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Jan 3, 2022 12 tweets 7 min read Read on X
2021 saw a record high amount of quits.

If the rest of the country is shocked by the labor shortage, Kentucky's is decades in the making.

Here's why it's the epicenter of America's Great Resignation. 👇

businessinsider.com/how-to-solve-l…
Kentucky's quit rate has been especially high compared to most other states during the pandemic, but it was higher than the national average long before.

"The truth is that something has been amiss for a long time," wrote @KyChamberFdn.

businessinsider.com/how-to-solve-l… Graph shows the quit rate in Kentucky and in the United Stat
💼 It's tough to be a worker — and an employer.

Look at Kentucky's minimum wage workers, who have kept earning $7.25 for the past 12 years while the federal minimum hasn't increased and most other states and localities have moved to raise it.

businessinsider.com/how-to-solve-l… Photo shows a billboard with “Now hiring!” in large lett
The labor shortage is slowly pushing wages higher across the country as employers compete for workers, although many recent gains have been overtaken by even higher inflation.

businessinsider.com/how-to-solve-l… Photo shows business owner Mamadou “Sav” Savane, who had
👩‍👧 Five experts told Insider that the lack of affordable childcare is especially felt in Kentucky.

@KyPolicy found that, from July 2012 to July 2021, the number of childcare centers in Kentucky declined 46%.

businessinsider.com/how-to-solve-l… Map of the United States depicts the share of people in a ch
The lack of childcare centers is another consequence of the state's low wages.

Over a quarter of early childcare workers in Kentucky are earning below the poverty line. And the childcare centers that are open are pricey.

businessinsider.com/how-to-solve-l… Photo shows a mom and her child in their kitchen. It is over
😷 Despite the rollout of vaccinations, it's still a pandemic, especially in Kentucky.

That makes childcare and working with children even harder than it already is.

businessinsider.com/how-to-solve-l…
Some said they felt uncomfortable returning to work in a state that lingers below the national vaccination rate — about 64% of the state's adults were fully vaccinated compared to 72% nationally, as of Dec. 19.

businessinsider.com/how-to-solve-l… Photo shows a healthcare worker wearing a lab coat. It is ov
💸 Crises like drugs, systemic inequality, and climate change had been swelling under the surface for years, and the pandemic brought them to a head.

Inequities play a role in people's ability to job switch, start businesses, or work remotely.

businessinsider.com/how-to-solve-l… Photo shows a hiring sign posted on a storefront. It is over
In Louisville, around 10% of households don't have internet access, according to research from @GreaterLou.

Black residents are also far less likely than white peers to have high speed internet access.

businessinsider.com/how-to-solve-l…
Still, there are hopeful signs.

@KyanaWorks director Gritton said a lot of quits are likely people switching to new jobs because "there's so much opportunity in the economy."

businessinsider.com/how-to-solve-l… Graph shows the labor force participation rate in Kentucky a
But there's just as much opportunity being held back by deep-seated social problems and the pandemic.

Until those are resolved, the real solution to the labor shortage might be embracing it, as experts are saying that it might be here to stay.

businessinsider.com/how-to-solve-l… Photo shows hiring signs posted outside of a Taco Bell. It i

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More from @BusinessInsider

Jan 12, 2023
Chief heart officers are invading the C-suite, but don't let their titles fool you: they can still fire you, Drew Limsky writes for @thisisinsider.

Feelings-centric job titles try to paper over a fundamental part of work: its transactional nature. 👇
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Jan 11, 2023
Hirakawa Yasuhiro is one of the only blacksmiths in Japan who still makes scissors using techniques that date back to the 5th century.

We went to Sakai, Japan, to see how this bonsai-scissor-making craft is still standing. 👇
Like knives, these scissors start with a small piece of metal.

Yasuhiro uses Japanese Yasugi steel because it's more durable and helps the blades stay sharp.
He heats the metal in an old wood-burning surface, rather than a gas burner because he believes the heat is more concentrated that way.

It takes about an hour to reach the perfect temperature.
Read 12 tweets
Dec 30, 2022
Remote work sparked a surge in whistleblower complaints. There's more free time, less risk, and more support to call out wrongdoing when you work from home.

@BrittaLokting explains why so many remote workers are deciding to squeal on their companies. ⬇️

businessinsider.com/remote-work-su… A graphic with an image of a man holding a whistle. It reads
In 2017, Simon Edelman blew the whistle on his former employer, the US Department of Energy, as he leaked photographs to the news site @inthesetimesmag of a meeting between the Energy Secretary Rick Perry and the CEO of one of the largest coal companies.

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The photos showed the executive presenting DOE officials with a pro-coal regulatory plan and giving Perry, a former governor of Texas, a hug.

The day after the photos were published, Edelman was escorted out of the DOE offices.

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Dec 28, 2022
Feel like starting your own company?

Data from the Yellowstone Wolf Project hints that it's just the side effect of a protozoan inhabiting our brains in a failed attempt to make more protozoa, Adam Rogers (@jetjocko) writes. ⬇️
businessinsider.com/parasite-cat-f… Image of a cat in a suit wi...
Curious about what motivates a wolf to leave its pack, Kira Cassidy, a field biologist with the Yellowstone Wolf Project, and her team hypothesized that a parasitic infection was egging them along. Specifically, a microorganism called Toxoplasma gondii. businessinsider.com/parasite-cat-f…
Toxo, as it's colloquially known, reproduces in cat species but leaps to other hosts like rats, hyena, people, and wolves. Once it takes up residence in a new animal, it’s linked to weird behavior — much of it spurred by an elevated appetite for risk. businessinsider.com/parasite-cat-f…
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Dec 20, 2022
It takes dozens of people, expensive robots, and special cameras to bring a fast food commercial to life.

We look at how production company The Garage works against the clock and films an advertisement for the perfect burger.👇
Steve Giralt has filmed commercials for big brands like Hershey's, Heinz, and Pepsi through The Garage.

Filming one 30-second ad can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. And they're working against the clock because they use real food.
Giralt and his team at The Garage worked on a test shoot for Burger King to try to land the popular fast food client.

Brett Kurzweil is a veteran food stylist whose job is to make the burger look like a Whopper.
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Dec 16, 2022
No molds are used in the process of making bangjja yugi, or Korean bronzeware — only skill and an experienced eye.

One rice pot can cost $350. We found out what makes it so expensive.👇
While making bangjja yugi has largely been modernized, Lee Bong-ju is one of the few yugi masters still using traditional methods.

Bong-ju, who is 96, has been making traditional Korean bronzeware for over 70 years.
Bong-ju starts by measuring ingredients. The perfect mix requires an exact ratio of 78% copper and 22% tin.

The metals are heated and boiled at 1,300 degrees Celsius. What is left is called a baduk — a bronze plate with a rounded bottom.
Read 10 tweets

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