Action Alert: Tell Ehrlich don’t veto children’s health care

This Thursday, Maryland Governor Ehrlich is going to hold a “ceremony” celebrating a veto of the “Fair Share Health Care” bill. [article here]

The “Fair Share Health Care” bill requires large corporations, like Wal-Mart, to pay their fair share of their workers health care. Maryland has 4 corporations with more than 10,000 employees, yet only one does not pay their fair share for health care.
That’s right – only one! Wal-Mart is the only company not to pay its fair share for health care. No wonder so many of Wal-Mart’s employees have to rely on taxpayer funded public assistance for health care.

Help us tell Governor Ehrlich don’t veto healthcare, make Wal-Mart pay its fair share.  Send him an email using the following form:

http://www.wakeupwalmart.com/feature/write-to-mdgov.html

Take action against Wal-Mart’s Nazi ad

As was diaried yesterday at dKos by JR Monsterfodder, Wal-Mart is running a campaign in Flagstaff, Arizona to try and overturn a local ordinance that protects communities. Wal-Mart has become so desperate they are now bank-rolling a newspaper ad depicting a Nazi book-burning image.

To view an image of the actual ad, click here.

A Wal-Mart spokesperson wouldn’t comment on the ad. When a reporter finally tracked down a spokesperson for the Wal-Mart backed campaign group, he said the group will continue using the Nazi image because it “make(s) people think.”

Well, its time to help make Wal-mart think about doing the right thing.
Help us tell CEO Lee Scott – Wal-Mart must publicly denounce this ad and state it will never use a Nazi image again. The use of Nazi images is wrong and it must stop right now!

It’s time to make Wal-mart do the right thing!

Please sign the petition today:

http://www.wakeupwalmart.com/feature/nazi-ad.html

Over Fifty Members of Congress Ask Wal-Mart to Release Wage Statistics

Just released from the office of Rep. Rosa DeLauro:

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Amid reports of pay inequality and a class-action lawsuit on behalf of 1.5 million current and former female Wal-Mart employees – the largest in history – over fifty members of Congress led by U.S. Representative Rosa L. DeLauro (Conn.-3) today requested Wal-Mart release its wage statistics to Congress. In a letter to CEO Lee Scott, the members said they sought the information “to further understand why Wal-Mart pays its women associates less than men and promotes its female workers less frequently than their male counterparts.”

Almost 700,000 women work for Wal-Mart – nearly three-quarters of the company’s workforce – and on average earn higher performance ratings than men and stay with the company longer. Yet women account for only a third of the company’s managers – only 15 percent of store managers. In comparable positions, Wal-Mart pays its female hourly workers 40 cents less per hour than their male counterparts, with female managers earning nearly $5,000 per year less than managers who are men.
“This is part of a public education campaign to familiarize a public that knows Wal-Mart the retailer with the practices of Wal-Mart the employer – the largest employer in the country,” said DeLauro. “Our nation’s largest employer is the single most influential corporation in the world right now. We need to make sure it is a responsible corporate citizen.”

The full text of the letter follows.

May 12, 2005

Lee Scott, CEO
Walmart
7000 Marina Boulevard
Birsbane, CA 04005

Dear Mr. Scott,
We are writing to bring to your attention an ongoing matter involving Wal-Mart and its policy regarding gender discrimination. As you know, pay inequity is a serious issue in the United States, with women still earning only 76 cents for every dollar that a man earns. That is why it is of great concern to us that Wal-Mart, America’s largest employer, does not pay its women the same wage as men for the same work.

    A recent analysis of Wal-Mart’s own payroll record conducted by Professor Richard Drogin, Professor Emeritus at University of California, Berkeley, showed that Wal-Mart paid its female hourly workers 40 cents less per hour than their male counterparts, with female managers earning nearly $5,000 per year less than managers who were men. In addition, while women comprise 72 percent of your workforce, almost 700,000 overall, women only account for a third of your managers and only 15 percent of your store managers – this, despite the fact that your female employees, on average, earn higher performance ratings than men and turnover less frequently.

    In view of this, we would ask Wal-Mart to disclose its wage statistics for congressional review, including any documents submitted to the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. In doing so, we seek to further understand why Wal-Mart pays its women associates less than men and promotes its female workers less frequently than their male counterparts.

    We welcome your new commitment to begin a national discussion about Wal-Mart’s business practices; certainly, as the nation’s wealthiest and largest employer and largest company, Wal-Mart has a unique role and responsibility to do the right thing and set the best standard for America. But it remains unacceptable for any employer, much less our nation’s largest, to discriminate against its women workers. We would urge you to take a personal interest and active role in resolving this issue as soon as possible.

    Thank you for your attention to this important matter. We look forward to your response.

