Tag Archives: unemployment

The Iowa Economy: Improving?

Good news about Iowa’s economy continues to trickle in, but does this mean the economy is turning the corner or a case of we had nowhere to go but up?

Iowa’s unemployment rate is 6.8% or 114,600 Iowans out of work. The lowest rate is in Lyon County (4.8%) in far northwest Iowa. The second lowest is Carroll County at 5.1%. The highest level is in Allamakee at 11.8%.

Job openings are starting to appear in the Cedar Rapids Gazette. Is that a good sign? The fields hiring? According to the story:

The top categories for jobs were general help, followed by accounting, general administration, sales, nursing and social work.

Another story in the Des Moines Register shows the Iowa economy has seen gains for six months in a row.

What does that exactly mean?
Where is the growth happening?
Are you getting back to work yet?

We have put together another economic roundtable for May 13 on the Iowa Journal. Our feature piece will likely be about Carroll, Iowa. What have they done in Carroll County to keep that number low and be a regional economic engine? We hope to find out in our visit this week.

What other spots are improving? Where do you live and what is the economy like there? Tell your story below in the comments or send us an email to IowaJournal@IPTV.org.

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The Iowa Journal in 2010 – what we’ve covered so far

The first 3 months of 2010 have been good ones at The Iowa Journal.

What have we covered on your statewide network?

  • Crime Victims
  • Nature Heritage discussion
  • Iowa Vision and future
  • Tax Credits
  • Unemployment
  • Flood Potential
  • Refugees/Immigrants
  • Mental Health
  • Healthcare – Obama
  • Innovations in Education

Interested? Click on the TIJ and the show # for a link to the show page on IPTV.org.

Below is a longer look at each topic.

Crime Victims TIJ #315 aired on 1.7.10.  Produced by Judy Blank. The criminal court system deals with those who commit a crime. Who helps the crime victims? On the next Iowa Journal, a look at crime victim’s services and the victim justice rights movement in Iowa.

Each year, thousands of Iowans are “branded” by a description they never sought – or never thought they would receive. They also learned first hand, the ins and outs of a judicial system that they previously had not experienced.

There is also a state program that pays compensation to victims who incurred medical expenses or loss of income due to a crime. The costs and challenges are many, as seen in a visit with a central Iowa woman about a violent domestic assault.

Nature Heritage discussion TIJ #316 aired 1.14.10.  Sara Frasher was the producer. TIJ explores Iowa’s role in the preservation and conservation of the state’s and the nation’s natural heritage.

On this edition we take a look back to October 2009 with an encore presentation of a thought-provoking discussion about Iowa’s ecology.  We invited some people with expertise and experience to join us and asked them how Iowa can maintain and protect the natural world we inherited, a world that sustains us all.

Vision for Iowa TIJ #317 originally aired 1.28.10. Judy Blank and Paul Yeager worked on this show. Iowa faces recession, unemployment and out-migration of young people. What does the future hold for those who stay in the state?

With state revenue projections down and unemployment up Iowa’s elected officials and government leaders are trying to find ways to sustain necessary state services that Iowans depend upon. The governor has ordered more than one budget cut and asked employees to take days off without pay.

Still looking for solutions, the General Assembly’s Web site has posed a question to the public.  What are your suggestions for improving state government?  Since February of 2009 more than 500 have responded.  So, just what solutions can come from the private sector?  We asked four Iowans their vision for Iowa’s future, how to overcome challenging socioeconomic concerns and who can help harness the state’s power.

Tax Credits TIJ #318 aired 2.4.10. Nancy Crowfoot produced the show. Governor Culver has called for major reforms in Iowa’s tax credits. How will any changes affect Iowa’s business climate? And how do such incentives affect the state budget and the ability to pay for the services Iowans depend upon?

On October 28th, a group of international filmmakers filed a lawsuit against the Iowa Department of Economic Development.  The filmmakers had to postpone making a movie in Iowa because the state’s film tax-credit program has been put on hold. So once again, the state’s most visible and recent effort to prime the pump and attract a new business and jobs ran into problems. Encouraging private business while still raising enough revenue to take care of the public’s business is a tricky balancing act.

Unemployment TIJ #319 originated 2.11.10 and was produced by Paul Yeager. This show looks at those who are unemployed and underemployed in Iowa. What services and support are there for them?

While economists may say the recession is over, those still looking for work may disagree. In January, national unemployment stood at just under 10 percent… a slight dip from the previous month…. while in Iowa the latest unemployment figures from December put the percentage of unemployed in this state at 6 point 6 percent. But the numbers can be misleading.

