
(Tom Williams/Getty Images)
- Miller-Meeks said she liked clean energy tax credits, but her vote for the Big Beautiful Bill shows she didn’t care, writes Stefanie Warnick, a union construction worker with the Laborers’ International Union of North America (LiUNA) Local 43. “Our state needs leaders who will fight for the livelihoods of Iowans, not just sign letters and then vote the other way when it counts,” Warnick wrote.
- Noncompetes are back: President Donald Trump’s FTC voluntarily stopped defending its ban on noncompete agreements—meaning bosses can go back to limiting who you can work for to suppress your wages and job mobility.
- 450 Korean workers were detained in Georgia in ICE’s largest raid so far this year—yet they were brought in as temporary workers to get the plant online, after which they’d hire Americans. (This, it turns out, has not made South Korea—the country’s “biggest foreign direct investor”—very happy.)
- Companies are suing the federal government over tariffs, after a federal court ruled Trump didn’t have the right to impose them. This could cost our federal government $1 trillion, and the rich could take it all.
- ‘Take back this state’ was Rick Moyle’s message at the recent International Association of Machinists union conference in Altoona last month. “Whether you know it or not, we’re under attack, and we have been for the last 10 years,” the president of the IAM Iowa council said. “So we have to continue politically to engage our members.” Watch the short video here.
- Kawasaki is trying to destroy the union: Workers in the Kawasaki United Labor Union (KULU) in the Philippines have been on strike for over 90 days and are requesting solidarity and support. Sign a petition, donate to their strike fund, or picket a dealership near you.
- Immigrants make up 32% of home health care workers, and that includes noncitizen workers. Deporting them, or otherwise forcing them to leave the country, is exacerbating the health care worker shortage.
- What does it mean to lose a union contract? “Deteriorating services, moms forced back from maternity leave, and more” for federal workers, says a new investigative article from Workday Magazine and The American Prospect.
- Voting on a union: Twenty-four full- and part-time radiographers with American Ordnance in Middletown vote Sept. 17 on whether to unionize with IAM Local 1010. A total of 1,776 full- and part-time registered nurses and PRNs at Iowa Methodist Medical Center, Blank Children’s Hospital, Methodist West Hospital, and Iowa Lutheran Hospital in Des Moines vote Oct. 5-7 on whether to unionize with Teamsters Local 90.
- Starting up a union: Fifty full- and part-time workers at River Hills Community Health Center in Ottumwa refiled a petition to unionize Aug. 8 with River Hills United/Teamsters Local 90.
Upcoming layoffs:
All information taken from Iowa Workforce Development’s WARN Act website. Read WARN Act and Iowa WARN Act criteria here.
- TreeHouse Foods in New Hampton is closing and laying off 48 workers by Friday. Read more here.
- John Deere in Waterloo is laying off 71 workers at the Waterloo Works (Foundry) by Sept. 19. Read more here.
- Wells Fargo in West Des Moines is laying off 44 workers by Sept. 22, 10 workers by Oct. 4, and 10 workers by Oct. 18.
- Lennox Industries in Marshalltown is laying off 49 workers by Sept. 28. Read more here.
- The Quad City Times in Davenport is laying off 49 printing press workers by Sept. 29. Read more here.
- Winnebago Industries is closing and continuing to lay off, including one worker in Forest City by Sept. 29, three workers in Forest City by Oct. 10, and 26 workers in Charles City by Dec. 12. Read more here.
- Smurfit Westrock Company in Cedar Rapids is closing and laying off 100 workers by Oct. 4. Read more here.
- Maverik in Des Moines is laying off 100 workers at its corporate headquarters by Oct. 6. Read more here.
- Fox River Mills in Osage is closing, relocating to North Carolina, and laying off 105 workers by Oct. 10. Read more here.
Support Our Cause
Thank you for taking the time to read our work. Before you go, we hope you'll consider supporting our values-driven journalism, which has always strived to make clear what's really at stake for Iowans and our future.
Since day one, our goal here at Iowa Starting Line has always been to empower people across the state with fact-based news and information. We believe that when people are armed with knowledge about what's happening in their local, state, and federal governments—including who is working on their behalf and who is actively trying to block efforts aimed at improving the daily lives of Iowan families—they will be inspired to become civically engaged.


Iowa Worker’s Almanac: Layoffs and news briefs, Aug. 29
Working class news you can use: A 'Save Our VA' picket in Iowa City took place on Wednesday, with dozens of Iowans showing up to protest not only...

Iowa Worker’s Almanac: Working class news and upcoming layoffs, Aug. 21
Muscatine construction worker and victim of crime jailed: Jesús Hernández was shot when two people tried stealing his car. After a hospital stay, he...

Iowa has a dire shortage of nurses. Here’s why
(This story first appeared in the Iowa Worker's Almanac, and is a subscriber exclusive.) You probably already know Iowa has a problem getting...

From the Iowa Worker’s Almanac: Layoffs and news for the working class, Aug. 14, 2025
Fox guarding the henhouse: A former Tyson executive now oversees the safety of the US meat supply. (Sentient Media) Designed to discriminate: By...

Iowa DOGE recommends cutting public worker IPERS for new hires
The Iowa DOGE task force wants to cut IPERS for new hires, the public employee retirement system that thousands of teachers, corrections officers,...

Iowa DOGE targets retirement pensions for teachers, law enforcement
A taskforce appointed by Gov. Kim Reynolds recommended eliminating the state pension system for new employees and replacing it with a 401(k)-style...