Sincerely,

Rosa L. DeLauro
George Miller
Hilda Solis
Anna Eshoo
Barbara Lee
Rush Holt
Jim McDermott
Frank Pallone
Raul Grijalva
John Conyers, Jr.
Anthony Weiner
Carolyn Maloney
Tom Lantos
Bernie Sanders
Peter DeFazio
Joe Baca
Sam Farr>
Neil Abercrombie
Rahm Emanuel
James McGovern
Carolyn McCarthy
Eddie Bernice Johnson
Linda Sanchez
Robert Wexler
Corrine Brown
Mike Honda
Louise Slaughter
Jan Schakowsky
Brian Higgins
Dennis Kucinich
Robert Brady
Shelley Berkley
Debbie Wasserman- Schultz
Lane Evans
Madeleine Bordallo
Lois Capps
Gwen Moore
Bob Filner
Bill Pascrell
Elijah Cummings
John Tierney
Sherrod Brown
Jerrold Nadler
Ed Markey
Zoe Lofgren
Stephen Lynch
Eleanor Holmes Norton
John Olver
Barney Frank
Betty McCollum
Michael Capuano

"Love Mom, Not Wal-Mart" results

As some of you may have read in my previous diaries, the Wake-Up Wal-Mart Campaign was trying to gather 20,000 signatures for the “Love Mom, Not Wal-Mart” pledge.  

Well most of the results are in, and with the help of many of you, we did it!  We are currently at 21,044 signatures, both from online pledges and from activities run by volunteers in states all across the U.S. and even some in Canada.  
I want to thank any of you that signed or passed the pledge around to your friends.  This was a great stride in the fight to change Wal-Mart.

While at an event at Eastern Market in D.C., I heard countless people say that they had heard about some of the awful ways that Wal-Mart treats its employees, which gives me hope that the issue is becoming more openly discussed and understood.

Please check out the Wake-Up Wal-Mart Blog in the coming days if you are interested in reading about the “Mother of all Mother’s Day Cards” that we will be sending to Lee Scott with all 20,000 + signatures on it.  

"Love Mom, Not Wal-Mart" Campaign Gains Support

Today, on Capitol Hill, five distinguished Members of Congress – Rep. Rosa DeLauro, Rep. George Miller, Rep. Linda Sanchez, Rep. Hilda Solis, and Rep. Jan Schakowsky – joined with Linda Chavez-Thompson, Executive Vice-President of the AFL-CIO, a plaintiff in the Wal-Mart gender discrimination lawsuit, and former Miss America Carolyn Sapp to pledge their support for the “Love Mom, Not Wal-Mart” campaign.

For pictures of the event, including the “Mother of All Mother’s Day Cards,” which will be delivered to Lee Scott, Wal-Mart CEO, visit the Wake-Up Wal-Mart Blog.
The “Love Mom, not Wal-Mart” campaign, the latest initiative by WakeUpWalmart.com, unveiled the “Mother of all Mother’s Day” card. The card is an enormous 8 foot by 8 foot Mother’s Day card, a symbol of how large Wal-Mart’s discrimination problem is, calling on CEO Lee Scott to stop ignoring Wal-Mart’s record of discrimination and start doing the right thing for all our Moms and all women.

As sign of their support for the “Love Mom, Not Wal-Mart” campaign, Rep. DeLauro, Rep. Miller, Rep. Sanchez, Rep. Solis, and Rep. Schakowsky, former Miss America Carolyn Sapp, and Linda Chavez-Thompson signed the “Mother of all Mother’s Day” card. The card reads, “Dear Lee Scott, It’s time for Wal-Mart to honor and respect all women. This Mother’s Day, Wal-Mart should stop discriminating against women. Happy Mother’s Day, WakeUpWalmart.com.”

“We are so pleased that these well-respected leaders have joined America’s campaign to change Wal-Mart,” said Paul Blank, WakeUpWalmart.com Campaign Director. “We can only hope that this Mother’s day, on behalf of all mothers and women across America, Wal-Mart will finally do the right thing and end its discrimination of its women workers.”

As part of the “Love Mom, Not Wal-Mart” campaign, Congresswoman Rosa DeLauro released a dear colleague letter for other Congressional members to sign calling for a Congressional review of Wal-Mart’s wage statistics. The letter reads, “We would ask Wal-Mart to disclose its wage statistics for congressional review, including any documents submitted to the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.”

The “Love Mom, Not Wal-Mart” is kicking off a two-week effort, including blog ads and on-the-ground organizing, to ask all Americans to sign the “Mother’s Day Pledge” promising not to buy their Mother’s Day gift at Wal-Mart this year until Wal-Mart finally ends its discrimination against women workers. Already, thousands of Americans have signed the pledge.

