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Iowa Workforce Development Awards Over $3.6 Million to Grow and Expand Registered Apprenticeship Programs

DES MOINES – Iowa Workforce Development announced it has awarded over $3.6 million in funding designated to create or expand Registered Apprenticeship Programs across Iowa. Benefiting both employers and high schools, Registered Apprenticeship Programs are a critical tool for building new workforce pipelines in high-demand fields and allowing young Iowans to earn while they learn.

The state’s support of these programs is provided through the Iowa Apprenticeship Act (15B) and the Iowa Registered Apprenticeship Development Fund (15C). 15B provides $3 million in annual funding to support training or ongoing costs within any active Iowa Registered Apprenticeship program. 15C, with $760,000 in funding available annually, applies to programs that have created or expanded with a new program in a high-demand occupation.

The state announced that 31 recipients are receiving 15C funding and 57 recipients are receiving 15B funding this year. In total, this year’s funding is estimated to support approximately 5,957 apprentices across the state. The full list of 2022 awardees can be viewed online at earnandlearniowa.gov.

Mahaska Chamber Hosting Business & Industry Forum on Potential Transload Facility

OSKALOOSA – The Mahaska Chamber & Development Group, in partnership with the City of Oskaloosa and Mahaska County continue to investigate critical infrastructure in and around the Oskaloosa Innovation Park.

They are inviting any businesses and/or industries to a forum to discuss the potential transload facility being investigated near the existing Oskaloosa Innovation Park. They are developing a feasibility study to determine the economic impacts a transload facility would have on a local, state, and regional level. This forum will be held on Wednesday, July 20th at 8:00 AM in the lower level of the Mahaska County Environmental Learning Center.

Topics of discussion include, but not limited to the following: General site information, Certified Site status, potential shipping needs including commodity, quantity, site needs, desired footprint, etc., anticipated rail and trucking needs, utility needs, and potential investment commitment.

They are excited about this opportunity for growth in our community and look forward to your input on this facility. Please RSVP by Monday, July 18 to ddegroot@mahaskachamber.org or call 641.672.2591 if you plan to attend.

US inflation reached a new 40-year high in June of 9.1%

By CHRISTOPHER RUGABER

WASHINGTON (AP) — Surging prices for gas, food and rent catapulted U.S. inflation to a new four-decade peak in June, further pressuring households and likely sealing the case for another large interest rate hike by the Federal Reserve, with higher borrowing costs to follow.

Consumer prices soared 9.1% compared with a year earlier, the government said Wednesday, the biggest yearly increase since 1981, and up from an 8.6% jump in May. From May to June, prices rose 1.3%, another huge increase, after prices had surged 1% from April to May.

The persistent price acceleration has underscored the brutal impact inflation has inflicted on Americans, with the costs of necessities, in particular, rising much faster than average incomes. Lower-income and Black and Hispanic Americans have been hit especially hard, because a disproportionate share of their income goes toward such essentials as housing, transportation and food.

The inflation spike has diminished consumers’ confidence in the economy, sent President Joe Biden’s approval ratings tumbling, posed a political threat to Democrats in the November elections and raised the risk of a recession caused by much higher interest rates. Forty percent of adults said in a June AP-NORC poll that they thought tackling inflation should be a top government priority this year, up from just 14% who said so in December.

The U.S. inflation surge erupted from the swift rebound from the 2020 pandemic recession, spurred by vast federal aid, ultra-low Fed rates and pent-up spending fueled by savings built up during the nation’s shutdowns. As Americans channeled their purchases toward items for the home, like furniture, appliances and exercise equipment, supply chains became snarled and prices for goods soared. Russia’s war against Ukraine further magnified energy and food prices.

In recent months, as consumer spending has gradually shifted away from goods and toward services like vacation travel, restaurants meals, movies, concerts and sporting events, the resulting higher demand has fueled high inflation in services, too.

Some economists have held out hope that inflation might be reaching a short-term peak. Gas prices, for example, have fallen from the eye-watering $5 a gallon reached in mid-June to an average of $4.63 nationwide Wednesday — still far higher than a year ago but a drop that could help slow inflation for July and possibly August.

In addition, shipping costs and commodity prices have begun to fall. Pay increases have slowed. And surveys show that Americans’ expectations for inflation over the long run have eased — a trend that often points to more moderate price increases over time.

