Other Retail Archives - Page 32 of 34 - I Hate Working In Retail

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Working conditions in Dollar General and Walmart compared to other industries

The Real State Of The Union For Workers

 
state of union workers

WASHINGTON — “The state of our union is strong,” President Obama will tell the country tonight, echoing a sentiment shared by nearly every executive before him. But just how strong is it for the country’s working people, particularly those on the lower end of the income sca
The number of workers living in poverty exploded during the Great Recession and its aftermath, as people were hobbled by part-time work, temporary employment and the disproportionate growth of low-wage jobs. Most workers have endured at least adecade of wage stagnation, with their pay being well outstripped by corporate profits. A McDonald’s executive may now earn $8.75 million a year, but a McDonald’s workerstill earns $8.25 an hour.
Below are just some of the wages and working conditions faced by tens of millions of workers in the U.S. — and how those conditions are determined in part by policy set in Washington.
Warehouse workers
amazon warehouse
Warehouse work is the hidden engine of the U.S. retail sector, but many of the so-called “lumpers” who load trucks bound for major retailers earn poverty wages on a contingent basis. The companies whose products are being moved prefer to outsource the warehouse responsibilities to third parties, which in turn outsource the work to other third parties. While it saves the companies plenty of money, the byzantine contracting arrangements tend to blur the lines of corporate accountability, leading to widespread allegations of wage theft and other abuses by temp firms at the bottom of the contract chain. As one expert put it to The Huffington Post, “All of these companies, wherever they possibly can, they want to create a workforce that doesn’t work for them.”
Dollar store employees
dollar general store
Dollar stores — Dollar General, Dollar Tree and Family Dollar — are one of the fastest-growing sectors of the retail economy. By one measure, a new dollar store is opening every six hours in the United States. But much of that growth, as HuffPost reported, isunderwritten by dubious labor practices by the big chains that collectively employ over 100,000 people. Even though managers spend their days doing grunt work — like unloading trucks and stockings shelves — their designation as “managers” excludes them from basic protections in federal labor law, like a guaranteed minimum wage and time-and-a-half for overtime. Some of them work so hard physically that they get hurt, but at the end of the day, they don’t earn much more than the workers they oversee. Managers throughout the country are now suing the chains over these practices.
Meatpackers
chicken wings
Working on a poultry processing line is a dangerous and low-paying job, full of repetitive motion and muscle pain. A recent government study found that four in ten workers at one chicken plant in South Carolina showed signs of carpal tunnel syndrome, the painful hand-and-wrist condition. Despite such findings, federal regulators are now considering a proposal to raise the maximum line speed even higher — a move that has the wide backing of the poultry industry. One poultry worker told HuffPost that the men and women who eviscerate and debone chicken carcasses can barely keep up at current speeds. Faster line speeds, he said, were nearly unimaginable: “It’s a job where you don’t get any relief.”
Repo agents
tow truck repossession
While auto repossession has always been difficult and dangerous work, big banks have recently found new ways to make it low-paying as well. The lenders who underwrite auto loans have recently pushed auto repossession agents into working on a “contingency” basis — meaning if they don’t find the car, they don’t get paid a dime. Not only has that squeezed agents’ wages, it’s also encouraged them to put their lives and others’ in danger by making risky repossessions. HuffPost reported the story of one agent working on contingency who ran over a car owner during an altercation. As the owner of one repo outfit said, the lenders’ stinginess is “turning good people into bad, making them do things they wouldn’t normally do.”
Fast-food workers
mcdonalds sign
The quintessential image of a fast-food worker is a high school kid looking for spare cash at night and on the weekends. In reality, many fast-food workers are now grownups with families to support; 40 percent are now 25 years or older, according to the National Employment Law Project. But despite the growing age and experience of its workforce, the fast-food industry is about as low-paying as its ever been when adjusted for inflation, with a median wage under $9. HuffPost has interviewed fast-food workers whose most recent raises were granted not by their employers but by the U.S. Congress, when the federal minimum wage was last hiked in 2009. For minimum wage workers in states that don’t adjust the wage floor each year for inflation — and that would be the majority of states, including pricy New York — the wait between raises can be years.
