of people were like, ‘oh, isn’t that great?’ I said, you this is probably the crappiest job I’ve ever had. It was a lot of work. Always working your resume, looking for positions, calling people. Making those contacts. And I’m a lab scientist. I didn’t get to run anymore experiments, so…”

Economist Cox says biotech did lose some jobs during the recession, and some venture capital funds took a hit. But he says, on the whole, the industry is rebounding. That’s something Clouser-Roche has noticed too. After a year of being unemployed she got a job at another biotech company. About one year after that she got a phone call that led to her current job.

Clouser-Roche: “One of my former colleagues, who is now at Millennium, called up and said, hey, I know you found something but I think we have a really neat opportunity for you here at Millennium. So it’s kind of been that change. Things have loosened up. It’s not everybody fighting for one job now. There are really a lot more opportunities opening up.”

And that may be true for the region as well. Employment has grown by 2.5 percent in each of the past two years and San Diego’s on track for a third year as well.

I’m Katie Orr.

***
This story was produced by Capital Public Radio and KPCC