Baltimore Job Market Report

Baltimore's Job Market: Health Care, Logistics, and Opportunity in Transition

4 min · 19. juni 2026
episode Baltimore's Job Market: Health Care, Logistics, and Opportunity in Transition cover

Beskrivelse

Baltimore’s job market is stabilizing after recent shocks, with moderate growth, pockets of labor shortage, and ongoing structural change. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that the Baltimore–Columbia–Towson metro unemployment rate has generally been hovering around the mid‑3 to mid‑4 percent range in recent months, close to the national average, though neighborhood disparities remain significant. According to the Maryland Department of Labor, total nonfarm employment in the region has been trending upward, with gains in health care, professional and business services, hospitality, and logistics. Federal Reserve analyses of the Mid‑Atlantic note that employers across health care, transportation, and skilled trades continue to report difficulty filling specialized roles, suggesting a tight labor market in key occupations. Major industries include health care and life sciences anchored by Johns Hopkins and the University of Maryland Medical System, port‑related trade and logistics tied to the Port of Baltimore, education, financial services, cybersecurity and defense contracting, and government at the city, state, and federal level. Key employers include Johns Hopkins Medicine, Northrop Grumman, the Social Security Administration, major hospital systems, universities, and city and state agencies. Growing sectors cited by the Baltimore Development Corporation and local business press include cybersecurity, digital health, biotech and medical research, port and warehouse operations, and tourism and events, although precise job counts by niche are not always reported, representing a data gap. Seasonal patterns are evident in hospitality, construction, and port activity, with summer and early fall typically stronger for hotels, restaurants, and tourism‑adjacent work. Commuting trends from regional planning agencies show substantial in‑and‑out flows between Baltimore City, Baltimore County, and surrounding counties, with many workers relying on MARC trains, buses, and cars to reach downtown hospitals, government offices, and the port. Recent developments include recovery and rerouting efforts after the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge reported by local and national news, which temporarily disrupted port operations and affected transportation and logistics jobs while federal aid and rebuilding contracts are expected to create construction and engineering work. City and state initiatives such as programs run by the Mayor’s Office of Employment Development, apprenticeships promoted by Maryland’s workforce agencies, and targeted training in tech, health care, and trades aim to connect residents to in‑demand roles and reduce unemployment among youth and returning citizens. Over the past decade, analysts note a gradual evolution away from heavy manufacturing toward services, knowledge work, and logistics, with the port and hospital‑university complex acting as anchors but also exposing the market to sector‑specific shocks. There are still gaps in timely neighborhood‑level data on wages, underemployment, and informal work, so some conditions must be inferred from broader metro statistics and local reports. For listeners seeking opportunities now, current openings include a Supervising Pro Se Staff Attorney with the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland in Baltimore, a permanent role paying roughly 169,000 to 197,000 dollars per year according to the United States Courts; a Registered Nurse Charge position based partly in Baltimore with the Maryland Department of Juvenile Services listed on the State of Maryland JobAps site; and numerous private‑sector roles, with tens of thousands of openings in Baltimore County alone reported on Indeed, ranging from skilled trades to professional services. Key findings are that Baltimore’s labor market is relatively tight overall but uneven across neighborhoods, is increasingly driven by health care, logistics, and knowledge industries, and is being actively shaped by infrastructure shocks, government workforce initiatives, and long‑term shifts from manufacturing to services. Thank you for tuning in and remember to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

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19 episoder

episode Baltimore's Job Market: Health Care, Logistics, and Opportunity in Transition cover

