March 9, 2009 9:32 PM

Help Wanted: Companies Hiring In Recession

(AP)  Help wanted: pharmacists, engineers and nurses. Believe it or not, even some banks are hiring, at least for their technology teams.

While the recession has claimed 4.4 million jobs, the economy has created others, many of them for highly trained and specialized professionals. More than 2 million jobs openings now exist across a range of industries, according to government data.

Job seekers beware, though. An average of nearly five people are competing for each opening. That's up sharply from a ratio of less than 2-to-1 in December 2007, when the recession was just starting and nearly 4 million openings existed.

Human resources executives say companies that are hiring are benefiting from a top-notch talent pool as applications pour in from a larger base of job seekers. The number of unemployed Americans has soared, to 12.5 million last month, from 7 million when the recession began.

Broadly, jobs are being added in education, health care and the federal government, the Labor Department said, with the government adding 9,000 new jobs last month alone.

But beyond those areas, jobs can be found in a variety of sectors. Some places that are hiring, such as companies that make nuclear power equipment, haven't been hit that hard by the recession. Others, such as discount retailers, are actually benefiting from the downturn as shoppers turn thriftier.

Even some businesses at the center of the economic meltdown are managing to add a few employees. Banks involved in recent mergers, for example, are hiring information technology specialists to help integrate companies, said Tig Gilliam, chief executive of the Adecco Group North America, a human resources firm.

Some mortgage lending companies, notably those never involved in subprime or other exotic loans, are actually growing and hiring as larger competitors have folded.

"We've been busy," said Terry Schmidt, chief financial officer of Guild Mortgage Co. in California, whose company has doubled in size, from around 450 to close to 900 employees, in the past year and a half.

The new hires originate home loans and process them, among other duties.

"We're finding that the talent pool — the level of talent and experience — is much better than we've ever had," Schmidt said.

Mortgage servicing companies — those that collect payments for the lenders that originated them — are also hiring as lower mortgage rates fuel mortgage refinance applications.

Marina Walsh, associate vice president of industry analysis at the Mortgage Bankers Association, said servicers "are just scrambling for workers."

The nuclear power industry, meanwhile, doesn't seem to have noticed the economic downturn. It is adding thousands of jobs as it gears up to build as many as 26 new nuclear power plants in the next decade.

Corporations such as Pittsburgh-based Westinghouse Electric Company and GE Hitachi Nuclear Energy are hiring engineers and adding other workers as they expand manufacturing facilities, according to the Nuclear Energy Institute, a trade group. (GE Hitachi is a partnership between General Electric Co. and Tokyo-based Hitachi Ltd.)

Engineers of all kinds are in demand and are facing a rock-bottom jobless rate of about 3 percent, according to Gilliam of the Adecco Group North America. That compares with a nationwide unemployment rate of 8.1 percent last month.

Adecco is trying to fill about 1,200 engineering jobs, Gilliam said. They include product engineers who test the next generation of computer equipment, he said.

Other bright spots in an otherwise dismal labor market:

— Pharmacists: An aging U.S. population is taking more medicine and pharmacists are taking more time helping patients with chronic diseases manage their dosages, said Douglas Scheckelhoff of the American Society of Health System Pharmacists.

There is a 6 percent shortage of hospital pharmacists, Scheckelhoff said, while many drug stores are also looking to hire new pharmacists and pharmacist technicians, he said.

— Nurses: Hospitals also need more nurses to care for the aging population and to replace those nearing retirement, said Cheryl Peterson, director of nursing practice and policy at the American Nurses Association. Hospitals added 7,000 jobs of all kinds last month, even as the economy overall shed 651,000.

— Veterinarians: "There's a tremendous demand" for veterinarians, particularly to serve livestock growers in rural areas, said Dr. Ron DeHaven, chief executive officer of the American Veterinary Medical Association. The government is also short of veterinarians needed to inspect slaughterhouses and undertake other food safety measures, he said. The Labor Department projects that the number of veterinary jobs will grow by 35 percent by 2016, DeHaven said.

Some companies are benefiting from the recession as shoppers shift to lower-priced stores. The economy has lost more than 600,000 retail jobs since the slowdown began, but discount retailer Family Dollar Stores Inc. is hiring.

The company plans to hire new workers for 200 stores it expects to open this year, said spokesman Josh Braverman, and will also add employees at some of its nine distribution centers. Family Dollar saw its sales at stores open at least a year rise by 6.4 percent in the three months ending in February.

