Walmart Archives - Page 14 of 35 - I Hate Working In Retail

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5 new lows for Wal-Mart — just in September

5 new lows for Wal-Mart -- just this month
Enlarge(Credit: Reuters/Kevork Djansezian)
This article originally appeared on AlterNet.

AlterNetProfiting off its new uniform policy. Faking a state sales tax. Abusing animals to promote soda. These are just some of the ways the world’s largest private employer has stooped to new lows this month. Here are five developments that expose the extent of Walmart’s greed.

1. Walmart set to profit off workers from its newly imposed dress code. Last week, we reported that Walmart may make nearly $80 million by forcing its U.S. employees to pay for new work uniforms. Walmart sent a notice to its employees saying they have until September 29 to purchase the clothes to adhere to the dress code. It recommended workers go to Walmart (surprise!) to shop for their new uniforms.

Walmart-branded vests are the only part of the uniform the corporation will be paying for. But even those come at a price to workers. One U.S. Walmart worker sent Gawker a photo of the vests which reveals that they were “Made in Jordan.” This is despite the fact that Walmart promotes a “Made in USA” campaign and has a history of horrendous labor conditions in Jordan.

In 2006, Jordanian sweatshop workers making clothes for Walmart said they were forced to work 20-hour days, weren’t paid for months, were hit by their supervisors and jailed if they complained. Five years later, conditions had not improved. A new report found female employees alleged being sexually assaulted on a regular basis and some workers were forced to sleep in bed bug-infested dormitories without heat or water.



2. Walmart fires workers who exposed the company selling expired food. While we’re on the topic of Walmart’s poor treatment of workers overseas, this week, the corporation fired workers in its China stores who claimed Walmart was selling expired food to its customers. The four workers alleged that the company was selling rice infested with insects, and cooking expired meat using old, black oil. The whistleblowers released videos exposing this food inside their store last month. Bloomberg reports that Walmart has been undergoing a public relations battle around food safety in China. So while the corporation tries to cut corners by selling rotten food, it’s also making sure to send a chilling message to workers who threaten its profit margin with bad press.

3. Walmart lies about a state “sugar-tax” to explain prices to customers. When customers at a Walmart in New York saw that their 12-pack of soda rang up $3.50 at checkout when it was advertised for $3, they asked what was up. Employees were told to tell them that the 50-cent difference was part of a state-imposed sugar tax. Problem is, there is no such tax.

Despite numerous complaints, Walmart kept lying and sold more than 60,000 12-packs at the inflated price. But it didn’t get away with trying to blame the state. The NY Attorney General stepped in, and this week, the state settled with Walmart over the false advertising claims. Walmart was forced to pay penalties and was tasked with creating better policies to deal with customer complaints concerning prices.Perhaps, number one should be, stop lying?

4. Walmart harms animals for advertisement. Walmart will apparently jump through any hoop to make sure it’s selling soda. This week, a Walmart in Mexico held a cockfight in its store in order to promote a soda company. Animal rights activists raised alarm after they saw photos of the cockfight on social media. Walmart has until September 24 to provide a defense or it could face a fine.

Meanwhile, a Walmart spokesperson provided this pathetic justification: “It wasn’t a cockfight.… There wasn’t anything that would be in violation of any game regulations.” Bloomsburg reported that he added “the roosters weren’t armed with blades, no betting took place at the store and no birds were harmed.” Roosters not armed with blades? Always high standards Walmart. Always.

5. Walmart is even greedy with charity. So Walmart doesn’t care if it forces its workers, who already receive low wages, to purchase clothes to adhere to its new dress code. It doesn’t care about the working conditions for those making the new clothes. It doesn’t care about lying to customers or using animals for promotional entertainment. So it shouldn’t be surprising that the greedy giant doesn’t care about charity either.

A new report from Making Change at Walmart, a campaign anchored by the United Food & Commercial Workers pushing to improve working conditions at the corporation, found that the Walton family gives a measly amount of their money to charity. Compared to the other top richest Americans, the four heirs’ charity contributions are laughable. For example, while Bill Gates gives about nine percent of his net worth to charity, Christy Walton, the sixth richest American, gives 0.04 percent. Jim Walton, the seventh richest American, gives 0.00004 percent.

Mother Jones pointed out that the average American family has a net worth of $650,000 per household and contributes on average $3,000 to charity each year. (The median American household net worth is about $70,000). Meanwhile, each Walton heir, on average, has a net worth of $36 billion, and on average, give a mere $730,000 to charity. Compare these rates of giving, and you find that your average American family is 230 times more generous than a Walton heir. Don’t worry Walton family, might as well live up to the Walmart slogan “Save money, live better.”

