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2 new Iowa bills to lower grocery prices: Iowa Worker’s Almanac layoffs and news for Feb. 12, 2026

2 new Iowa bills to lower grocery prices: Iowa Worker’s Almanac layoffs and news for Feb. 12, 2026

A woman checking out at the grocery store. (Getty Images/Unsplash)

By Amie Rivers

February 12, 2026

Iowa Worker’s Almanac news briefs, Feb. 12, 2026:

  • Pushing workers out of Iowa: Workers are leaving Iowa in droves. One Iowan confronted Republican lawmakers about how striking state affirmative action policies and allowing for discrimination in professional licensure would only make the problem worse.
  • Two new grocery store bills to keep prices down: State Sen. Zach Wahls this week introduced two bills in the Iowa Legislature he says will “protect both retail grocery consumers and workers.” The first would prohibit large grocery stores from owning their own meat processing facilities, called “vertical integration,” that often raises consumer prices. The second bans digital surveillance pricing, which allows stores to increase prices based on what they think a consumer is willing to pay. “If you’re a grocery chain, you shouldn’t be allowed to own the whole supply chain just so you can crush your competition and raise prices on Iowa families,” Wahls said in a statement. “And you damn sure shouldn’t be using cameras or algorithms to charge different people different prices for the same grocery cart.” UFCW International Vice President Ademola Oyefeso agreed. “If these trends continue, workers, small business owners, and shoppers will lose while big companies win larger and larger profits.”
  • UnityPoint nurse shares her unionization story: Remember Belinda Carpenter, one of the organizers of the Nurses United union (still awaiting a court case to make their union official)? She just wrote an op-ed in Labor Notes talking about what they went through to get there.
  • The use of AI in hiring, bargaining, wages and more would be prohibited under Iowa Senate Study Bill 3014 for state agencies, and it would compel them to disclose the use of artificial intelligence tools. Unions for state workers registered in support of it.
  • Union endorsements: Teamsters Local 238 endorsed Sarah Trone Garriott for US House District 3 in Central Iowa. “Working people are tired of a political system that serves big money and leaves our communities behind,” said Jesse Case, Secretary-Treasurer of the union. “Sarah Trone Garriott shares those priorities and has shown she’ll listen to working people and deliver.” // Evan Langston, community leader and cofounder of Cedar Valley Working Families, endorsed Clint Twedt-Ball for US House District 2 in Northeast Iowa.
  • Fewer OSHA inspectors, higher fatalities: That’s what the US Department of Labor warns is a major challenge in their latest report, due to staffing cuts. “A lack of available inspectors can lead to fewer inspections, diminished enforcement in high-risk industries and, ultimately, greater risk of fatalities, injuries, or compromised health for workers,” the department wrote.
  • Trump more than doubled Argentina beef imports, making Iowa cattle producers so mad that even Republican US Rep. Zach Nunn had to issue a medium-worded statement.
  • Young workers marched on Washington, DC, this weekend, advocating for better pay and working conditions they say are making it hard for Gen Z to get by, let alone get ahead.
  • Trump Rx not only doesn’t make any medicines cheaper, it actually has higher prices on some drugs than other discount drug programs like GoodRx, a new report finds.
  • Got a coworker believing anti-immigrant myths? It is possible to change their mind: Ask questions, build a relationship with them, root the conversation in your actual workplace, and draw on values of solidarity and building worker power, Natascha Elena Uhlmann writes.
  • Write to Congress if you support the Railway Safety Act, which increases safety standards in the wake of the East Palestine derailment.
  • Less than $1,000 for retirement is the median savings for all employed American adults between the ages of 21 and 64, according to a recent report.
  • Easier to fire: Starting March 9, up to 50,000 federal employees could lose their current job protections and be converted into at-will employees at President Trump’s discretion, according to a final rule issued last week by the Office of Personnel Management (OPM).
  • Voting on a union: Fifty full- and part-time workers at River Hills Community Health Center in Ottumwa will vote Feb. 19 on whether to be represented by 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.

  • Winnebago Industries in Charles City is closing and laying off its remaining 23 workers by Feb. 20.
  • MercyOne is closing and laying off 40 workers in Ottumwa by Feb. 27, laying off 67 workers at MercyOne Des Moines Medical Center by Mar. 17, and laying off 34 workers at MercyOne North Iowa Medical Center in Mason City by Mar. 17. Read more here.
  • Amie Rivers

    Amie Rivers is Iowa Starting Line's newsletter editor. She writes the weekly Worker’s Almanac edition of Iowa Starting Line, featuring a roundup of the worker news you need to know. Previously, she was an award-winning journalist at the Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier; now, she very much enjoys making TikToks and memes and getting pet photos in her inbox.

    Have a story tip? Reach Amie at [email protected]. For local reporting in Iowa that connects the dots, from policy to people, sign up for Amie's newsletter.

CATEGORIES: LABOR

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Amie Rivers
Amie Rivers, Community Editor
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