Labor

Iowa working class news you can use: July 25

Iowa Working Class News You Can Use: Iowaโ€™s farmers are left with rising bills and few guaranteesย as President Donald Trump’s second trade war brewsโ€”creating aย storm of financial pressure in the heart of the stateโ€™s farm economyย that could ripple beyond 2025, especially if global partners retaliate and fragile trade truces unravel. Yet some farmers stillย have faith…

An image of a gravel road cutting between two farm fields on either side with the quote, "It's like changing a tire while we're still driving down the road."
An image of a gravel road cutting between two farm fields on either side with the quote, "It's like changing a tire while we're still driving down the road."

Iowa Working Class News You Can Use:

  • Iowaโ€™s farmers are left with rising bills and few guaranteesย as President Donald Trump’s second trade war brewsโ€”creating aย storm of financial pressure in the heart of the stateโ€™s farm economyย that could ripple beyond 2025, especially if global partners retaliate and fragile trade truces unravel. Yet some farmers stillย have faith it will ultimately work out,ย despiteย farm bankruptcies on the riseย andย worries about USDA cuts.ย (The Gazette, Reddit, Farm Policy News, Iowa Capital Dispatch)
  • 200 JBS Ottumwa workers had their visas revoked,ย amounting to 10% of the plant’s workers. It comes after Trump’s Department of Homeland Security revoked temporary protected status for residents of several countries, including Haiti, Cuba, Nicaragua, and Venezuela. JBS sent notices to the affected workers, telling them they were losing their jobs and had to leave the country immediately.ย “Keep those people in our prayers,”ย said Ottumwa Mayor Rick Johnson.ย (Sentient)
  • No teachers available:ย Iowa has such a shortage of teachersโ€”in areas ranging from math to science to music to art to Spanish to P.E.โ€”that many districts are now forced to contract with companies to provide classes online, the Iowa Department of Education said.ย (IPR)
  • “The U.S. Mail is not for sale:”ย That’s the message the American Postal Workers Union is telling Iowans toย tell our members of Congress, as Trump mulls over whether to privatize the US Postal Service.ย Cuts would hit rural areas the hardest.ย “Our economy isnโ€™t delivering for the middle class anymore,โ€ said gubernatorial candidate Rob Sand.ย (Iowa Capital Dispatch, IPR)
  • Today marks 16 years without an increase in the federal minimum wage,ย which isย $7.25 an hour, and which Iowa lawmakers have refused to raiseโ€”even though that’s contributed to theย lowest average wages in the Midwest and 44th-worst in the nation.ย (Business for a Fair Minimum Wage, Des Moines Register)
  • $3.394 trillion will be added to the country’s deficit,ย andย 10 million Americans will lose their health care, under Trump’s budget bill, the Congressional Budget Office predicts. And even if you’re not losing your health insurance, it’s expected toย rise by 75% next year.ย (Iowa Capital Dispatch, IPR)
  • Truckers, environmentalists join up to ask for better safety:ย Drivers have described seeing waste marked flammable or radioactive being pumped out of HAZMAT-marked tanks and loaded onto regular, unmarked trucks,ย endangering them and the communities they drive throughโ€”all, allegedly, just to save labor costs.ย (In These Times)
  • Black women have one of the highest unemployment rates of any demographic,ย something that’s been exacerbated by the recent Trump (and Reynolds) administration’sย purging of “diversity” positions. (Black Iowa News)
  • Iowans need to make $20 per hourย toย afford rent on the average two-bedroom apartment, the National Low Income Housing Coalition found in a new report. That’s the equivalent of working three full-time minimum-wage jobs, or 24 hours a day. But sure, there’s no affordable housing crisis!ย (IPR)
  • USW Local 444 workers rallied to kick off contract negotiationsย at Henniges Automotive in Keokuk last week. Workers are asking for no changes to their health insurance, asย they’re worried about costs rising.ย (Daily Gate City)
  • Digital workplace surveillance, or “bossware,”ย is becoming more prevalent. But when it goes wrong,ย workers often have little recourse.ย (National Employment Law Project)
  • Contract workers don’t need the Independent Retirement Fairness Actโ€”they need toย stop being misclassifiedย as independent contractors by companies trying to save a buck, argues the Economic Policy Institute.ย (EPI)
  • Voting on a union:ย Seventeen full- and part-time baristas and shift supervisors at aย Starbucksย inย Des Moinesย vote Aug. 7 on whether to unionizeย with Starbucks Workers United. Seventeen linemen, apprentice linemen, line foremen and member service technicians withย Southwest Iowa Rural Electric Cooperativeย inย Corningย vote Aug. 12 on whether to unionizeย with the International Brotherhood of Electric Workers Local 55.

Upcoming layoffs:

  • Whirlpool Corporationย inย Amanaย is laying off 250 workers by Wednesday.
  • American Contract Systemsย inย Grimesย is closing and laying off 62 workers by July 31.ย Read more here.
  • Lennox Industriesย inย Marshalltownย is laying off 62 workers by Aug. 1.ย The company previously laid off 114 workers in 2023.
  • US Cellularย inย Cedar Rapidsย is laying off 30 workers by Aug. 1.
  • The Mutual Groupย inย West Des Moinesย is laying off 34 workers by Aug. 8.
  • Wells Fargoย inย West Des Moinesย is laying off 35 workers by Aug. 10, 35 workers by Aug. 24, 11 workers by Sept. 8, and 44 workers by Sept. 22.
  • Southeast Service Corporationย inย Mount Vernonย is laying off 31 workers by Aug. 11.
  • Advanced Drainage Systemsย inย Waterlooย is closing and laying off 71 employees by Aug. 17.ย Read more here.

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