Medicare Shake-Up: Thousands of Iowans Must Choose New Plans
With Medicare open enrollment underway through Dec. 7, many Iowans are confronting major coverage changes heading into 2026. https://iid.iowa.gov/press-release/2025-10-30/iowans-medicare-seek-coverage-lower-costs-2026
- UnitedHealthcare is canceling 8 of 10 AARP Medicare Advantage plans, affecting 36,500 enrollees.
- Wellmark is ending 3 of 4 drug-inclusive plans, and 22 others are narrowing service areas.
- Beneficiaries must act by Jan. 1 to maintain uninterrupted coverage.
New drug-pricing reforms and a 2025 cap on prescription co-pays are expected to lower costs for key drugs, including Eliquis and Jardiance.
The Iowa Insurance Division’s SHIIP program warns seniors to check their mail and plan notices carefully – current subscribers to discontinued plans that are have guaranteed issue rights to enroll elsewhere through Feb. 28.
Key takeaway
The landscape for Iowa seniors is shifting fast. Many face tough choices amid the biggest Medicare restructuring in a decade. And changes to Social Security benefits may be next.
For local help, dial 1-800-351-4664 or visit shiip.iowa.gov
Iowa manufacturing feels the farm crisis chill
Iowa’s manufacturing sector – historically intertwined with agriculture – is contracting sharply as farm income plunges.
- 5,400 manufacturing jobs were lost in the past year; 11,000 since mid-2023.
- Deere & Co. has cut 2,000+ workers across Iowa and Illinois; Kinze and Firestone have also reduced staff.
- Fertilizer costs are up, crop prices are down, and China’s retreat from U.S. soybeans continues to ripple through rural economies.
Experts say the current slump mirrors the 1980s Farm Crisis, though some caution that it is cyclical. Yet even as ag struggles, manufacturers cite an even deeper issue: workforce shortages.
Maintainer Inc.’s CEO reports 20 unfilled jobs out of 240 positions, with up to 25% of staff nearing retirement. Meanwhile, immigration declines and the outmigration of young professionals from the state have drained Iowa’s labor pool.
“Our workforce and our overall population is what’s going to really hold us back from potential opportunities,” said Iowa Business Council President Joe Murphy.
Quick fact: Iowa ranks third in the nation for GDP share from manufacturing (17%) but future growth hinges on attracting and retaining skilled workers.
Judge rules requiring COVID-19 vaccine didn’t violate Dordt student’s rights
The Sioux City Journal reports that a judge has ruled that Dordt University didn’t discriminate against a student who refused to get a COVID-19 vaccination. Andrew Perry, a Kansas undergraduate, sued the school in June 2022, saying it had violated his religious rights when it required him to get the vaccine to participate in clinical trials.
Iowa AG Brenna Bird targets “gaming” by big oil
Attorney General Brenna Bird is calling for a federal investigation into oil companies allegedly abusing small refinery exemptions under the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS).
Her letter to the DOJ, EPA, DOE, and SEC – co-signed by Nebraska and South Dakota AGs – claims some refiners report “economic hardship” to dodge RFS blending requirements while boasting profits and stock buybacks to investors.
“The possibility that refineries are gaming the system to receive government handouts when they don’t need them hurts Iowa farmers,” Bird said.
The Iowa Renewable Fuels Association applauded her action, warning manipulation undermines ethanol demand. Meanwhile, the Iowa Biodiesel Board urged the EPA to finalize 2026–27 RFS rules quickly, warning that uncertainty could cost soybean farmers $3–7.5 billion in crop value.
And in Washington, Rep. Randy Feenstra – now officially running for governor in 2026 – led a bipartisan letter pressing EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin to reallocate 100% of waived biofuel gallons.
The upshot
Biofuels are again at the political and economic crossroads of Iowa’s identity – with farm livelihoods and rural jobs hanging on federal rulemaking timelines.
Four Iowa schools earn blue ribbon honors
Four schools – in Albia, Dubuque, George-Little Rock, and Cedar Rapids’ Prairie Hill – have been named Iowa Blue Ribbon Schools, part of the new state-led recognition program replacing the former federal initiative.
Gov. Kim Reynolds praised the schools as “models of excellence across the state.” The program honors the top 15% of Iowa’s schools for student achievement and growth.
Learn more: Iowa Blue Ribbon Schools
Drake University expands to Panama’s ‘City of Knowledge’
Drake University is deepening its global footprint with a partnership in Panama City’s Ciudad del Saber (“City of Knowledge”), launching an accelerated Data Analytics + AI degree.
Students will complete coursework in Panama, with opportunities for 2+2 programs culminating in Des Moines. Each participant will earn a guaranteed internship with a Panamanian company.
Drake President Marty Martin said the partnership leverages Panama’s role as a “thriving global supply chain hub.”
Big picture
Drake’s initiative shows how Iowa’s universities are innovating abroad – aligning education with international tech and data markets while exporting Midwestern academic influence.
Our Take – Iowa’s Silent Turning Point
Today’s news reflects structural inflection points in Iowa’s identity:
- Healthcare choices reveal aging demographics and the administrative strain of reform.
- Manufacturing’s struggles expose population decline and policy shortfalls in workforce renewal.
- Biofuel politics underscore the friction between corporate power and rural survival.
- And education partnerships show the state’s future lies in global integration – from Panama to Pella.
Iowa’s story remains one of resilience and reinvention. But as today’s headlines show, the challenges ahead require more than grit – they demand vision.
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