Labor Market Regions (LMRs) correspond to ten geographic areas of the state, which are defined by the New York State Department of Labor. Counties are the building blocks used to build progressively larger geographic areas for which labor market statistics are reported.
The Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) survey is a semiannual mail survey of employers that measures occupational employment and occupational wage rates for wage and salary workers in nonfarm establishments, by industry. OEWS estimates are constructed from a sample of about 41,400 establishments. Each year, forms are mailed to two semiannual panels of approximately 6,900 sampled establishments, one panel in May and the other in November.
This dataset shows the population, civilian labor force, unemployed, and unemployment rate for people aged 16 to 24 years in New York State and its Labor Market Regions.
The New York State Department of Labor has ten labor market regions across the state. This dataset lists the counties and their corresponding labor market region.
The New York State Department of Labor has labor market analysts in 10 regions across the state. This data set outlines where the labor market analysts are located by labor market region.
Data from the Current Population Survey (CPS) provide detailed labor market information and demographics. The CPS data are provided for NYS. Topics include Veterans (employment status and selected demographics only available for New York State), employment status and other labor force demographics.
Shows the population, civilian labor force, unemployed, and unemployment rate for people aged 16 years and older by race and ethnicity in New York State and its Labor Market Regions.
The Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages (QCEW) program (also known as ES-202) collects employment and wage data from employers covered by New York State's Unemployment Insurance (UI) Law. This program is a cooperative program with the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. QCEW data encompass approximately 97 percent of New York's nonfarm employment, providing a virtual census of employees and their wages as well as the most complete universe of employment and wage data, by industry, at the State, regional and county levels. "Covered" employment refers broadly to both private-sector employees as well as state, county, and municipal government employees insured under the New York State Unemployment Insurance (UI) Act. Federal employees are insured under separate laws, but are considered covered for the purposes of the program. Employee categories not covered by UI include some agricultural workers, railroad workers, private household workers, student workers, the self-employed, and unpaid family workers. QCEW data are similar to monthly Current Employment Statistics (CES) data in that they reflect jobs by place of work; therefore, if a person holds two jobs, he or she is counted twice. However, since the QCEW program, by definition, only measures employment covered by unemployment insurance laws, its totals will not be the same as CES employment totals due to the employee categories excluded by UI.
Long-term Industry Projections for a 10 year time horizon are provided for the state and 10 labor market regions to provide individuals and organizations with an industry outlook.
Splitgraph serves as an HTTP API that lets you run SQL queries directly on this data to power Web applications. For example:
See the Splitgraph documentation for more information.
The dataset includes a comprehensive list of contractor licenses that have been issued to businesses for the purpose of elevator inspection and contracting within New York State. The dataset includes contractor information such as name, address, phone and license information such as license number, license type, issued date and expiration date.
The Local Area Unemployment Statistics program estimates labor force statistics (labor force, employed, unemployment, unemployment rate) for New York State civilian labor force aged 16 and up. Areas covered include, New York State, New York City, Balance of State, Metropolitan Statistical Areas, Counties, Labor Market Regions, Workforce Investment Board Areas, and cities and towns with populations of 25,000 or more. Data are not seasonally adjusted. Civilian labor force data do not include military, prison inmate, or other institutional populations.
Long-term Occupational Projections for a 10 year time horizon are provided for the state and 10 labor market regions to provide individuals and organizations with an occupational outlook to make informed decisions an individual career and organizational program development. While occupational openings data are presented on an annual basis, numbers of annual openings may fall above or below the average for each year in the 10 year projections period. Data are not available for geographies below the labor market regions. Detail may not add to summary lines due to suppression of data because of confidentiality and/or quality.
https://fred.stlouisfed.org/legal/#copyright-public-domainhttps://fred.stlouisfed.org/legal/#copyright-public-domain
Graph and download economic data for Unemployment Rate in New York (NYUR) from Jan 1976 to Jul 2025 about NY, unemployment, rate, and USA.
The Local Area Unemployment Statistics program estimates labor force statistics (labor force, employed, unemployment, unemployment rate) for New York State civilian labor force aged 16 and up. Seasonally adjusted estimates are provided for New York State, New York City, Balance of State.
U.S. Government Workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works
License information was derived automatically
The Local Area Unemployment Statistics (LAUS) program is a federal-state cooperative effort which produces monthly estimates of produces monthly and annual employment, unemployment, and labor force data for approximately 7,000 areas including Census regions and divisions, States, counties, metropolitan areas, and many cities.
This dataset includes data for all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico. To only see data for Connecticut, create a filter where "State name" is equal to "Connecticut".
For more information on the LAUS program and data visit: https://www.bls.gov/lau/
For more information from the CT Department of Labor visit: https://www1.ctdol.state.ct.us/lmi/LAUS/default.asp
U.S. Government Workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works
License information was derived automatically
The Local Area Unemployment Statistics (LAUS) program is a federal-state cooperative effort which produces monthly estimates of produces monthly and annual employment, unemployment, and labor force data for approximately 7,000 areas including Census regions and divisions, States, counties, metropolitan areas, and many cities.
This dataset includes data for all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico. To only see data for Connecticut, create a filter where "State name" is equal to "Connecticut".
For more information on the LAUS program and data visit: https://www.bls.gov/lau/
For more information from the CT Department of Labor visit: https://www1.ctdol.state.ct.us/lmi/LAUS/default.asp
The dataset includes a comprehensive list of elevator licenses that have been issued to individuals for the purpose of elevator mechanics, inspection, accessibility and lift accessibility within New York State. The dataset includes the individual’s name and license information such as, license number, license type, issued date, and expiration date.
This dataset contains seasonally adjusted employment data for New York City. Data is reported at the industry level (in units of thousands) and aggregated to total nonfarm and total private levels. Updates are posted after the not-seasonally-adjusted data is published by the NYS Department of Labor – typically monthly but with irregularities due to annual benchmark revisions.
The Business Service Representatives data set houses information about business service representatives across the state. These representatives are able to help businesses with their workforce needs.
This dataset reflects the monthly number of employee-reported incidents of workplace violence, as defined by New York State Labor Law Section 27-B, against on-duty MTA employees. This dataset divides workplace violence incidents into groupings as reported pursuant to New York State Labor Law Section 27-B. The same data is available in the MTA Workplace Violence Penal Law Incidents dataset, which divides the data according to New York State Penal Law Related Offenses.
Labor Market Regions (LMRs) correspond to ten geographic areas of the state, which are defined by the New York State Department of Labor. Counties are the building blocks used to build progressively larger geographic areas for which labor market statistics are reported.