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Hurricanes & Residential Construction

Over the next few years there could be many billion$ of construction spending to “repair” hurricane damaged homes. That spending will NOT be reported in Census construction spending reports. According to Census definition, renovations to “repair” natural disaster damage are not recorded in construction spending.

Construction spending to “replace” homes entirely lost to hurricane damage (wiped completely off the foundation) IS reported in Census spending, but it is reported as renovations/repair, not new SF or MF construction. These are not “new” homes and do not add to the new home count. The work is to replace an existing home.

There will be billions$ of residential construction and the associated labor that will fall outside posted Census data. Some of that spending and labor will be diverted from the growth in residential construction tracked by the Census Rsdn$. So, it is conceivable that Census tracked residential spending could slip slightly from current projections, and yet the work is being done, only unaccounted for.

(All of this is true also for nonresidential).

Expect increased demand and potentially longer waits for all residential building products; lumber, doors, windows, roofing, siding, drywall, flooring, HVAC, plumbing, electrical and appliances, primarily or exclusively in the affected regions.

If your business is in a region that is currently outside the affected region and slow for residential construction, consider that anybody with a hammer and a pick-up truck may be traveling to the affected regions to work. That could mean that many slow regions may lose some available labor, as the labor will move to the affected area.

For every $1billion of work needed to replace damaged buildings it requires 4000-5000 construction workers for one year. That could also be stated as 1000 jobs for 4 to 5 years. Very early damage projections due to Helene and Milton range from $50-$175 billion, but not all of that is construction. If even $10 billion of work is construction to repair/replace damaged buildings, that would require 10,000 jobs for a period of 4 to 5 years (or 20,000 jobs for 2 to 2 1/2 years).

Here is the U S Census definition of flood repairs