Baltimore's Job Market: Health Care, Logistics, and Opportunity in Transition

Baltimore’s job market is stabilizing after recent shocks, with moderate growth, pockets of labor shortage, and ongoing structural change. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that the Baltimore–Columbia–Towson metro unemployment rate has generally been hovering around the mid‑3 to mid‑4 percent range in recent months, close to the national average, though neighborhood disparities remain significant. According to the Maryland Department of Labor, total nonfarm employment in the region has been trending upward, with gains in health care, professional and business services, hospitality, and logistics. Federal Reserve analyses of the Mid‑Atlantic note that employers across health care, transportation, and skilled trades continue to report difficulty filling specialized roles, suggesting a tight labor market in key occupations. Major industries include health care and life sciences anchored by Johns Hopkins and the University of Maryland Medical System, port‑related trade and logistics tied to the Port of Baltimore, education, financial services, cybersecurity and defense contracting, and government at the city, state, and federal level. Key employers include Johns Hopkins Medicine, Northrop Grumman, the Social Security Administration, major hospital systems, universities, and city and state agencies. Growing sectors cited by the Baltimore Development Corporation and local business press include cybersecurity, digital health, biotech and medical research, port and warehouse operations, and tourism and events, although precise job counts by niche are not always reported, representing a data gap. Seasonal patterns are evident in hospitality, construction, and port activity, with summer and early fall typically stronger for hotels, restaurants, and tourism‑adjacent work. Commuting trends from regional planning agencies show substantial in‑and‑out flows between Baltimore City, Baltimore County, and surrounding counties, with many workers relying on MARC trains, buses, and cars to reach downtown hospitals, government offices, and the port. Recent developments include recovery and rerouting efforts after the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge reported by local and national news, which temporarily disrupted port operations and affected transportation and logistics jobs while federal aid and rebuilding contracts are expected to create construction and engineering work. City and state initiatives such as programs run by the Mayor’s Office of Employment Development, apprenticeships promoted by Maryland’s workforce agencies, and targeted training in tech, health care, and trades aim to connect residents to in‑demand roles and reduce unemployment among youth and returning citizens. Over the past decade, analysts note a gradual evolution away from heavy manufacturing toward services, knowledge work, and logistics, with the port and hospital‑university complex acting as anchors but also exposing the market to sector‑specific shocks. There are still gaps in timely neighborhood‑level data on wages, underemployment, and informal work, so some conditions must be inferred from broader metro statistics and local reports. For listeners seeking opportunities now, current openings include a Supervising Pro Se Staff Attorney with the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland in Baltimore, a permanent role paying roughly 169,000 to 197,000 dollars per year according to the United States Courts; a Registered Nurse Charge position based partly in Baltimore with the Maryland Department of Juvenile Services listed on the State of Maryland JobAps site; and numerous private‑sector roles, with tens of thousands of openings in Baltimore County alone reported on Indeed, ranging from skilled trades to professional services. Key findings are that Baltimore’s labor market is relatively tight overall but uneven across neighborhoods, is increasingly driven by health care, logistics, and knowledge industries, and is being actively shaped by infrastructure shocks, government workforce initiatives, and long‑term shifts from manufacturing to services. Thank you for tuning in and remember to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

19. juni 20264 min
episode Baltimore's Job Market: Health Care, Tech, and Logistics Lead Growth in 2026 cover

Baltimore's Job Market: Health Care, Tech, and Logistics Lead Growth in 2026

Baltimore’s job market is moderately tight with steady hiring and a tilt toward services, logistics, health care, and government. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports the Baltimore-Columbia-Towson metro unemployment rate has recently hovered around the mid‑3 to low‑4 percent range, close to the national average, with total nonfarm employment slowly expanding, led by health care, professional and business services, and warehousing. The employment landscape is shaped by major anchors such as Johns Hopkins University and Health System, the University of Maryland Medical System, Northrop Grumman’s Mission Systems operations, state and federal agencies, the Port of Baltimore, and regional finance and insurance firms, all of which support large numbers of jobs in education, research, defense, logistics, and business services. According to the Maryland Department of Labor and regional economic development reports, key growing sectors include cybersecurity, IT services, life sciences and biotech, port‑related distribution, and hospitality tied to tourism and sports venues, although exact 2026 sector growth rates are not yet fully available, which is an important data gap. Recent developments include continued growth in remote and hybrid roles across Maryland in tech, customer service, and administrative work, as noted by staffing firms such as Randstad, and ongoing investment around the Inner Harbor, hospital campuses, and warehouse corridors. Seasonal patterns are noticeable in hospitality, stadium concessions, tourism support, and some port activity, with summer and early fall producing short‑term spikes in hiring. Commuting trends remain split between car commutes from surrounding counties, transit use into downtown, and an increasing share of work‑from‑home arrangements for knowledge workers. Government initiatives at the state and city level focus on workforce training in tech and trades, port and infrastructure investments, and incentives for employers locating in designated revitalization and innovation zones. Over the last decade, the market has evolved from a heavy manufacturing base toward a more diversified mix dominated by health care, education, professional services, and logistics, with remote work and automation reshaping roles. Current openings illustrate this mix: Liberty Mutual is hiring an inbound Sales Representative based in Maryland on a remote basis with average earnings between 55,000 and 75,000 dollars annually; Compass Group is seeking an Assistant Director of Operations for concessions at M&T Bank Stadium with a salary around 115,000 to 120,000 dollars; and the State of Maryland is recruiting a Chief Financial Officer for the Unemployment Insurance Trust Fund in Baltimore to oversee employer liability and fund integrity. Key findings for listeners: unemployment is relatively low but varies by neighborhood; hiring is strongest in health care, education, logistics, government, and professional services; remote and hybrid work are expanding; and long‑term growth depends on continued investment in skills, infrastructure, and neighborhood revitalization. Thanks for tuning in and remember to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