Taxi and sedan drivers
dc taxi

A lot of sedan and taxi drivers aren’t technically employed by the companies they work for. Like other folks in the transport industry, they’re instead classified as “independent contractors” working on their own. Many of them aren’t independent in any real sense. The companies set the terms of employment — where the drivers work, when they must be available, and even what they wear while on the job. But the companies reap major benefits by classifying the workers as independent — like not having to pay workers’ comp or unemployment taxes, and not having to worry abouttheir drivers unionizing. Since they’re technically not employees, the drivers can’t expect health coverage or other basic workplace benefits. In some cases, they don’t even get to keep the “gratuities” that the companies charge their clients.
Walmart workers
walmart
Earlier this month, officials at the National Labor Relations Board formally accusedthe world’s largest private-sector employer of retaliating against workers who spoke out about working conditions. The general counsel for the board charged Walmart with violating the rights of more than 60 workers in 14 states surrounding the Black Friday strikes that became national news for the retailer.
Coal miners who take a stand
upper big branch sign
Coal mining remains one of the most dangerous jobs in the world. Even though U.S. miners have strong whistleblower protections written into federal law, those who speak out about mine hazards or refuse to do risky work still have a way of getting demoted or fired. The official investigations into the Upper Big Branch mining disaster, which killed 29 people, showed that miners who dared question the dubious orders coming from management were threatened with their jobs. Such coercion can be routine in some mines. Charles Scott Howard, a Kentucky miner, has been reinstated on the job at least three times after being retaliated against for his whistleblowing on safety issues. Reuben Shemwell, another Kentucky miner, was hit with a lawsuit by his own company merely for filing a whistleblower complaint with the feds.
Restaurant workers who try to unionize
panera sign
With few exceptions, the restaurant industry is a union-free world. Chains and franchisees can usually rely on the work’s high turnover rate to keep unions naturally at bay, but in recent cases, owners have taken a much more proactive approach. A Jimmy John’s sandwich shop franchisee in Minnesota fired pro-union workers during a heated unionization battle. Similarly, a major Panera franchisee in Michigan hasdeclined to accept the successful union election of its bakers. The federal labor board has issued a raft of union-busting charges against the company, but the bakers still don’t have a contract. “I came into this thinking we had the right to bargain collectively,” one baker told HuffPost.
Housekeepers
hotel housekeeper
At a lot of U.S. hotels, the men and women who clean guests’ rooms are no longer even employed by the hotels. Instead, they work for temp staffing agencies on a day-to-day basis. This arrangement has obvious benefits for large hotel chains; by outsourcing the work, they don’t have to worry about offering a living wage, health care coverage or other benefits to the housekeepers who clean their hotels. But for workers, the outsourcing comes at a steep cost. Previously in-house workers can be rehired through the temp firms at substantially lower wages, and many of them enjoy no job stability whatsoever as temporary employees. “It’s everywhere now,” an Indianapolis janitor said of the hotel outsourcing. “The housekeepers, the restaurant, the stewards, laundry, room service …”
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A ‘tsunami’ of store closings expected to hit retail Sears J C Penny

Get ready for the next era in retail—one that will be characterized by far fewer shops and smaller stores.
On Tuesday, Sears said that it will shutter its flagship store in downtown Chicago in April. It’s the latest of about 300 store closures in the U.S. that Sears has made since 2010. The news follows announcements earlier this month of multiple store closings from major department stores J.C. Penney and Macy’s.
Further signs of cuts in the industry came Wednesday, when Target said that it will eliminate 475 jobs worldwide, including some at its Minnesota headquarters, and not fill 700 empty positions.
Experts said these headlines are only the tip of the iceberg for the industry, which is set to undergo a multiyear period of shuttering stores and trimming square footage.