Other companies prospering amid the economic gloom include liquidators — firms that sell the assets of troubled businesses.

Bill Angrick, chief executive of Washington, D.C.-based Liquidity Services Inc., which operates the Web site Liquidation.com, said his company expects record profits for the first quarter. Among the items his company liquidates are vehicles and networking and communications equipment.

Julie Davis, a spokeswoman for the firm, said it has openings for at least 10 people in its sales, marketing, operations and finance departments.

"We are absolutely in hiring mode," she said. The company employs about 700 people worldwide.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 20 Comments
by aullfromky April 30, 2009 9:40 PM EDT
my huband worked in a factory for years till it closed down he went back to school w/ a trade in welding thinking there will always be job well there is none he has been off since July where is the help for the working family who paid there bills and proved for there family now there is no jobs and still nothing is being done give us back our jobs from the other countries
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by greatgrandpaw March 10, 2009 11:52 AM EDT
Littlebuddy..I did know that, but it sounds like you are falling in behind him in being pessimistic. I gone through a few more presidents and congresses than you and I really like our chances of getting out of this depression and repression. What needs to be done is to become less like him and more like the people who look for the good. Too many people in our great land can't find good in anybody or anything. I would just like more optimism shown. Is that too much to be asked? We are a people who like to pick, pick, pick.
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by rbullock440 March 10, 2009 11:29 AM EDT
Anyone in public service - cab drivers, bus drivers, medical, car mechanics, hair stylists, etc. We cannot do without these workers!
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by hetup-2009 March 10, 2009 10:53 AM EDT
Obama should be allowed to run three or four terms

I agree, but it is not allowed by the constitution. Perhaps Michele will step in. What we don't want is to change the constitution. My God can you imagine what would happen if Republicans were allowed to stay in office because of voter apathy?

It was a good thought though.
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by berniew4 March 10, 2009 10:35 AM EDT
Obama should be allowed to run three or four terms. Change the constitution. We need a head 'COMRAD" to run our country for many years,.. Why not the 'SOCIALIST" from illinois. great speaker fools the people . pretends to know what he is doing and his followers want us to hope he succeeds in destroying what is left of our country . He will also send troops to die in AFGAN While he condemned Bush for doing same in IRAQ. SOME LEADER ?? To excuse his incompetence I find his supporters always say "" YEAH BUT BUSH WAS BAD TOO "" Makes sense ??
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by cydygitt1 March 10, 2009 10:30 AM EDT
Education, Health Care, the Federal Government, Discount Retailers, Information Technology Specialists, Engineers, Pharmacists, Nurses, Veterinarians, and .....


.....APPLE PICKERS. DONT FORGET APPLE PICKERS!
Posted by sockpuppet4
===============

Ahhhh....first we'll have the farmers planting sweet corn and picking cherries, peaches, apricots, etc........long before they're picking our local apples!
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by hetup-2009 March 10, 2009 10:29 AM EDT
Surely the job loses will grow more in the next couple of months as sour old companies like GM finally roll over and die. What a waste of our money to even try to float these Titanic companies. But out of there death will come a breeze of freshness in the marketplace that we all deserve. The overpaid undereducated listless employees of those huge old companies are going to just have to come to grips with there own inabilities. Their handicaps were self induced with large shots of inflationary wages. They didn't care about the rest of America when they were riding high. Don't even think you will get any sympathy from me, I hope you live in poverty for a few decades to wash that gloating smirt off your face.
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by tomanyt March 10, 2009 10:27 AM EDT
mrs_concrete = troll.
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by greatgrandpaw March 10, 2009 10:20 AM EDT
The government is telling us that we are in a recession, that it will continue for some time, and the future doesn't look good...at least for some time. How depressing that news is! Even though that is apparently true, can't we have some more optimism from our leaders? Optimism will help bring us out of this quagmire. Pessimism will take us deeper into it.
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by cydygitt1 March 10, 2009 10:19 AM EDT
CITI AND THE REST WHO TOOK BAIL MONEY WILL BE GIVEN UP ON

HOW STUPID CAN WE BE?

Posted by philabias
============

Seems that there is no bounds for republiCON ignorance!

Guess you didn't hear that Citi actually had a profit the past 2 months, and IndyMac Bank that was taken over by the FDIC is ready to open again under private hands!

The pessimism by the CONStipated CONServitards will completely destroy what shards of the GOP are still left in dismay! The GOP is totally in exile looking for a NEW message!
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