In one Iowa county, as many as one out of every nine people over the age of 16,  or 11 point 1 percent of the residents are currently looking for a job. Losing one’s job creates not only a financial strain on any family but also an emotional one. We visited with a family who is living the day-to-day live without an income and what is next for that family. Also, another unemployed woman who is taking this opportunity to work for herself.

Flood Potential TIJ #320 Airdate: 2.18.10 as produced by Nancy Crowfoot. The Iowa Journal looks at the potential for 2010 floods similar to those of 2008.

Much of Iowa has seen excessive amounts of snowfall this winter– with the western part of the state at twice as much and the northwest corner about three times as much snow as usual.
The storms have nearly busted the snow-removal budgets of many communities.  And recovering from storm damage — from downed trees and power lines to collapsed rooftops – is estimated to cost millions of dollars statewide.
To help with storm recovery costs, Governor Chet Culver has asked President Obama to declare 27 Iowa counties federal disaster areas.  This aid is sought as Iowans still face more winter to come.

And with the current and future snow expected – there are concerns by many that when the snow of 2010 melts, they may have to relive the “floods of 2008″.

Refugees/Immigrants TIJ #321 Originated: 2.25.10. Producer: Judy Blank. Critical programs that brought some 30,000 refugees to Iowa over the past 35 years are ending. The Iowa Journal examines changes to refugee services, what that means to the state, the people who live here and those wanting to come.

In the last year’s time, more than 900 refugees have resettled in Iowa.  But the flow of new arrivals will soon slow as three Iowa agencies offering refugee services will reduce or eliminate those services.

This would end an era where Iowa stood out nationally in its commitment to helping refugees that dates back to 1975. That was the year when Governor Robert Ray established a task force to help resettle more than 1,000 refugees from Southeast Asia, following the Vietnam War. In the past 35 years some 30,000 refugees have been resettled in Iowa.

Since then, refugees from many countries have made Iowa their new home.  In recent years, according to the Iowa Bureau of Refugee Services, the majority resettling here are Burmese, Bhutanese, Somali, Eritrean and Iraqi.
Our feature included a visit with a group of Iraqis and their struggles to settle in and one way they cope is through music.

Mental Health TIJ #322 Air date: 3.4.10. Producer: Nancy Crowfoot. Is there enough support in communities and from the state to help those living with mental illness?

Attention to mental illness in Iowa has focused on a recent rural Iowa murder trial where the defendant pled “not guilty by reason of insanity.”

But one high-profile criminal trial does not represent the scope of mental illness, or the diverse diagnoses that the National Institute of Mental Health say affects an estimated 13 million American adults — or approximately 1 in 17.

In Iowa, a minority are cared for in the four state mental health institutions.  Most are treated in their own community where experts say in most cases, is better for the individual and more economical for counties and the state.   A case in point can be seen in Fort Dodge.


This show also included a look at Ames High School basketball standout Harrison Barnes.

Healthcare TIJ #001 Airdate: 3.25.10. The Iowa Journal looks into how the new health care law will affect Iowans.

While there are still a lot of politics to be debated on health care reforms, the Iowa Journal wanted to move on to exactly what this new law will do for individual Iowans. This followed the coverage of President Obama’s speech in Iowa City earlier in the day.

Innovations in Education TIJ #323 Airdate: 4.1.10 as produced by Paul Yeager. Several Iowa schools are attempting to be innovative in their approaches to education. The Iowa Journal looks at two efforts going on now in Iowa.

In a month’s time most of the major headlines with the word “school” or education” in them, have not shed the system in good light.

For example, the Iowa Association of School Boards, which provides advice to Iowa school boards on things like finance and oversight, fired its executive director after she allegedly raised her own salary from $210,000 to $367,000.

The same day as that firing, the Iowa Department of Education released numbers showing an increase in the state high school drop-out rate to 48-hundred. Leading the state in drop-outs were the Ottumwa and Davenport school districts.

Getting kids to stay in school and inspiring them to actually like academics is not easy. But several school districts have found innovative ways to engage kids and prepare them for the future.

This feature was a look at the efforts in Sigourney and Van Meter.

Where else are you going to get coverage on topics like this?
Please remember your public television network covering issues important to all Iowans in all 99 counties.

What is coming up? Thanks for asking, Journal Monkey. Music in education, Beer, Food, Inc, childhood obesity, the Dalai Lama, economic roundtables, republicans debating to just name a few.

See you Thursday at 8p, Friday at 630p or on IPTV.org/IowaJournal

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What unemployment questions do you have?

We are getting ready to record our Iowa Journal on Unemployment in Iowa.

We are looking to answer as many questions as possible that will help you.

Here’s our panel and their backgrounds in jobs, financial advising and emotional effects of unemployment. Post your question to me and we’ll do our best to get it answered.

