tr?id=&ev=PageView&noscript=

From the Iowa Worker’s Almanac: Layoffs and news for the working class, Aug. 14, 2025

From the Iowa Worker’s Almanac: Layoffs and news for the working class, Aug. 14, 2025

Jacob Scroggins, a shift supervisor at the Starbucks on Merle Hay Road in Des Moines, talks about the effort to unionize his store in a screenshot from a video call with Iowa Starting Line on July 22, 2025.

By Amie Rivers

August 18, 2025
  • Fox guarding the henhouse: A former Tyson executive now oversees the safety of the US meat supply(Sentient Media)
  • Designed to discriminate: By gutting the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs, Trump is making it easier for federal contractors to discriminate—all underwritten by your tax dollars. (EPI)
  • Honduran, Nicaraguan, and Nepalese workers can stay, for now, after a judge halted Trump’s order to end Temporary Protective Status for people from those countries. No word if JBS is reinstating the 200 workers they fired as a result of Trump’s order; Iowa Migrant Movement for Justice says it’s happening at other Iowa plants, too, though details were not available. (CNN, IPR)
  • Iowa graduate students call university’s decision “total capitulation:” After two University of Iowa staff members were put on administrative leave after they were secretly taped by a conservative news outlet, the Campaign to Organize Graduate Students said such recordings were not only prohibited, their firings were wrong. “We are alarmed by the use of government power in an attempt to censor such speech, and hereby call on President Wilson to protect students, faculty, and staff from interference in our university by the Reynolds and Trump administrations.” (Iowa City Press-Citizen)
  • Iowa National Guard ordered to work with ICE: Immigration rights groups Escucha Mi Voz and LULAC Iowa condemned the move. “Deploying the National Guard against our state’s hardworking immigrant communities is morally indefensible and risks widespread violations of civil liberties and constitutional rights,” said Alejandra Escobar of Escucha Mi Voz. “Governor Reynolds’ plan is a misuse of Iowa’s resources,” said Joe Henry of LULAC. “The governor should be putting her efforts toward the real problems we’re facing in Iowa like climbing cancer rates, the second-worst economy in the nation, poor access to healthcare and dangerous levels of water pollutants in our rivers.” (Iowa Capital Dispatch)
  • Des Moines firefighters won a compensation lawsuit against the city. They’ll now get extra time off when working overtime on holidays(Axios)
  • West Des Moines firefighters sue over misclassification: Fifteen current and former firefighters say the city inaccurately classified them as exempt from overtime because of their managerial status, though generally first responders aren’t classified as such. (Iowa Capital Dispatch)
  • The Republican megalaw is for the wealthy, the CBO confirmed this week. It’s also “a betrayal of everything I believe government should be for,” according to International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers President Kenneth Cooper. “This so-called One Big Beautiful Bill is the greatest transfer of wealth from working people to the rich in our nation’s history.” (Iowa Capital Dispatch)
  • After firing the head of the BLS, Trump installed a far-right loyalist (shocker) who now says monthly jobs report numbers aren’t needed. Columnist Ed Tibbetts remembers a certain Iowa governor who tried reimagining job numbers, too. (Iowa Capital Dispatch, Along the Mississippi)
  • It’s not just you; prices are indeed rising, driven by tariffs. (Yahoo Finance)
  • Won a union: Seventeen full- and part-time baristas and shift supervisors at a Starbucks in Des Moines voted 10-5 to unionize with Starbucks Workers United. It’s now the fourth unionized Starbucks in Iowa. Read more here. (Des Moines Register)
  • Voting on a union: Seventeen linemen, apprentice linemen, line foremen and member service technicians with Southwest Iowa Rural Electric Cooperative in Corning voted Tuesday on whether to unionize with the IBEW Local 55; no word yet on the National Labor Relations Board website.
  • 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. Twenty-four x-ray radiographers and lead workers with American Ordnance in Middletown filed a petition Aug. 11 to unionize with IAM Local 1010.

Upcoming layoffs:

All information taken from Iowa Workforce Development’s WARN Act website. Read WARN Act and Iowa WARN Act criteria here.

  • Advanced Drainage Systems in Waterloo is closing and laying off 71 employees by Sunday. Read more here.
  • Wells Fargo in West Des Moines is laying off 35 workers by Aug. 24, 11 workers by Sept. 8, 44 workers by Sept. 22, and 10 workers by Oct. 4.
  • FedEx is laying off 168 workers at three locations by Sept. 1: 57 workers in Cedar Rapids, 84 workers in Des Moines, and 27 workers in DubuqueRead more here.
  • Winnebago Industries is closing and laying off 18 workers in Charles City and 77 workers in Waverly by Sept. 8, and laying off another 26 workers in Charles City by Dec. 12. Read more here.
  • TreeHouse Foods in New Hampton is closing and laying off 48 workers by Sept. 12. Read more here.

This article originally appeared in the Aug. 14 edition of the Iowa Worker’s Almanac. Thanks for being a subscriber.

  • 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

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.

Amie Rivers
Amie Rivers, Community Editor
Your support keeps us going
Help us continue delivering fact-based news to Iowans
Related Stories
Share This
BLOCKED
BLOCKED