But there was no significant change in the number of unemployed workers, and the unemployment rate held steady at 9.7%. Economists surveyed by Briefing.com were expecting an increase to 9.8%.
The government said the winter storms that blanketed the East Coast with several feet of snow last month possibly skewed the results. The Labor Department's jobs survey was conducted in the middle of February, which coincided with blizzards that temporarily shuttered some businesses and kept many workers home without pay.
Those employees would not have been counted on the government's payroll survey if they did not get paid during that pay period.
"The jobs numbers themselves show a pretty steady improvement across most categories," said Bob Brusca, economist at FAO Economics. "Through the blizzard of jobs data, it's a lot easier to connect the dots to a positive story than to a negative story."
Brusca noted that even in sectors that are not hiring, the pace of job loss has slowed to close to the lowest level since the recession began in December 2007.
Snowed in"The snow storms were particularly severe, hitting large-population areas the hardest right at the time of the survey," said George Corona, chief operating officer of temporary staffing firm Kelly Services. "You would expect that manufacturing and construction were negatively impacted because of the weather."
Retail, construction and factory workers were the most likely to be impacted by inclement weather, and all three sectors took a hit in February. Retailers trimmed 400 jobs after adding 41,000 positions in January. Manufacturing businesses added just 1,000 jobs, down from 20,000 new jobs the month before.
Construction continued to be one of the worst-hit sectors, cutting 64,000 jobs in February. Unemployment in the construction industry rose to a rate of 27.1%, up from 24.7% in the previous month and by far the highest rate of any sector.
The snow also likely impacted the number of workers who were seeking full-time employment but were working only part-time hours. That figure rose by nearly 400,000, pushing the so-called underemployment rate up to 16.8% from 16.5% in January.
That resulted in shorter hours for workers: The hourly work week fell by an average of 6 minutes to 33.8 hours in February. With a modest 3-cent gain in the average hourly salary, the average weekly paycheck rose by $1.01 to $759.15.
Obama administration economist Christina Romer said the snow storms likely had a "substantial" impact on February's jobs figures. In turn, she expected last month's jobs report "to be counteracted next month, as workers who temporarily disappeared from payrolls because of the snow are once again counted."
A silver liningDespite the snow, several industries showed solid gains in employment, including health care and the service industries. Private business services created 51,000 jobs in February, the most of any sector. That's encouraging, since economists say hiring in that sector is a good measuring stick for the health of the overall labor market.
Also encouraging was the addition of 47,500 temporary workers, whose hiring often signals that employers are starting to gear up again. There have been nearly 100,000 temporary jobs created in 2010.
0:00/1:34What's in the overdue jobs bill? In an attempt to correct the still slumping labor market, the House passed a $15 billion jobs bill on Thursday, and the Senate is expected to vote on it next week. The bill would exempt employers from Social Security payroll taxes on new hires who were unemployed; fund highway and transit programs through 2010; extend a tax break for business that spend money on capital investments, such as equipment purchases; and expand the use of the Build America Bonds program, which helps states and municipalities fund capital construction projects.
Tennessee’s unemployment rate won’t get much relief from jobs billJob Growth