Guests in the studio will be Mike Wilkinson, regional area coordinator for Iowa Works; Amanda Jones of Veridian Credit Union, who teaches classes on managing finances after layoffs and provides instruction on budgeting and conserving cash if the job loss extends for a long period of time; and Susan Schiltz-Day, is a counselor, assisting people to maintain their emotional health regarding a wide variety of issues, including loss. Schiltz-Day works for both Des Moines University and Wadle & Associates.

You can learn more about our full program here.

Send me your questions to paul.yeager@iptv.org or post them in the comments so others can see the question. Even if you are outside of Iowa, your question still may be very relevant to share and ask.

We are recording around 330p on Thursday in Johnston. If you see this after the fact, still drop me a line and we’ll get the questions to appropriate person.

A sample of questions already given to me to ask:
-Do employers have the upper hand in hiring? Can they and are they exploiting the market to say, if you don’t take this job, I’ve got 6 other people who will take it and like the 12 month probation and no health benefits in the first 18 months?
-How much savings should I have on hand?
-How do I get past ego and ask for help?

If you’ve got others for me to ask, send them my way. Just try to get them to me before 3p on Thursday, February 11.

Thank you for the time.

This week’s Iowa Journal airs at 8p on Iowa Public Television and Friday at 630p and will live on http://www.iptv.org/iowa journal for you to see and share.

You can read more about the broadcast and how it turned out here.

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Unemployed in Iowa

We are making gains in our effort to put together a new “Unemployed in Iowa” Iowa Journal program set to air February 11th at 8p on Iowa Public Television.

Who would have thought I could pull of a double Iowa-Iowa sentence? Not me.

Thanks to great leads from several of you who commented to my email inbox or on one of the 12 social media outlets that I’m on today. Here’s a post with some background on our efforts. That includes a look at the issue in May, 2009.

We are headed to Fairfield to talk to the Green family of Jen and Shawn. You can read about their situation here on this blog or even join their Facebook fan page. You can follow Jen on Twitter as well @Jenners26

The Ottumwa Courier did a story on them as well. Matt Milner wrote the story. He’s a friend of the Iowa Journal who was on with James Lynch of the Cedar Rapids Gazette for our 2nd Congressional District profile.

We’ll be in Fairfield on Wednesday.
Then on Thursday we hopefully will be at the Smokey Row Coffee shop to a networking event. We hope to find a couple more people to profile as well.

Here’s the official description from the Unemployed in Des Moines website.

Feb. 4th, 9am-noon, Unemployed in Des Moines Networking, Smokey Row. John Stein, owner of Stein’s Way, a learning and development firm based in central Iowa. During his program, we will read and discuss the article “The Importance of a Vision” and then spend time creating our own powerful three year visions, both personal and professional visions. We will then look at how to break that vision down so that it becomes part of our quarterly, monthly, daily reality. Finally, we will take the Clean Sweep 100 to determine any tolerations that might be getting in the way of our success. FREE

If you seen Suzanne Hull’s picture and think she looks familiar, then you’ve been watching CBS News when they featured her networking efforts or watched the Wartburg Dance Team in the late 90s.

Next we are looking for guests for our discussion. I think we may head into the personal finance arena. What types of things should you be doing with your 401k? Should I sign up for insurance? How do I make a budget and how long do I plan to live without an income?

What can we do to help you? What things do Iowans need to know about your situation?

We are still looking for other ideas on guests or types of guests that would be the most beneficial to those without work. Ideas? Again, drop them to me here at IPTV at paul.yeager@iptv.org. This is for a show to air Thursday, February 11 at 8p and February 12th at 630p.

Thanks again for your help.

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Iowa Journal to look at Unemployment in Iowa

We are working to make the February 11th Iowa Journal a program about unemployment here in Iowa.

We have done a couple of shows close to this same topic before. One was back in May with Rob Denson of DMACC, Elisabeth Buck of Iowa Workforce Development, Adam Carroll, personal financial consultant and Jim Adams from Lutheran Church of Hope and their Hope at work program.

That show was more about coping with financial difficulties.

Now we need to focus on unemployment. This show will hopefully help people find a job or help those skills to get a job.

I’m looking for someone who is looking for a job in Iowa. What are you doing to find work? What resources have been helpful? Not so helpful? What has frustrated you in the job search? This would be someone we could feature in our set up piece to our discussion. I would need about 3-4 hours of someone’s time this week, preferably Wednesday, February 3rd.

We’re also looking for panelists on the program. What state-run departments have been most helpful? Which programs are helping people find work? Who is helping people find jobs in Iowa?

What areas of the state are not struggling as much? Who has lower unemployment levels?

Have you seen this video before?

Please send me your information in an email to paul.yeager@iptv.org

If you’ve got resources to help others, post them in the comments so all can utilize the services.

Here’s an update on our efforts.

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