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AED and AEM warn Congress of job losses ahead.

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November 17, 2009 - In wake of last week's dismal government unemployment data, AED and AEM are warning Congress that economy will shed more jobs in coming months unless lawmakers swiftly enact new multi-year highway law. Warning came in form of orange flags sent to every member of Congress. Flags were accompanied by details of IHS Global Insight economic report that found equipment industry had lost 37% of its workforce in last 3 years and that downturn had cost 550,000 jobs nationwide.

Equipment Industry Orange Flags Warn Congress of Job Losses Ahead


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Association of Equipment Manufacturers
6737 West Washington St., Ste. 2400
Milwaukee, WI, 53214
USA



Press release date: November 11, 2009

WASHINGTON, D.C. - In the wake of last week's dismal government unemployment data, two leading construction equipment industry trade groups are warning Congress that that the economy will shed more jobs in the coming months unless lawmakers swiftly enact a new multi-year highway law.

The warning came in the form of orange flags sent to every member of Congress by Associated Equipment Distributors (AED) and the Association of Equipment Manufacturers (AEM). The flags were accompanied by details of a recent IHS Global Insight economic report that found the equipment industry had lost 37 percent of its workforce in the last three years, the equipment industry downturn had cost 550,000 jobs nationwide, and equipment sales had declined 50 percent since 2006.

The orange flag has become a symbol of Start Us Up USA!, a grassroots campaign launched in September by AED and AEM to draw attention to the equipment industry economic crisis. In conjunction with a recent Washington, D.C., rally and idle construction equipment caravan through the streets of the nation's capital, the associations planted 5,500 orange flags in the National Mall - one for each 100 jobs lost since 2006 as a result of the downturn in the equipment industry.

AED and AEM are urging Congress to swiftly reauthorize the federal highway program and increase investment in roads and bridges to stop the job bleed and put the construction industry back to work. SAFETEA-LU, the most recent blueprint for federal highway spending, expired on Sept. 30 and neither chamber of Congress has yet voted on a new transportation bill. The uncertainty surrounding reauthorization and future highway funding levels has led many contractors to put off equipment purchases, which has contributed to historic volatility in equipment markets.

"These orange flags are a warning to Congress," AED President & CEO Toby Mack said. "The highway bill is overdue and the construction industry is in a state of crisis. If Congress doesn't do its job, more Americans are going to lose theirs in the months ahead."

"A robust, multi-year highway bill won't just create jobs and put people back to work, it will also build a solid foundation for America's future economic growth, help create a cleaner environment, and make our roads safer," AEM President Dennis Slater said.

More information about the AED-AEM Start Us Up USA! campaign (including video highlights of rallies and idle equipment caravans in Las Vegas, Chicago, and Washington, D.C., and the results of the IHS Global Insight study on industry economic conditions) is available at http://www.StartUsUpUSA.com.

The Association of Equipment Manufacturers (www.aem.org) is the North American-based international trade association for the off-road equipment manufacturing industry serving the construction, agriculture, forestry, mining and utility markets. AEM is headquartered in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, with offices in Washington, D.C., Ottawa, Beijing and a European presence in Brussels. It represents more than 800 companies.

Associated Equipment Distributors (www.aednet.org) is an international trade association representing companies involved in the distribution, rental and support of equipment used in construction, mining, forestry, power generation, agriculture and industrial applications.

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