
David Staten, right, of Chatsworth files for unemployment after being laid off from a construction job in Dalton on Aug. 22. Collapsing industry or not, Dalton city officials are still the proud owners of the label ‘Carpet Capital of the World,’ but what they aren’t happy about is the most recent label: the city that is leading the nation in the number of job losses per capita this year.
Many of those businesses are shuttered now, hinting at one of the city’s more dubious distinctions: The city has lost more jobs per capita in the past year than any other in the U.S. Between June 2011 and June 2012, 4,600 jobs in this city of 100,000 have disappeared, according to the United States Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Factories in and around Dalton produced three-quarters of the nation’s flooring until the housing bubble burst and brought one of the largest U.S. manufacturing industries to its knees. Thousands lost their jobs and the unemployment rate spiked from 4.7 percent in 2007 to 12.7 percent in 2009, according to the Georgia Department of Labor.
Recovery has been elusive here, in part because virtually every other business in town relied on the prosperity of carpet. Support industries, such as trucking, suddenly had less to haul and had to find ways to make up for it. Officials say they’re fighting to bring their city back from the brink.
Elaine Bell, a lifelong Dalton resident, was among those who lost her job at a local carpet factory in 2009. She’s willing to work any job — she hasn’t found full-time work since losing her factory job. But her hope dwindles every time she hears the word “no.”
“I’ve been all over Dalton since 8 o’clock this morning and that’s all I’ve heard: We ain’t hiring,” Bell said.
Bell said she’s barely getting by, trying to keep up with gas prices and the cost of taking care of her elderly mother.
Of those 4,600 jobs lost, only 400 were in manufacturing. Most of the rest were in construction, hospitality and other private sector services stinging from carpet’s decline. And that ripple effect is to be expected, said Rajeev Dhawan of the Economic Forecasting Center at Georgia State University.