15. juni 20263 min
episode Baltimore's Job Market: Steady Growth, Uneven Opportunity cover

Baltimore's Job Market: Steady Growth, Uneven Opportunity

Baltimore’s job market is mixed but generally stable, with moderate growth and pockets of opportunity alongside persistent inequality. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports the Baltimore-Columbia-Towson metro unemployment rate recently hovering around the low- to mid-3 percent range, slightly better than the national average, though city unemployment remains higher than surrounding counties. According to the Maryland Department of Labor, total regional employment has grown modestly in recent years, led by health care, education, logistics, and professional services, but data can lag by several months and often does not fully separate Baltimore City from the broader metro, which is a key gap for listeners focused strictly on the city. The employment landscape is anchored by major institutions. Johns Hopkins University and Health System, the University of Maryland Medical System, and the federal government are among the largest employers. Port-related logistics, defense contracting, financial services, and sportswear also matter, with Under Armour’s headquarters in Baltimore continuing to support corporate and technical roles, as shown by its current posting for a Sr. Data Steward in Baltimore with a listed salary range of seventy‑five to one hundred thousand dollars. Comcast Business is hiring an SMB Account Executive in Baltimore with a base salary of about fifty‑two thousand and total target compensation of roughly eighty‑two thousand dollars, highlighting ongoing demand in business‑to‑business sales. Allied Universal is advertising armed security officer roles at government sites in Baltimore at over thirty‑three dollars per hour, reflecting steady demand in security and public‑facility work. Growing sectors include health care, life sciences, cybersecurity, data and analytics roles tied to both private firms and research institutions, and port and warehouse jobs as supply chains continue to reconfigure. Seasonal patterns show increased hiring in hospitality, events, and security tied to tourism and sports, while teen summer employment has tightened, mirroring national trends noted by recent Wall Street Journal and Bureau of Labor Statistics coverage. Commuting trends reflect a sizable share of workers traveling from surrounding counties and using a mix of cars, MARC commuter rail, and local transit; telework has reduced some downtown office commuting but not eliminated it. Government initiatives, including Maryland’s post‑pandemic workforce training, apprenticeship incentives, and local hiring programs tied to port and infrastructure work, aim to connect city residents to better‑paying roles, though evaluation data on long‑term outcomes remains limited. Recent developments include a cooling from the rapid post‑pandemic rebound and more cautious hiring in some white‑collar fields, but health care, education, logistics, and security remain resilient. Market evolution over the past decade has shifted Baltimore further toward knowledge, logistics, and health sectors and away from traditional manufacturing, while still contending with geographic and educational disparities in access to those jobs. Key findings for listeners: the Baltimore job market is relatively tight with low regional unemployment; opportunity is strongest in health care, education, logistics, data and cybersecurity, and business sales; large anchor institutions continue to drive hiring; and sustained public and private investment in skills and transit access will be critical to broadening who benefits from this growth. Thanks for tuning in, and remember to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

12. juni 20264 min
episode Baltimore's Job Market: Steady Growth in Healthcare, Tech, and Logistics cover

