There are some interesting numbers buried in the just-released statewide unemployment report, which, on the whole, had some really positive news for the state's economy.
Job growth was not evenly spread through the state.
The Tri-Cities were hot, growing their workforce by a state-leading 5.4 percent. West of the mountains, both Bellingham and Clark County showed healthy 3.9-percent growth. Hot farm economies in Moses Lake and Adams County generated job growth of close to 4 percent. And over in the lower right-hand corner, Asotin County recorded a 4.1-percent jump - only 400 jobs, but still, that's significant in Clarkston.
However, some of the places we think of as booming showed relatively stagnant job growth: Bremerton, Spokane and Yakima may have vibrant new downtowns, but their labor markets all grew less than 2 percent - the same in Wenatchee, even with its hot housing market. The new wineries, restaurants and bed-and-breakfasts in Walla Walla generated only 0.3 percent job growth. And December's flood washed away 430 Lewis County jobs - Centralia's job totals were down 1.5 percent year-over-year.
Bottom line: Statewide, the jobs picture is brighter than the national outlook, and some communities are growing rapidly. A handful of regions are lagging behind, but even there - in most cases - the growth is generally better than the national norm.