“There may be some relief in the July numbers — commodity prices have come off the boil, at least — but we are a very, very long way from inflation normalizing, and there is no tangible sign of downward momentum,” said Eric Winograd, an economist at asset manager AB.

The relentless pace of price increases has forced many Americans to turn to food banks or to make other changes in their lives. Among them is Marcia Freeman, 72, who lives near Atlanta and who visited a food bank this week, something she rarely did before prices began accelerating. She has stopped buying salmon and other seafood because it’s grown too expensive. Even the cheaper store brands, she said, are now much pricier.

Freeman lives on a fixed income — she receives a pension — that hasn’t kept up with inflation.

“Everything goes up,” she said, “except what we’re getting.”

Some people blame companies for using inflation as a cover to raise prices beyond the amount they need to cover their own higher costs.

“I feel the inflation pain every day,” Susana Hazard said this week outside a grocery store in New York City. “Every day, everything is going up and up, more than inflation — they’re price-adjusting. Because even if inflation doesn’t happen, they’ve raised the prices.”

There is evidence that Corporate America has become less competitive, making it easier for companies to jack up prices. But most economists say corporate price gouging is, at most, one of many causes of runaway inflation and not the primary one.

Still, the breadth of the price gains shows how rising costs have seeped into nearly every corner of the economy. Grocery prices have jumped 12.2% compared with a year ago, the steepest such climb since 1979. Rents have risen 5.8%, the most since 1986. New car prices have increased 11.4% from a year earlier. And average airline fares, one of the few items to post a price decline in June, are nevertheless up 34% from a year earlier.

Energy prices soared 7.5% just from May to June, accounting for nearly half the month-over-month inflation. Gas prices have skyrocketed nearly 60% compared with a year ago. From May to June, the cost of dental services surged 1.9%, the biggest one-month increase since record-keeping began in 1995.

Excluding the volatile food and energy categories, so-called core prices rose 0.7% from May to June, the biggest such spike in a year. Compared with 12 months earlier, core prices jumped 5.9%, below a recent peak of 6.4% but still exceedingly high.

Inflation is surging well beyond the United States, with 71 million people pushed into poverty in the three months after Russia invaded Ukraine, which further magnified energy and food prices, the U.N. Development Program said last week.

The war’s economic damage has been especially severe in Europe, with its reliance on Russian oil and natural gas squeezing businesses and consumers with sharply higher bills for utilities, groceries, gasoline and more. Inflation reached decades-high levels of 8.6% last month in the 19 countries that use the euro currency and 9.1% in the United Kingdom in May.

With many people priced out of the market for houses and looking instead to rent, demand for apartments has sent rental rates beyond affordable levels. The average cost of new leases has jumped 14% in the past year, according to real estate brokerage Redfin, to an average of $2,016 a month.

Rents as measured by the government’s inflation index have risen more slowly because they include all rents, including existing leases. But economists expect the rising expense of new leases to send the government’s inflation measure higher in coming months.

The persistence of high inflation has unnerved Chair Jerome Powell and other Fed officials, who are engaged in the fastest series of rate hikes since the late 1980s to try to slow the price spikes. The central bank is expected to raise its key short-term rate later this month by a hefty three-quarters of a point, as it did last month, with potentially more large rate hikes to follow.

Powell has stressed that the central bank wants to see “compelling evidence” that inflation is slowing before it would dial back its rate hikes. Such evidence would need to be a “series of declining monthly inflation readings,” Powell said at a news conference last month.

Many economists worry that the Fed’s drive to quell inflation will cause it to tighten credit too aggressively even while the economy, by some measures, is slowing. Much higher borrowing costs could trigger a recession, potentially by next year.

Consumers have started to pull back on spending, home sales are falling as mortgage rates rise and factory output slipped in May. Yet steadily robust job growth points to an economy that is still expanding, with little sign of an imminent recession.

___

David R. Martin, APTV senior producer, contributed to this report from New York.

Look for the moon to be big and bright tonight

BY 

RADIO IOWA – Before hitting the hay tonight, Iowans should be sure to check out the July “supermoon,” what promises to be the biggest and brightest of the year.

Peter Geiger, editor of the Farmer’s Almanac, says tonight’s gem in the sky is known as the “Buck Moon.” Geiger says, “That’s because the velvety antlers of the male deer that start to sprout in the springtime, by the time we get to July, they’re pointed and they’re hardened.”