Shoppers will likely see an average decrease in overall retail square footage of between one-third and one-half within the next five to 10 years, as a shift to e-commerce brings with it fewer mall visits and a lesser need to keep inventory stocked in-store, said Michael Burden, a principal with Excess Space Retail Services.

Getty Images
“I believe we’re going to hear a lot more announcements in the coming months,” Burden said. It’s “an indication that there is a shift in the retail environment and it’s one that will continue.”
(Read more: 5 problems retailers must fix in 2014)
January is typically a busy month for retailers to announce store closings. According to the International Council of Shopping Centers, 44 percent of annual store closings announced since 2010 have occurred in the first quarter. But this year’s closings are likely indicative of a new trend, sparked by more and more shoppers turning to the Web, experts said.
This holiday, online spending increased by 10 percent on desktop devices—a number that will likely grow another 2 percentage points when factoring in the role of mobile devices, according to data tracker comScore. Paired with a compressed holiday shopping calendar and a spate of freezing weather across much of the U.S., online shopping contributed to a nearly 15 percent decline in foot traffic this past holiday season, according to ShopperTrak.
“Stores are making a long-term bet on technology,” said Belus Capital Advisors analyst Brian Sozzi. “It simply doesn’t make strategic sense to enter a new 15-year lease as consumers are likely to continue curtailing physical visits to the mall.”
Future of American malls
Rick Caruso, Caruso Affiliated founder and CEO, discusses the future of American malls and explains what shopping malls need to do to become relevant again. “Retail brick and mortar has a great future,” Caruso says.
Sozzi said that after a profitable but below-expectations holiday season, the retail industry will face its second “tsunami of store closures across the U.S.,” only a few years after what he called the “fire sale holiday season of 2008.”
During the recession, the number of shopping center vacancies rose by 5.5 percentage points to 11 percent, according to ICSC data, and has since recovered only 2.1 percentage points.
In addition to J.C. Penney—which announced last week that it will close 33 stores—there are about a dozen retailers that still have too many stores, Sozzi said. Among them: American Eagle, which needs to move some of its aerie lingerie locations into its main stores; Aéropostale, which is on track to close 175 stores over the next few years; and Wal-Mart, which has about 100 stores in the U.S. producing same-store sales declines deeper than 3 percent, Sozzi said.
(Read more: JC Penney closing 33 stores, slashing 2,000 jobs)
As for Penney’s, Wells Fargo analyst Paul Lejuez said that its store closures are a step in the right direction, but they barely scratch the surface of how many are needed.
“With mall traffic trends very challenging and J.C. Penney facing its own significant company-specific issues, we do not believe a 1,000-plus store fleet is appropriate,” Lejuez said in a research note. “In our view, the company needs to close several hundred stores to operate more efficiently, but that is not easy to accomplish overnight.”
Retailers need a new approach
That’s not to say there aren’t a number of young retailers who still have plenty of room to build their store base, Lejuez said. Among them: Lululemon and the fashion-forward Michael Kors and Vince brands, which both recently went public. Kors, which increased its store base by nearly 100 stores last year, is on track to open 50 U.S. stores in 2014.
In a separate note, Lejuez said that the ideal way for young brands to build a retail business today is very different than it was 20 years ago. These days, he said, it makes more sense for a retailer to have half the number of stores they once thought appropriate, and instead concentrate on a small store network and e-commerce business. This will take time to accomplish, however, as the vast majority of store locations are leased and not owned, making them harder to unload, he said.
“There is often a mismatch between the number of stores retailers operate today compared to how many they would choose to operate if they had to do it all over again,” Lejuez said.
(Read more: Without rebirth, malls face extinction: Developer)
But it’s not just the number of stores that are shrinking—it’s also their size, said David Birnbrey, chairman of retail real estate advisory group The Shopping Center Group. As fewer shoppers buy items at the physical store, retailers don’t require the same inventory levels to be kept in an attached storage room.