“How can America’s richest company and largest employer of women discriminate against more than 1.5 million of its women workers, many of them Moms? It is time for Wal-Mart to wake up and stop treating its female employees and their families like second class citizens.” added Susan Phillips, Director of Women’s Outreach for WakeUpWalMart.com.

The “Love Mom, Not Wal-Mart” campaign highlights Wal-Mart’s terrible record of discriminating against its women workers. Wal-Mart is currently involved in a gender discrimination lawsuit covering more than 1.5 million women. The case is the largest class action lawsuit in U.S. history. The suit documents Wal-Mart’s systematic discrimination against women for lower pay and unequal promotion. In fact, in a recent study, women made-up 72% of Wal-Mart’s hourly workforce, but accounted for only 33% of managers and only 15% of store managers. In addition, women earned from 5% to 15% less than men for the exact same work. This equates to nearly 40 cents less per hour for female hourly workers or nearly $5,000 less per year for female managers.

The “Love Mom, Not Wal-Mart” campaign is part of WakeUpWalmart.com, a growing grassroots campaign calling on Wal-Mart to change. As part of the Mother’s Day campaign, supporters can sign the Mother’s Day pledge and send the pledge to their friends. Supporters will also be able to send Mother’s day e-cards, purchase discounted flowers and download a volunteer action toolkit which contains a fact sheet and flyer detailing Wal-Mart’s record of gender discrimination.

The full text of Congresswoman Rosa DeLauro’s letter follows.

   

Dear Mr. Scott,

    We are writing to bring to your attention an ongoing matter involving Wal-Mart and its policy regarding gender discrimination. As you know, pay inequity is a serious issue in the United States, with women still earning only 76 cents for every dollar that a man earns. That is why it is of great concern to us that Wal-Mart, America’s largest employer, does not pay its women the same wage as men for the same work.

    A recent analysis of Wal-Mart’s own payroll record conducted by Professor Richard Drogin, Professor Emeritus at University of California, Berkeley, showed that Wal-Mart paid its female hourly workers 40 cents less per hour than their male counterparts, with female managers earning nearly $5,000 per year less than managers who were men. In addition, while women comprise 72 percent of your workforce, almost 700,000 overall, women only account for a third of your managers and only 15 percent of your store managers – this, despite the fact that your female employees, on average, earn higher performance ratings than men and turnover less frequently.

    In view of this, we would ask Wal-Mart to disclose its wage statistics for congressional review, including any documents submitted to the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. In doing so, we seek to further understand why Wal-Mart pays its women associates less than men and promotes its female workers less frequently than their male counterparts.

    We welcome your new commitment to begin a national discussion about Wal-Mart’s business practices; certainly, as the nation’s wealthiest and largest employer and largest company, Wal-Mart has a unique role and responsibility to do the right thing and set the best standard for America. But it remains unacceptable for any employer, much less our nation’s largest, to discriminate against its women workers. We would urge you to take a personal interest and active role in resolving this issue as soon as possible.

    Thank you for your attention to this important matter. We look forward to your response.

For pictures of the event, including the “Mother of All Mother’s Day Cards,” which will be delivered to Lee Scott, Wal-Mart CEO, visit the Wake-Up Wal-Mart Blog.  

Is your community fighting against Wal-Mart?

Cross posted at Daily Kos

Since launching WakeUpWalMart.com, I have received dozens and dozens of emails from people who are working, either on their own or with community groups, churches, or other organizations, to keep Wal-Mart out of their town.

I’ve decided to devote a new section of WakeUpWalMart.com to these groups, which I have begun to build.
But I need your help. If you are involved in an effort to keep Wal-Mart out of your town, please come to the Wake-Up Blog and tell us about it. Even if you are not directly involved, if you know of any such groups in your area, ask them to speak out here, or tell us what you know about them.

We are looking for links to news articles, websites of community groups, personal stories, and anything else you feel like sharing.

Please help us build this new section, which will become an informational database, along with tools and advice on methods that have worked to keep Wal-Mart out.

Thanks,

Brendan
Online Coordinator
WakeUpWalMart.com

Sign the pledge – Love Mom, Not Wal-Mart

WakeUpWalMart.com has just launched a new “Mother’s Day Specials” section.  

While there, you can sign the pledge, declaring that until Wal-Mart starts treating their women employees fairly, you will not buy your Mother’s Day gifts there.  WakeUpWalMart.com will deliver all the signatures from the pledge to Lee Scott, Wal-mart CEO, on the “Mother of all Mother’s Day Cards.”
You can also purchase discounted Mother’s Day flowers, send Mother’s Day e-cards, download Wal-Mart on Women facts sheets and other education tools to distribute and discuss in your community and among friends and colleagues.  