Geiger says the moon may appear to be a bit larger tonight as this is the month in which it’s closest to the earth.”In reality, whether it’s 2,000 miles closer or less isn’t going to make a difference in what you see,” he says, “but I think because your weather is going to be very good, you’re going to see a very bright, illuminated moon.”

Tonight’s “supermoon” is also known as the “Hay Moon” after the July hay harvest, and the “Thunder Moon” in correlation to this month’s typical storms. If clouds do block your view tonight, there will be another “supermoon” on August 11th, what’s known as the “Sturgeon Moon.”

State Says No Personal Data Lost in Cyber Attack

The state of Iowa’s job search website, IowaWorks.gov, is still out of commission over two weeks after a cyber attack was aimed at the company that maintains the site.

The company, Geographic Solutions Incorporated, otherwise known as GSI, is a Florida-based company and its president says that no personal data was accessed or retrieved from its network operations center.

According to Iowa Workforce Development, the cyber attack has had no impact on the payment of unemployment benefits to Iowans, but has disrupted Iowans’ weekly submission of ongoing unemployment claims and impeded their job-search process.

There is no firm timetable for the website to be restored to public use, but until it does, unemployed Iowans are advised to file their weekly benefit claims directly through the state’s website at uiclaims.iwd.iowa.gov. They’re also advised to keep a record of their work-search activities to submit to the IowaWorks website once it’s back up and running and to use the National Labor Exchange for job-seeking during the time the website is down.

People with questions or concerns about their claims, benefits, or job searching process should call the IWD customer service line at 1-866-239-0843.

Diaper Derby Returns to Southern Iowa Fair

OSKALOOSA – Back by popular demand, the Diaper Derby is returning to the Southern Iowa Fair in Oskaloosa on Saturday, July 23. The event will be held at the Free Stage starting at 9 am.

Participants can register the day of the event, starting at 8:30 am. Sponsors of the Diaper Derby are Oskaloosa Fareway, Mahaska Drug and Modern Floor Covering.

It will consist of three events: The Fastest Crawler, The Fastest Walker, and The Most Creative Decorated Diaper. All contestants must be less than two years of age as of July 23, 2022. Fairway Manager John Stearns, one of the event organizers, said that for the Diaper Derby races, contestants can only enter one: Fastest Crawler or Fastest Walker. “To qualify for the Fastest Crawler race, the contestant must not walk any part of the race,” Stearns explained.

“The kiddos cannot be touched once the race begins, but parents or family members can get on the ‘racetrack’ rug to encourage them to move quickly. Sometimes even bribing with food or a toy works.”

Depending on the number of participants, there will be ‘heats’ run to find the fastest, followed by a walk off or crawl off. Prizes will be awarded to every contestant, and a First-Place trophy will be awarded to the winner in each category. Second and Third Place ribbons also will be awarded in each category.

The Decorated Diaper Contest will be held after the races, and race participants can also enter this contest. According to Deb Van Engelenhoven of Mahaska Drug, all contestants must be in a decorated diaper attire, disposable or cloth. “You may design a costume around the diaper, but the diaper itself must be visible for judging.

“It’s always entertaining to see how creative the parents can be,” Van Engelenhoven said. “Judging for the Most Creative Diaper will be based on originality of design, creativity, public appeal and overall effect.”

Prizes will be awarded to every contestant. A First-Place trophy will be awarded to the winner, and Second and Third place ribbons will be awarded. The decision of the judges in all the contests will be final.

Biden to discuss immigration, trade with Mexico’s president

By WILL WEISSERT

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden plans to meet with Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador on Tuesday for discussions the White House says will showcase the underlying strength of a relationship that of late has been more notable for the leaders’ disagreements on issues including energy and Ukraine policy.

López Obrador declined Biden’s invitation to the Summit of the Americas in Los Angeles last month after unsuccessfully urging the U.S. to include the leaders of Cuba, Nicaragua and Venezuela — all countries with anti-democratic regimes. The Mexican leader also has called U.S. support for Ukraine in its war with Russia “a crass error” and criticized the U.S. for moving more swiftly to provide military funding to Ukraine than financial aid to Central America.

There also are political crosscurrents in Washington, where top Republicans have pointed to a rising number of people from Mexico and Central America crossing the southern U.S. border illegally and have criticized the Democratic president’s administration for not doing more to curb the migration.

