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More Older Workers on the Job in OR

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Thursday, September 25, 2008   

LaGrande, OR – Oregon's aging workers are still on the job; people over age 55 make up 15 percent of Oregon's workforce, and in rural areas almost 17 percent. A new Census Bureau report says the Oregon county with the biggest increase per capita in older workers is Wallowa.

Employment Department economist Jason Yohannan says that's partly because the general population there is older anyway, but it also may be the growing number of entrepreneurs who choose Northeast Oregon as their home base.

"There's been a long-time tradition of self-employment in Wallowa County. That could be folks who aren't dependent on the local market for their revenue, who are still living there by choice, but have customers from all over the state, or all over the country."

The figures are from a few years ago, the 2001-2004 period. Yohannan says it's likely that even more older residents have joined the work force because of the region's lagging economy.

"Right now, we're seeing all age groups applying for work. Times have been tough. In Wallowa County and many other counties in Oregon, 2007 was a very good year. We had record high employment levels in the state, in Wallowa County and a couple of neighboring counties. 2008 has been a different story."

Yohannan says as Wallowa County's reputation as a tourist area and retirement destination grows, higher prices might also be driving young families elsewhere to look for work. The new report says the spot with the highest overall number of older workers is Gilliam County, in North Central Oregon.


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