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 amie@new.iowastartingline.com. For local reporting in Iowa that connects the dots, from policy to people, sign up for Amie’s newsletter.


Latest from Amie Rivers

  • News

    Amie Takes a Hike: Union Grove’s Lake, Waterfall and Diverse Flora Pull You In

    I’m hiking every beautiful place I can think of around my home state, to showcase the beauty Iowa has to offer. Follow along here, or on Twitter using #AmieTakesAHike, to pass along your suggestions and see where I’m headed next. They had me at “waterfall.” Union Grove State Park, established in 1938 outside of Gladbrook…


  • News

    UNI Prof Wants to Try New Model to Curb Gun Violence in Waterloo

    It’s less than a week after a racist mass shooting in Buffalo, New York, that killed 10 Black grocery store shoppers and employees. It’s one day after 4-year-old Savannah Holmes of Ankeny found her father’s gun on the couch and accidentally shot and killed herself. Most people in the room Thursday night at the Waterloo…


  • News

    Iowa Republicans Vote Against Bill To Address Baby Formula Shortage

    Even as they’ve railed against an extreme shortage of baby formula, particularly Abbott brands that have left Iowa parents scrambling, Reps. Ashley Hinson, Mariannette Miller-Meeks, and Randy Feenstra still voted against a US House bill that provides $28 million to help ease the shortage, with funds for safety inspections, staff addressing the shortfall, and efforts…


  • News

    Black Women Business Owners Grapple With Rising Costs, Disparities

    Owning a small business has always been difficult, particularly if you’re facing discrimination because of your gender or race. Add in an economic crisis brought on by the perfect storm of a pandemic, supply chain problems, inflation, overseas conflicts, and empty legislative promises, and Iowa’s small business owners have had it rough lately. At a…


  • News

    Amie Takes A Hike: George Wyth State Park Is An Accessible, Easy Hike

    It’s tempting, easy, or—let’s be honest—lazy to only think of Iowa as a flat state divided into squares of corn and soybeans. That’s what everyone else thinks of us, looking down from their airplane as it flies over, right? Sure, we’re an agricultural state. Many of Iowa’s once-defining features of windswept prairies, wild woodlands, and…


  • News

    How Grinnell College Undergrads Unionized And Made History

    Was Keir Hichens surprised that his small, private Iowa college would vote overwhelmingly to unionize its undergraduate student workers, becoming the first college in the entire country to do so? Not at all, the Grinnell College junior said. That’s because Hichens and other organizers before him spent five years putting in the work. The unionization…


  • News

    New Report Details How Iowa Meatpackers Risked Workers’ Safety During COVID

    Cargill, JBS, National Beef, Smithfield Foods, and Tyson, all of which operate meatpacking plants in Iowa, are accused of conspiring with the Trump Administration to shield themselves from legal liability after they forced workers back on the line during the COVID pandemic, despite being “aware of the high risks,” according to a damning new report…


  • News

    Drivers Continue Strike At King’s Ready Mix In Cedar Rapids; Rally Set For Tuesday

    Drivers at King’s Ready Mix in Cedar Rapids went on strike Tuesday for better wages while the company argues their pay is fair. Jesse Case, secretary/treasurer of Teamsters Local #238, said 16 drivers were striking for higher wages, the only thing workers were bargaining for. “We are hopeful for a resolution, but the members are…


  • News

    Decorah Nonprofit Accused Of Union-Busting By Former Staff

    Carly Matthew was excited in 2020 when she began working at Seed Savers Exchange, a Decorah nonprofit dedicated to the preservation of heirloom seeds. She went to The Organic Farm School in Washington State for six months to learn all about the trade. This April, when she was promoted to the position of evaluation manager,…


  • News

    Mathis Calls Out Hinson and Reynolds Over ‘Secret’ Meeting On School Vouchers

    A private meeting Wednesday between select Marion-area parents, Gov. Kim Reynolds, and US Rep. Ashley Hinson had state Sen. Liz Mathis calling it a “secret meeting” to promote Reynolds’ “unpopular bill” on school vouchers. Hinson disputed that, saying it was instead to hear concerns from parents about schools’ policies on transgender students. However, handouts passed…