Sourced from salon.com

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Walmart Security Guard Shoots Alleged Beer Thief in the Back

Walmart Security Guard Shoots Alleged Beer Thief in the Back

A Walmart security guard in Nashville, Tennessee shot a man last night who was allegedly trying to steal a case of beer. According to WSMV, police are now investigating whether or not the guard was “justified in using his weapon.” The guard hit the man in the back.

WKRN describes the incident like this:

The security guard was patrolling the parking lot when he confronted the suspect as he was getting into a car.

Shots were fired by the security guard into the car as it began to drive away.

The suspect was shot once in the back. … A female passenger in the car was unharmed.

The man is in serious but not life-threatening condition at Skyline hospital. WKRN reports he drove himself straight to the hospital.

Sourced from Gawker.com

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What Working At Walmart Taught Me

walmartIf you’ve been following my blog I’ve written about how I grew up in government housing and my mistakes with my finances when I finished college. During college my mother had moved to Texas for a year due to the high cost of living in Hawaii. I joined her in the summer and got a job as a waiter in a Chinese restaurant. I would go into work at 10am, work until 2pm and stay at the restaurant for “rest” between 2 to 4pm. I would then work again from 4 to 10pm five days a week, for that I would earn $2.10 an hour plus tips. With the tips and the 14 hour work days it averaged out to $8 an hour. It was hard grueling work, the kitchen was manned by all illegal Mexicans except one guy who was legal. I knew this because when the health inspector came around it was only him and the owner cooking, the rest of the crew was absent.

With my determination and strong work ethic I had a plan for the long hours and grueling work.  So I did what any determined American would do, I quit Before I quit I had gotten a job at Walmart as a cashier paying $7.25 an hour.  We lived a quarter of a mile from the Walmart and had only one car so I walked to work.  (When I have children and tell them this story the walk to Walmart will become a Lincolnesque 2 mile walk.)  Some of my coworkers who saw me walking would sometimes pick me up, a few of them felt sorry for me that I had to walk to work.

$7.25 an hour at that time was a dollar over minimum wage.  Just showing up on time and not stealing anything put me in the top 15% of cashiers.  The biggest theft at retail isn’t from customers, it’s from the employees who let friends and family steal.  I would often bring lunch from home which baffled my coworkers as they would all eat there.  It didn’t make sense to me that they would spend $10 a meal which was nearly two hours of work. If you worked 8 hours with lunch, snacking, and the driving associated with the job you would net only 5.5 hours of pay once you paid that all out.

Working at a nearly minimum wage job meant devoting your entire life to it.  My schedule was made weekly, so I didn’t know what shifts or time I would be working .  I would often work 39 hours on various days so they wouldn’t have to pay me benefits, although when they were short I would sometimes get 60 hours.    Since I was in college couldn’t care less about health insurance, but for others they had to get several part time jobs to survive.  Here’s  some of the sad truth:  Someone in their 40s who makes minimum wage there is a reason why they make that.  Often not the smartest person and even simple tasks like scanning was a struggle.

There were two girls I would try to flirt with.  One was receptive, but since our schedules didn’t match up we couldn’t hang out.  Plus I was always physically tired so I wouldn’t even know what to do ( I don’t know how some guys can do the unhook the bra with one hand, that takes talent)  The other told me to ask her out only after I finished college and got a “real” job because I was actually worse off than anyone there because I had negative net worth with my student loans.  She was right,  if I dropped out of college with my at the time $18,000 in student loans I would be worse off than the average Walmart employee.  I couldn’t find love in Walmart.

Some of my young coworkers were going to college, while most had no plan.  They were actually more concerned about getting a new car, rims or saving to go on a nice vacation.  That summer I had never worked so hard in my entire life.  I was extremely grateful for that experience, because that reminded me that the world is full of shitty jobs and busting ass as a poor student wasn’t one of them.

I’m blessed that I now make more in a day than I made in an entire week at Walmart. When I need to work 50-60 hours a week at my job I remember that it’s more rewarding than working those hours at Walmart.  My experiences there is a major reason why I’ve stayed with my company for 15 years, I’ve come out farther ahead job hopping for higher pay.  With tenure and demonstrating my value I’ve been fortunate never to have been laid off, something that could’ve happen if I job hopped.    If it wasn’t for my Walmart job experience I most likely would slack off and take my job for granted, or worse constantly complain about my job.  My colleagues think they have stress, stress is trying to live on $7.25 an hour.

What job shaped your work experience or define you? How exactly does someone find love in Walmart?

Sourced from gettingarichlife.com

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