It will be the second in-person meeting between Biden and López Obrador at the White House. In addition, they spoke virtually amid the coronavirus pandemic last year and have held several calls. First lady Jill Biden hosted Mexican first lady Beatriz Gutiérrez Müller during this spring’s White House celebration of Cinco de Mayo.

Tuesday’s discussions come just before Biden leaves for Israel, the West Bank and Saudi Arabia.

Senior Biden administration officials say that the U.S.-Mexico relationship is a priority and that the countries plan to announce joint actions to modernize and improve infrastructure along key parts of the 2,000-mile (3,200-kilometer) border, enhance law enforcement cooperation against fentanyl smuggling and promote clean energy.

They also plan to announce a working group to promote more avenues for legal migration by workers, discussions that the officials said they hope could eventually be expanded to include labor from other countries.

In a preview call with reporters, administration officials declined to specify which visa programs might be expanded to bolster legal migration or by how much. They said the agreements set to come out of the meeting were more about demonstrating cooperation than announcing specific numbers.

The officials also didn’t say whether the Biden administration will urge Mexico to do more to stop people heading through its territory to then cross into the U.S. illegally — a key demand of Biden’s predecessor, President Donald Trump. Instead, the officials said Mexico and the U.S. are equal partners on immigration, and both countries had already previously committed to bolstering mechanisms for processing arriving migrants who ask for asylum, while more efficiently expelling those who don’t qualify.

Vice President Kamala Harris, who has been tasked with exploring the root causes of immigration across Latin America, also plans to host López Obrador in a breakfast Tuesday.

López Obrador has long pushed for expanding U.S. temporary visa programs to workers from Mexico and Central America. He said Monday that increasing legal immigration would help fight inflation by bolstering productivity.

Mexico’s president also has been more vocal about attempting to tamp down inflation than curb climate change or promote energy efficiency. U.S. officials want him to retreat on his reliance on fossil fuels and his efforts to prioritize his country’s state-owned electricity utility at the expense of foreign-built plants powered by natural gas and renewable energy, another topic that could come up.

López Obrador has repeatedly criticized the Biden administration, including decrying U.S. efforts to extradite Wikileaks founder Julian Assange from the U.K. for prosecution. He has vowed to bring up the topic during Tuesday’s meeting, and Biden officials say they are ready to discuss it.

KHC To Host Medicare Seminar

Knoxville Hospital and Clinics will host a free “Welcome to Medicare” seminar on Tuesday, July 26 from 5:30-7 p.m. in the KHC Learning Center.

Face masks will be required. The seminar will cover Medicare Parts A and B, Part D Prescription Drug Benefits, Medicare Advantage Plans and Medicare Supplement Insurance, as well as information on identifying Medicare fraud, errors and abuse.

This seminar is being held in connection with the State of Iowa’s Senior Health Insurance Information Program. SHIIP counselors are trained by the state and do not sell or promote any insurance companies, policies or agents.

This seminar is open to anyone approaching Medicare age, anyone on Medicare who would like to understand it better, family members and interested community members. The seminar is free but registration is required. Please call 641-842-1488 to reserve a spot.

IHCC Receives Grants for Facility Renovation

Indian Hills Community College has been named the recipient of three community grants to support the creation of the new Criminal Justice Training Facility for current and future law enforcement officers.

The Van Buren Foundation, Inc., the Community Foundation of Van Buren County and the Mahaska County Community Foundation have each awarded the college $10,000 to help renovate over 10,000-square-feet of existing space at the Workforce Training Center on the Indian Hills North Campus in Ottumwa.

The center will include a multipurpose training room with features including an evidence collection laboratory, movable walls, a virtual reality training space, classrooms and locker room facilities.

The Criminal Justice Training Center renovation is scheduled to begin this winter and is planned to be open to students and local law enforcement officers for training in the spring of 2023.

Mahaska County Student Awarded 4-H Scholarship

Olivia Stodghill from Mahaska County was awarded the Orscheln 4-H Scholarship through the Iowa 4-H Foundation at the recognition ceremony last month in Ames.

Stodghill has been involved with 4-H for 9 years, serving different officer positions as well as on the Mahaska County’s Honor Council. She will be attending Iowa State this fall to study Animal Science.

The Iowa 4-H Foundation awarded 95 scholarships valued at over $124,000 at the ceremony. Orscheln farm and home has been providing 4-H scholarships for over 30 years and awards several to young people who reside in counties where Orscheln stores are located.

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