Buy retailers with strong e-commerce: Trader
CNBC’s Courtney Reagan dissects the latest action in the retail sector, saying retailers need to ensure a strong online presence. FMHR trader Pete Najarian agrees the best names in e-commerce are buys.

By placing more of their stock in fulfillment centers, they can shrink their stores to cut back on commercial real estate expenses, Birnbrey said. Although retail rents are still well below where they were prior to the recession, they have begun to stabilize, and are expected to show a slight uptick in 2014, according to CB Richard Ellis.
“I think stores are typically downsizing right now, and I think they’re doing it because they had unsustainable inventory levels,” Birnbrey said.
Steering clear of traditional malls
One big shift in store closings has come from retailers shying away from indoor malls, instead favoring outlet centers, outdoor malls or stand-alone stores. Although new retail construction completions are at an all-time low, according to CB Richard Ellis, the supply of new outlet centers has picked up in recent quarters.
“There’s no question that mall stores are closing quicker than open air, as far as the department stores,” Birnbrey said.
(Read more: Showrooming left in the dust as shoppers go online)
Rick Caruso, founder and CEO of Caruso Affiliated, said at the recent National Retail Federation convention that without a major reinvention, traditional malls will soon go extinct, adding that he is unaware of an indoor mall being built since 2006.
“Any time you stop building a product, that’s usually the best indication that the customer doesn’t want it anymore,” he said.
But retailers aren’t throwing in the towel just yet. Turning brick-and-mortar shopping into a retail experience was one of the main topics discussed at the NRF convention this month, with retailers brainstorming ways to integrate targeted mobile couponing and high-tech gadgets to entice shoppers who may have been lost to the Web.
“They’re not giving up at all,” Birnbrey said.
—By CNBC’s Krystina Gustafson. Follow her on Twitter

@KrystinaGustafs

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Join The Booming Dollar Store Economy! Low Pay, Long Hours, May Work While Injured

Dawn Hughey had worked at Dollar General for just four months when she was named manager of a store in the Detroit suburbs in 2009. Having recently moved home after a stint in California, Hughey hoped the new honorific — and its attendant annual salary — would help her start a new life in Michigan.
But like other managers in America’s booming dollar store industry, Hughey quickly came to believe she was a manager in name only. The major dollar store chains — Dollar General, Dollar Tree and Family Dollar — have thrived by offering customers rock-bottom prices that rival Walmart’s, a business model that requires shaving labor costs wherever possible. For a manager like Hughey, that meant working far beyond a 40-hour week.
Each week, the company allotted Hughey around 125 hours to assign to the four workers in her charge, most of whom were earning close to minimum wage, she said. But according to Hughey, as well as recent lawsuits against Dollar General and its competitors, the hours that dollar store managers are allowed to assign rarely cover the work that needs to be done. The stores operate on something close to a skeleton staff, workers say.
Pressured to keep payroll down, Hughey spent most of her time unloading trucks, stocking shelves and manning the cash register, often logging 12-hour days, six days a week, to keep the store operating. She said she felt less like a manager than a manual laborer.
Dollar General saved a bundle by having Hughey do much of the grunt work. As a salaried manager, she was exempt from overtime protections and didn’t get paid for extra work. Given that she often worked 70 hours a week, at an annual salary of $34,700, her pay sometimes broke down to less than $10 per hour — hardly a managerial haul.
She and her fellow store managers didn’t like thinking about the math, she said. After all, these were supposed to be the good, middle-class jobs in the low-paying retail world.
“It was always depressing,” Hughey, 49, said. “We didn’t want to know what it broke down to. Employees would say, ‘You’re the boss, you get the big bucks.’ But, really, you’re making [as much as] I am.”
