
WAL-MART
PR Offensive
What good is $250 billion in revenue
if
nobody loves you?
Yesterday, Wal-Mart CEO Lee Scott launched a public
relations campaign aimed to restore the company's tarnished image.
He's
begun lashing out at the company's critics, claiming Wal-Mart is the
victim
of a misinformation campaign.
Displaying its trademark light touch,
Wal-Mart
placed 100
full-page advertisements in major newspapers laying out its side of
the
story. The advertisement declares, "everyone is entitled to their own
opinions about our company, but they are not entitled to make up
their own
facts." But Wal-Mart presents an incomplete and dishonest account of
how it
treats its employees. Here's the straight story:
DENYING HEALTH CARE BENEFITS: Wal-Mart brags about the generous
benefits
package it extends to employees. But the company fails to mention
that "only
40% of the company's one million U.S. employees are
currently
enrolled in its healthcare plan, leaving close to 600,000 of its
employees
acquiring health insurance elsewhere - or not at all." Part of the
reason
behind this embarrassingly low uninsured rate - the national rate for
insured employees at other large companies is 66 percent - could be
the
obstacles Wal-Mart places in front of workers seeking access to the
health
care plan. In spite of an astounding 60
percent annual turnover rate for its employees, the
waiting period for enrollment eligibility was increased to six
months for
full-time employees and two years for part-time employees. If part-
time
employees make it over this hurdle, they still cannot buy coverage for
spouses or children. It's also a wonder why their employees would
even want
to sign up for the health insurance plan as Wal-Mart "shifts much of
the
health care costs onto employees."
LEECHING OFF GOVERNMENT ASSISTANCE: In the advertisement, Wal-Mart
continues
on to praise itself for paying "almost twice the federal minimum
wage" to
its hourly store associates and listing the many benefits that come
with
employment. However, wages for many Wal-Mart employees are so low
that they
are forced
ABUSING HOURLY EMPLOYEES: Wal-Mart claims that "seventy-four percent
of
[its] hourly associates in the United States work full-time." What the
company chooses not to address is the nearly 40 wage-and-hour lawsuits
currently filed against them. In Washington state for example, a
class-action
DENYING WORKERS THE RIGHT TO ORGANIZE BY ANY MEANS NECESSARY: Of the
many
"perks" that should come with being employed at Wal-Mart, workers'
right to
organize - internationally "recognized as a
core labor
standard and a basic human right" - is not mentioned. This glaring
absence
is not a mistake: "Wal-Mart
has
consistently stated that it will not bargain with any union, and has
repeatedly taken drastic steps to prevent workers from organizing in
stores
across North America." Managers at Wal-Marts even have a "hotline to
call so
that company specialists can respond rapidly and head off any attempt
by
employees to organize." The various strategies that Wal-Mart has
employed to
get around unions have resulted in the company being hit with over 100
charges, complaints, and rebukes by United Food and Commercial
Workers, the
International Confederation of Free Trade Unions and the United States
government. Despite facing grand jury investigations, National Labor
Review
Board judges, and class action suits, behind closed doors, Wal-Mart
applauds
its "union avoidance strategy."
www.americanprogressaction.org
Author Unknown

