Partly Cloudy
81°
DeKalb, IL
Partly Cloudy|Forecast »

Best Ill. job prospects are in manufacturing, medical

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa
Clinical pharmacist Mary Eilers prepares a compound Jan. 17 at St. John's Hospital in Springfield. Experts looking at Illinois' job market say the best prospects for 2013 are likely in medical and manufacturing firms. (AP photo )

CHAMPAIGN – Illinois’ widening medical industry and its old standby, manufacturing, may be the best places to look for a job this year, although some of the positions will require increasing levels of education and training and many won’t pay what they might have just a few years ago, experts said.

Overall, 17 percent of Illinois employers plan to add staff during the first quarter of this year, up 3 percent from a year earlier, according to a survey from the staffing firm ManPower Group. About 71 percent plan to keep staffing levels the same.

“Job creation has been relatively strong in the last two years,” said John Challenger, CEO of the Chicago-based outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas Inc.

Even so, Illinois is like the rest of the nation: still staggering back from the recession 2007-09. Statewide unemployment hasn’t dropped below 8 percent since 2008.

The jobless rate in Illinois fell from 9.3 percent in December 2011 to 8.7 percent in December 2012, the most recent month for which data is available from the Illinois Department of Employment Security. But the state’s jobless rate in November 2007, the month before the recession started, was 5 percent.

The hole the country’s been trying to climb out of was so deep that, “bringing it back to normal has been a slow, year-by-year digging-out process,” Challenger said.

Experts say Illinois’ biggest job creator in 2013 could be the federal Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, which is expected to ratchet up the demand for a wide range of jobs.

Hospitals may need to add staff in positions that require everything from a four-year degree plus experience to entry-level jobs that require little education.

St. John’s Hospital in Springfield has been hiring nurse navigators – experienced registered nurses who help patients literally navigate their way through treatment, answering questions before and after, said Pat Schulz, head of the hospital’s human resources department. The pay is $22 to $30 an hour.

The hospital hires about 140 RNs a year for a variety of positions around the hospital, many of them straight out of school, she said. But the new ones don’t head straight to the hospital floor on their own, instead spending three to four months in additional training as nurse residents.

Previous Page|1|||
Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Reader Poll

How often do you attend organized downtown events in your community?

Often
Sometimes
Rarely
Never