The physical demands of the job took their toll. As Hughey was loading 25-pound boxes of books off a cart one day in July 2011, she felt a pinch in her neck, and “an immediate stabbing pain,” she recalled. The strain would eventually lead to X-rays, MRIs, physical therapy and recommendations to see a neurosurgeon, according to Hughey’s medical records. Hughey was put on work restrictions by her doctor, but continued clocking in.
As the pain got worse, her doctor told her to take two weeks off. On her third day back on the job, she was called into a meeting with her district manager, according to Hughey. “He told me we were going to part ways,” Hughey recalled. The manager said Hughey was being let go due to productivity problems that predated her injury. Hughey then began what would turn out to be a two-year battle over workers’ compensation due to her health problems.
Recent strikes by workers at fast food restaurants and at Walmart have helped spark a national discussion about pay and working conditions in the retail sector. Dollar stores like Hughey’s are a growing piece of that world, as companies like Dollar General have managed to take on Walmart in the discount retail game. The New York Times Magazine wrote that the influx of more affluent shoppers at these stores has helped create a “dollar store economy” in the wake of the Great Recession.
But the stingy payroll required by the dollar store business model leaves many employees overworked, underpaid and even injured, according to workers and litigation filed over labor practices. While further promotions await some managers, for many the leadership job they longed for isn’t a road to the middle class so much as a glorified manual labor gig that quickly burns them out.
In interviews and court documents, former and current store managers claim major dollar store companies classify them as managers merely to evade overtime obligations and to pay them less money. Those managers’ employees, in turn, have accused the companies of illegally shorting them on pay and forcing them to work off the clock due to payroll constraints.
Several workers told The Huffington Post that they lost their jobs or their hours once they got hurt or encountered health problems, leading to bitter feelings and long legal battles.
“We’re disposable,” Hughey said.
A NEW STORE EVERY SIX HOURS
The number of dollar stores in the U.S. has roughly doubled over the past decade, the full tally now approaching 25,000 nationally, according to the brokerage firm Sterne Agee. Such stores are much smaller than a Walmart — about 8,000 square feet, compared with the 182,000 of a typical Supercenter — but they’re also becoming far more accessible to U.S. shoppers than the nation’s top retailer. There are now approximately five dollar stores in the U.S. for every Walmart.
Dollar General, Family Dollar and Dollar Tree are on pace to open one new store every six hours this year, according to Sterne Agee’s analysis, and they now employ more than 220,000 full-time and part-time U.S. workers, according to the companies’ annual reports. Dollar General alone has 90,000 employees. Unlike with Walmart’s employees, dollar store workers are siloed in small stores with few coworkers, leading to little workforce identity and no labor union presence.
Much of the industry’s growth has come courtesy of the Great Recession. As the worst downturn in a generation settled in, shoppers increasingly looked for bargain bins close to home, steering them to the discount detergent, toilet paper and other so-called consumables that Dollar General and its competitors thrive on.
Many of the new shoppers at dollar stores are people who wouldn’t have stepped foot in one a decade ago. The big chains bore a reputation for operating dingy stores in run-down, high-crime neighborhoods, selling 99-cent items mostly to the poor. Sensing an opportunity to poach shoppers from big retailers and grocers, the main dollar store chains have spruced up their shops and broadened their inventory to make them more inviting to middle-class customers.
“People have migrated there and stayed there,” said Joan Storms, an analyst at Wedbush Securities.
Storms said the chains have improved stores to make them pleasant places to shop and to work.
“When you shopped those stores before, you really felt poor,” Storms said. “Over the last few years they’ve really upgraded the shopping experience and the working experience by reformatting stores, cleaning them up and adding better merchandise.”
Retail is one of the lowest-paying jobs in the economy, with a median annual salary of about $25,000, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That’s well below what a family needs to support itself in most parts of the country. Retail workers are also unlikely to have employer health insurance, either because it isn’t offered or it’s prohibitively expensive. (As full-time employees, most dollar store managers do have health care coverage and other basic benefits.)
