Minnesota employers added 4,300 jobs in July, as gains in public education, health care and finance overcame continued losses in construction and manufacturing.
The unemployment rate was unmoved at 5.2 percent, but is still well below the national average of 7.4 percent, the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development reported Thursday.
The state has been adding an average of just under 5,000 jobs in each of the past three months.
"If you have 12 months like that, that's 60,000 jobs. That's a good year," said Tom Stinson, an economist at the University of Minnesota. "I'd like to see the unemployment rate come down a little bit more, but the jobs numbers are comforting."
The state is now one strong month away from returning to the all-time employment high set in February 2008, before the recession eliminated 160,000 Minnesota jobs.
The strongest job sector in July was local government, which added 3,800 jobs, mostly at public schools. Hiring at school districts is up 10 percent from a year ago, a gain of about 10,000 jobs.
Oriane Casale, a labor market economist for the state, attributed that to growing summer school programs and the boost in education funding approved by the state Legislature this spring.
"Definitely one of the things going on here seems to be additional funding for hiring at the local government level, and specifically in school districts," Casale said.