Baltimore's Job Market: Steady Growth in Healthcare, Tech, and Logistics

Baltimore’s job market is mid-sized, diverse, and gradually expanding, with growth concentrated in health care, education, logistics, and professional services. The metro area serves as a regional employment hub for central Maryland, drawing workers daily from surrounding counties. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Baltimore-Columbia-Towson metro unemployment rate in early 2026 has hovered around the mid–3 to low–4 percent range, down sharply from pandemic-era peaks but slightly above some higher-growth Sun Belt metros. The labor force participation rate has stabilized, though detailed city-only data can lag several months. Listeners should note that some neighborhood-level and occupation-specific data are limited or outdated. The employment landscape is anchored by major institutions. Johns Hopkins University and Health System, the University of Maryland Medical System, and MedStar Health are among the largest employers, alongside federal agencies like Social Security Administration and Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, and defense-related employers at Fort Meade and Aberdeen Proving Ground, as reported by the Maryland Department of Commerce. The Port of Baltimore supports thousands of jobs in shipping, warehousing, and logistics, while downtown hosts a concentration of finance, legal, and business services roles. Growing sectors include health care, biotech and life sciences, cybersecurity and IT, port-related logistics, and advanced manufacturing. The Greater Baltimore Committee notes increased investment in cybersecurity corridors between Baltimore and Washington, and continued momentum in life sciences around the city’s medical campuses. Tech and remote-capable roles have expanded but remain smaller than in top-tier tech hubs. Recent developments include ongoing port channel improvements, redevelopment around Harbor Point and Port Covington, and continued expansion of hospital and research facilities. Seasonal patterns bring hiring upticks in hospitality, tourism, and port activity in spring and summer, with retail hiring rising in late fall. Commuting trends show heavy in-commuting by car from surrounding suburbs, with MARC rail and light rail serving a smaller but important share of downtown workers, according to the Maryland Transit Administration. Congestion on I-95 and the Baltimore Beltway continues to influence employer remote-work policies. Government initiatives include workforce training and apprenticeship programs through the Mayor’s Office of Employment Development and the state’s EARN Maryland program, which supports industry-led training in sectors like health care, IT, and construction. Over the past decade, the market has shifted away from traditional manufacturing toward services, health, and knowledge industries, while still retaining a core of port and industrial employment. Key findings: Baltimore offers relatively steady employment with strong anchors in health and education, rising opportunities in cyber and logistics, and persistent disparities between neighborhoods. Talent with in-demand skills in nursing, IT, and skilled trades is particularly competitive. Current job openings include a Deputy Commissioner of Correction position with the Maryland Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services in Baltimore City, offering a salary range around the mid–$120,000s to just under $200,000 per year; an HR Generalist role with the State of Maryland in Baltimore with pay in the roughly $60,000 to mid–$90,000 range; and numerous part-time babysitting and childcare positions in Baltimore listed on Sittercity, reflecting ongoing demand for flexible family support work. Thank you for tuning in, and please remember to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

8. juni 20264 min
episode Baltimore's Job Market 2026: Healthcare and Government Drive Stable Growth in Essential Services cover

Baltimore's Job Market 2026: Healthcare and Government Drive Stable Growth in Essential Services

Baltimore’s job market in 2026 is stable but uneven, with demand strongest in health care, government, logistics, and food service, while some neighborhoods still face housing and labor stress. Recent federal data show the broader U.S. unemployment rate at 4.3% in May, and the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that unemployment rates rose year over year in many metro areas in April, including Baltimore, though the exact city-level rate was not provided in the available results. Baltimore’s employment base is anchored by large public and health employers, especially the State of Maryland, University of Maryland Medical System, and other government and hospital systems. The State of Maryland’s recruitment portal lists dozens of open positions, and UMMS continues to hire in clinical roles such as registered nursing in downtown Baltimore. Recent postings also point to ongoing demand in facilities management, corrections, food service, and technical administration. The strongest growth sectors appear to be health care, public safety, education, and food service, with additional hiring in operations, logistics, and contracts. Seasonal hiring patterns are most visible in hospitality, campus operations, and food service, which typically strengthen around spring and summer. Commuting trends continue to favor a large regional labor shed, with many workers traveling into central Baltimore for hospitals, universities, and government offices; however, the supplied sources do not include current commute-mode data or metro commuting shares. Recent developments include continued state hiring, active correctional leadership recruitment, and open hospital nursing roles, suggesting that replacement hiring and essential services remain major drivers of employment. The market has evolved toward a more services-heavy structure, with public sector, health care, and institutional employers shaping job creation more than manufacturing. Data gaps remain for current Baltimore city unemployment, industry payroll counts, and precise commuting patterns in the provided search results. Current openings include Deputy Chief of Operations in Baltimore City facilities management, Deputy Commissioner of Correction for Maryland in Baltimore, and Registered Nurse at UMMS in downtown Baltimore. Key findings are that Baltimore’s labor market is broadening around essential services, public employment remains a major stabilizer, and health care is the clearest growth engine. Thank you for tuning in, and please subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

5. juni 20262 min