This low compensation — driven in large part by the cheap prices consumers demand — has been an essential ingredient in retail growth, including dollar stores. In the case of Dollar General, the company’s success has helped make it a poster child for the private equity industry. As private equity was assailed as “vulture capitalism” during last year’s presidential election, a trade group for the industry boasted that Dollar General had added more than 20,000 jobs since the firm Kohlberg Kravis Roberts acquired it in 2007. (The company went public again in 2009.)
But the growth of dollar stores has come with a boom in litigation from employees on the lower rungs of the economic ladder. Since just 2010, more than 30 federal wage-and-hour lawsuits have been filed against the three primary dollar store chains, according to court records. Such lawsuits are now common across industries, as workers sue employers under the Fair Labor Standards Act. But the dollar store world in particular has become a breeding ground for allegations by workers that they were shorted on pay.
For the dollar store chains, worker lawsuits have simply become a cost of doing business. Earlier this year, 6,000 Dollar Tree workers joined a lawsuit against that company. They claimed they were forced to clock out for breaks, but had to continue working unpaid anyway.
“The number of employment-related class actions filed each year has continued to increase,” Dollar General, which had sales of $16 billion last year, wrote in its 2010 annual report. In addition to litigation under the Fair Labor Standards Act, female managers sued the company in a class action alleging the company systematically underpaid them compared with male counterparts. The case was settled for $19 million last year.
Wanda Womack, the lead plaintiff in the sex discrimination case, worked as a manager for 11 years at different stores in Alabama. Like other longtime managers, Womack said the heavy workload at her store led to wear and tear on her body. She eventually got hurt lifting heavy boxes and required a series of rotator cuff surgeries, she said.
She went on a leave of absence with workers’ comp, but her job came to an end when it was apparent she could no longer lift 40 pounds, according to court filings. Womack filed her lawsuit after she was let go.
“It really took 20 years off my life because of all the muscle pains. I have back injuries, I have neck injuries,” Womack said.
As for Dollar General, “They’re popping up everywhere,” she said. “They just keep getting bigger and bigger and bigger.”
A SQUEEZE ON WORKERS
Like other retailers, the dollar store chains budget payroll hours to individual stores based on sales, geography and other closely watched metrics. It’s up to store managers to find a way to hit their sales goals and remain operational while coming in under their payroll ceiling.
Managers’ quarterly bonuses — a critical supplement for many, given average salaries in the mid- to high-$30,000s — hinge on their ability to keep stores profitable on thin margins. (According to salary data from Glassdoor.com, Walmart store managers earn well over twice the salary of dollar store managers, likely because their stores and workforces are so much larger.)
For managers, that means being stingy with the hours given to part-time workers, and then handling whatever work gets left behind. Many managers said they feel no different from the people they supervise, except that their hours are longer. The per-hour pay rate often works out to be roughly equal.
“I’ve managed other retail stores. This was different,” said Berdie Gillis, a former Dollar General store manager. “There are not enough hours, and not enough people. The turnover was horrible.”
Dollar store managers don’t benefit much from the Fair Labor Standards Act. Enacted in 1938, the bedrock labor law established the country’s minimum wage and overtime protections, and to this day serves as the primary governor on the 40-hour work week. By requiring that companies pay workers time-and-a-half for overtime, the law makes bosses pay a price for making their employees work long hours. It also encourages companies to spread the work to different employees to avoid paying a premium. Because they’re part of management and work on salary, white-collar supervisors are exempt from the overtime law.
The problem, according to Jennifer Klein, a Yale history professor, is that the law is still predicated on the industrial economy of the mid-20th century, when the lines between managers and rank-and-file workers were clear. The modern service economy, she said, is full of workers who may have “manager” in their title, but largely function as manual laborers and clerks.
The system “actually forces the management to squeeze people, to squeeze them and make them work hours off the clock, and for managers to pick up the slack,” said Klein.
“The model was based on full-time employment in an industrial enterprise, where there was a clear recognition of who was the boss and who was the employee,” Klein continued. “Employers obviously have a lot of incentive to exploit the ambiguities and continue to manipulate the meaning of ‘employee.'”
