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Posts Categorized: Grocery

Displaying 2 of 387 Total Records

April 8, 2014

OUR Walmart Wins Huge Victories on Scheduling and for Pregnant Workers

OUR Walmart, Walmart

walmart shifts

Recent OUR Walmart victories include new scheduling policies and protections for pregnant workers.

After years of relentless campaigning and advocacy by members of OUR Walmart along with their allies in the UFCW and labor, faith, and progressive communities, Walmart has announced two major policy shifts. One will allow workers to get more hours when they want them, another will ensure that pregnant women are given some basic accommodations that will help them keep their jobs and provide for their families.

Since the group’s inception, OUR Walmart members have spoken out about the need for access to full-time work, and the struggles of being scheduled for fewer hours than they need to get by. At the same time, as a result of chronic understaffing in stores, there have been reports of empty shelves and lower customer satisfaction. Most recently, OUR Walmart sent delegations to dozens of store managers across the country, and members launched a national petition calling for access to full time work. In Laurel, Md., OUR Walmart members stood together and got their manager to post open shifts in order to give more access to hours to part-time employees.

Walmart workers from across the country kept the pressure on for more shift access in stores. They went on strike to protest Walmart’s attempts to silence them when they spoke up against about inconsistent scheduling, insufficient hours, and low wages. Shortly after their Black Friday actions, Walmart announced it would increase transparency in scheduling, but few stores saw these promised changes take effect.

With the support and the signatures of thousands of Walmart workers and community members, Walmart workers held delegations at stores around the country last month. Walmart responded by posting important changes to its scheduling policy that will allow workers to get more access to the hours they need to support their families.

Walmart also recently altered its policy to accommodate pregnant employees. Under pressure from mothers working in their stores and women’s groups with the “Respect the Bump” campaign, the retail giant reworked its policy so that women with pregnancy-related complications could be considered temporarily disabled and be eligible for reasonable accommodation. While this policy does not go far enough to provide reasonable accommodations regarding physical demands for all pregnant women, it is a step forward in protecting the jobs and health of the most vulnerable pregnant women and their babies.

For decades, Walmart has been lowering the standards for retail workers. These two victories are an important step toward improving jobs at Walmart and ending the erosion of retail jobs across the industry. The victory shows that by standing together, workers can make change even at the largest private employer in the world. concluding_insignia_OP

To read stories about the workers’ victory, please visit the
Making Change at Walmart Facebook Page:
https://www.facebook.com/MakingChangeWMT

 

March 18, 2014

Walmart CEO Acknowledges Lack of Opportunities for Workers

Walmart

Walmart U.S. CEO, Bill Simon, recently  suggested that Walmart workers should look for jobs elsewhere if they want good wages and  access to better benefits.

Walmart U.S. CEO, Bill Simon, recently
suggested that Walmart workers should look for jobs elsewhere if they want good wages and
access to better benefits.

A recent Associated Press article by Josh Boak finds that Walmart does not provide its employees with enough opportunities for professional advancement or a pathway to a middle class life. As a result of the Great Recession, many older and more educated workers are turning to the retail giant as a way to support their families. Despite Walmart’s self-promotion as a source for professional opportunity, Bill Simon, CEO of Walmart U.S., suggests that workers look elsewhere if they want to make more money and have access to better benefits.

“Some people took those jobs because they were the only ones available and haven’t been able to figure out how to move out of that,” Bill Simon, CEO of Walmart U.S., acknowledged in an interview with The Associated Press.

If Walmart employees “can go to another company and another job and make more money and develop, they’ll be better,” Simon explained. “It’ll be better for the economy. It’ll be better for us as a business, to be quite honest, because they’ll continue to advance in their economic life.”

Simon’s suggestion that many Walmart employees might be better off leaving for other jobs surprised Walmart cashier Joanna Lopez. A 26-year-old single mother, she owns no car and lives with her church pastor near Fremont, Calif. She collects food stamps and receives insurance through California’s version of Medicaid.

Lopez started at Walmart as a temp in August 2011. Her pay has risen from $8 an hour to $9.20, after she moved from part-time to full-time. The suggestion by a Walmart executive that some employees might be staying too long offended her.

“To me, that’s an utter humiliation,” Lopez said. “How can you sit there and have management say that we should find other jobs because this place is ‘no bueno?’”

The full article can be read at http://bit.ly/APWalmart and an accompanying video report can be viewed at
http://bit.ly/APWalmartVideo. concluding_insignia_OP

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