Right to Work Iowa Welcomes New Businesses
Two companies investing in Right to Work Iowa are Sub-Zero Group and Fair Oaks Foods. Altogether, they will create 439 new jobs.
Two companies investing in Right to Work Iowa are Sub-Zero Group and Fair Oaks Foods. Altogether, they will create 439 new jobs.
Valent BioSciences and Hydrite are both expanding soon in different Right to Work Iowa locations.
Businesses investing in the Midwest include Accelerate360 in Kansas, Link Mfg in Iowa, Nucor in Nebraska, and Core Scientific in North Dakota.
Naeve Family Farms and divvyDOSE are both investing in Right to Work Iowa. Between the two of them, they plan to create up to 350 new jobs!
Two businesses that are investing in Right to Work Iowa are BAE Systems and Spiber. Combined, the two will invest $201.4 million.
According to Tammy Wawro, top boss of the NEA teacher union-affiliated IowaState Education Association, allowing school districts to offer higher pay to teachers who accept difficult assignments is bad for school employee “morale”! Credit : Scott Morgan/Freelance Thanks to…
National Right to Work President Congratulates Iowa Legislature On Passing Monopoly Bargaining Reform Bill Legislation will roll back worst abuses of government monopoly bargaining and save taxpayers money Springfield, VA (February 16, 2017) – Today, Mark Mix, President of the…
According to the Illinois Review, “Many attribute Romney’s poor performance to flyers Right to Work supporters passed out at the straw poll highlighting Romney’s failure to support a National Right to…
In the May issue of Inside ALEC, Iowa State Rep. Dawn Pettengill explains the importance of Right To Work and state economic growth: Through an executive order in July of 2000, Iowa’s Governor [Tom] Vilsack ordered the removal of all Right to Work references from the Department of Economic Development (IDED) website and brochures. [Vilsack is Barack Obama’s current Secretary of Agriculture.] Eleven years later, HF149 sailed through the Iowa House requiring IDED to include the phrase, “Iowa is a Right-to- Work State” in BOLD letters on all business recruitment and promotional literature and their website. Today, although the bill stalled in the Senate, the Iowa Department of Economic Development’s webpage “Why Iowa?” proudly announces Iowa as a Right to Work state. The “Business Advantages” page showcases Iowa’s Right to Work at the top of the list of reasons for a business to bring their commerce to our state. Whether you are a business or an individual, the rights of workers and employers are every bit as important as tax implications, a skilled workforce and a great quality of life when making that location decision. According to the National Institute for Labor Relations Research, Right To Work (RTW) states benefit from faster growth and higher purchasing power than non- Right To Work. Their November 2010 report shows significantly higher percentages in the growth of nonfarm private sector employees, real manufacturing GDP, real personal income, disposable personal income, value added per production worker, housing starts, the number of bachelor degrees attained and people covered by employment based and private health insurance.