The number of lawsuits alleging misclassification and wage violations in all industries has skyrocketed over the past decade, hitting record highs. According to an analysis from the Federal Judicial Center, nearly 8,000 such lawsuits were filed under the Fair Labor Standards Act in the last reporting year, after hovering around 1,500 a year in the 1990s and early-2000s.
Businesses often say this boom in litigation comes courtesy of money-hungry lawyers seek big-dollar settlements. But worker advocates say the rise in lawsuits is because employers game the system and workers aren’t being paid what they’re owed. Workers may also be more sensitive to getting shorted on their pay these days, given that a lot of paychecks in low-wage industries like retail haven’t kept up with the cost of living.
In a statement to HuffPost, Dollar General said that its managers have played “a critical role” in the company’s success, and that their status as salaried, “exempt” employees is appropriate. (The company declined to address individual workers’ claims, citing litigation.)
“Based on the nature and importance of store manager responsibilities, Dollar General classifies its store managers as full-time, salaried employees who are eligible for company-supported health care coverage and a competitive bonus system for the retail industry,” the company said.
Dollar General added that off-the-clock work is “absolutely” prohibited.
“Store managers are responsible for staffing and scheduling at their stores,” the company said. “They are provided with the tools and training to ensure that their stores’ business needs are met and employees are paid in accordance with company policy and the law.”
Dollar Tree didn’t respond to a request for comment. In an email to HuffPost, Family Dollar spokeswoman Bryn Winburn said the company believes its managers are “properly classified as exempt” from the Fair Labor Standards Act.
“The number of hours worked by Family Dollar store managers varies due to many factors, including the skill and experience of the specific manager,” Winburn wrote. “Because store managers are responsible for the entire operation of their stores, they are also responsible for setting the weekly schedule for the employees in that store, including their own, and in assuring that all employees in their stores receive the appropriate breaks.”
Winburn noted that Family Dollar was “not alone” in believing its managers should be exempt from overtime and minimum wage laws, noting the company’s many victories in federal court. A North Carolina federal court “has ruled 46 times in the past few years that individual Family Dollar store managers are classified properly,” she said.
Andrew Frisch, a lawyer who’s sued Chesapeake, Va.-based Dollar Tree on behalf of assistant managers, said it’s the companies’ taut payroll that lead to lawsuits. Many workers end up working through legally mandated unpaid breaks or doing other off-the-clock work, he said.
“It’s an untenable amount of work,” Frisch said.
In addition to working through unpaid breaks, Frisch said there are other, smaller ways in which dollar store employees get shorted. “At virtually every dollar store chain, there are people responsible for bringing bank deposits,” Frisch said. “The people at the end of the day get screwed. They clock out and leave, and then have to do the deposit.”
John Nicoletti is familiar with the dollar store labor model.
In early 2012, Nicoletti took a manager’s job at a Dollar General store in Martin, Tenn, he said. He’d put together a long career in retail, managing gas stations for years before starting the new job. He’d heard stories of brutal hours at dollar stores, but a supervisor told him when he started that he’d be working about 45 hours per week. Nicoletti couldn’t work much more than that because of neuropathy, a painful form of nerve damage caused by his diabetes that limited how long he could be on his feet each day.
Nicoletti said he was quickly working 60 or 70 hours per week, often putting in 12-hour days or longer, doing nearly everything on his own because his staff was short-handed. Nicoletti said he believes many managers take the job believing they’ve attained a supervisory role with some cachet, only to be disappointed.
“Psychologically, they get you to believe that you are actually a manager…. But we’re stock people,” Nicoletti said. “They want you to continuously work. There’s no stop. It’s just a continuous productivity thing with them. They really worked people into the ground until they got everything they could get out of you.”
Nicoletti said he soon found himself pleading with a regional manager for more hours to give employees. He said his own workers were shifted to other, similarly understaffed stores nearby. As the stress of the job mounted, Nicoletti’s doctor informed him he’d developed hypertension.
“I never had a blood pressure problem until October,” Nicoletti said. “It was only caused by the fact that they were taking people from my store and bringing them to another.”
Eventually, the stress was so bad that Nicoletti developed muscle spasms, he said. He left in the fall, having lasted about seven months.
Nicoletti said he couldn’t help but do the salary math that bothered Hughey so much. He said said his pay often broke down to a little more than $8 per hour, less than minimum wage in some states.
‘THE ONLY THING IN TOWN’
Dollar stores may have lured middle-class customers in recent years, but they still predominate in low-income areas. A “dollar store belt” stretches from Indiana and Ohio south to the Gulf Coast. It’s no accident that West Virginia and Mississippi — two of the poorest U.S. states — are also the two states with the greatest number of dollar stores per capita, according to an analysis by the Martin Prosperity Institute.
“Retail salesperson” has become the most common occupation in America, with 4.3 million people working the country’s sales floors and registers. In down-and-out areas, particularly where manufacturing or energy jobs have vanished, dollar stores now hold some of the only work that’s available.
“It’s the only thing in town,” said Sheila Sheneman.
Until late last year, Sheneman worked in a Dollar General store in Montcalm County, Mich. The unemployment rate there was above 17 percent in 2010. It’s dropped since then, but remains a stubborn 10.2 percent.
After about five years on the job, Sheneman said she was making $8.65 per hour as a “keyholder” — a low-level store management position. She and her husband carried debt, and the modest paycheck helped them tread water. But she said it was “impossible to try and live on those wages,” especially when full-time hours are elusive for non-managers.
If dollar stores are to hold good, middle-class jobs, Sheneman said, the companies need to provide managers with enough payroll to run their stores safely, even if that means taking less profit or passing some of the cost on to customers. The current labor model comes with its own unseen costs, like high turnover and stress for employees, she said.
There’s also the intangible factor of employee morale.
One day in 2010, Sheneman woke up with a wrenched back, nearly unable to get out of bed. She was all but certain the injury was due to moving the store’s “rolltainers” — massive cages that hold hundreds of pounds of products. She went to the doctor and ultimately worked despite the pain, but she filed a workers’ compensation claim to help cover her copays and medicines.
The company challenged the claim, arguing that Sheneman’s injury wasn’t due to work. Once Sheneman fought back, she said the company’s lawyers quickly capitulated in a conference call with her and her lawyer. According to workers’ comp records, Sheneman got a check for $250 to cover her out-of-pocket costs, but she said the experience was dispiriting. 

Then, last September, Sheneman broke her left arm in a motorcycle accident. She claimed she was soon taken off the schedule.
“If they said I could come back, I would probably swallow my pride and go back, just to have some income coming in,” Sheneman said.
Dollar General disputed her unemployment claim, according to records with Michigan’s unemployment agency. Sheneman said she was fired; her employer questioned her ability to work. The state’s unemployment agency sided with Sheneman.
Dawn Hughey, the Dollar General manager from Michigan who hurt her neck, agreed to a preliminary settlement with the company for an undisclosed sum in August. Hughey’s unemployment insurance ran out a few months ago, and she’s been relying on food stamps to get by. She even looked into selling blood. She was recently evicted from her apartment and moved in with a cousin.
“Sometimes my neck is in a lot of pain, and I have to lay down and get the pillows just right to get it to stop,” she said.
While she had viewed her job at Dollar General four years ago as the start of a new life, Hughey said she’s now hoping the workers’ compensation settlement will help her get back on her feet and settle some debts. When she finally ran out of money, the minister at her church helped her make the final payments on her car so that it wouldn’t be repossessed.
“I’m going to pay her back when it’s all said and done,” Hughey said.
This story appears in Issue 69 of our weekly iPad magazine, Huffington, available Friday, Oct. 4 in the iTunes App store.

 

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