Wal-Mart must stop discriminating against women, and your help is needed.  Please sign the pledge today:

http://www.wakeupwalmart.com/mom/

Wal-Mart: the $288 billion welfare queen

Cross posted at the Wake-Up Blog

In today’s Tallahassee Democrat, FL State Rep. Susan Bucher has a nice analysis of Wal-Mart’s costs to taxpayers. Among the more important quotes are these:

“It might be tempting to dismiss this issue as a larger one of corporate welfare, or to argue that we’re singling out Wal-Mart unfairly. But facts are facts: Wal-Mart does not just shift health-care costs onto taxpayers, it does so at a level well beyond that of any other employer.”

“That is, the retail behemoth deliberately cuts corners on employee health care, forcing a disproportionate number of its employees into state programs in order to receive health care for themselves and their families.”

“Finally, his response is entirely disingenuous. [Wal-Mart CEO Lee] Scott acts as though public programs are a better deal for workers, when really they’re simply a better deal for Wal-Mart. It’s not that Wal-Mart can’t afford to do better. It’s that Wal-Mart chooses not to.”

With such high costs to taxpayers, isn’t it time for Wal-Mart to wake up?

Link to full article here.

Wal-Mart: More villain than victim

In the Sunday edition of USA Today, UFCW International Union President Joe Hansen had the opportunity to respond to an opinion piece, titled “Wal-Mart foes go one too far.” His response, titled “More villain than victim,” follows:

As America’s largest company, with more than $285 billion in sales and more than $10 billion in profits, Wal-Mart has a responsibility to set the standard for customers, workers, families and communities. America’s largest employer — with nearly 1.3 million workers — must reflect America’s values.

    Wal-Mart is not the victim of globalization, lower wages and lack of health insurance. More accurately, Wal-Mart’s business practices created many of these problems in America today. Look at the record.

    A company that reflects America’s values doesn’t pay below poverty-level wages to its workers. At 34 hours per week (full-time at Wal-Mart), the average Wal-Mart associate makes $17,114 per year, well below the poverty level for a family of four.

    A company that reflects America’s values doesn’t have 660,000 of its employees without company-provided health insurance, forcing workers to seek taxpayer-funded public assistance. In fact, in 11 of the 12 states that have disclosed employers who have employees on Medicaid, Wal-Mart tops the list. In Georgia, for example, a state survey found more than 10,000 Wal-Mart employees on Medicaid — 14 times the next highest employer.

    A company that reflects America’s values doesn’t ask taxpayers to subsidize its $10 billion in profits. A U.S. congressional study found that Wal-Mart costs you, the American taxpayer, up to $2.5 billion in public assistance. One newspaper editorial titled it, “Wal-Mart Welfare.”

    A company that reflects America’s values doesn’t put profits before its people, morality and the law. In the past few months, Wal-Mart agreed to pay a record fine for exploiting illegal immigrants and settled extensive child labor violations. It still faces the largest gender discrimination lawsuit, 1.6 million women, in U.S. history for unfair pay and unequal promotion.

    Wal-Mart is not creating jobs in our communities. Wal-Mart’s business practices simply exchange decent jobs with health benefits for lower-paying jobs and taxpayer-subsidized health care. The truth is Wal-Mart is forcing good-paying American jobs overseas. Wal-Mart is creating an America of lower wages, no health care and lack of retirement security.

    We think it’s time for Wal-Mart to wake up.

For more on this and other Wal-Mart stories, please visit the Wake-Up Blog.

UFCW files charges against Wal-Mart

Cross posted at Wake-Up Blog

The following letter was sent from The United Food and Commercial Workers International Union to the National Labor Relations Board yesterday.

To read the AP article discussing the charges leveled in this letter and the accompanying Unfair Labor Practice Charge that accompanied this letter, click here.

Arthur F. Rosenfeld, General Counsel
National Labor Relations Board
1099 14th Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20570

Dear Mr. Rosenfeld:

Enclosed is an Unfair Labor Practice Charge the UFCW is filing against Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., today with Region 28 of the NLRB.

As you can see, the charge complains that Wal-Mart, acting through officers, employees and agents, including those at the highest levels of management, systematically denied workers their democratic right to exercise a choice for union representation. Wal-Mart’s actions seemingly involved the criminal misappropriation of company funds to create an illegal anti-union slush fund. The fund was used to bribe workers for information on other workers who desired a voice in their workplace and then to influence them to abandon their desire to exercise their rights for that voice. The Union first learned of these facts from the attached Wall Street Journal article of April 8, 2005, which describes in detail the illegal scheme. As you undoubtedly know, the U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Arkansas is conducting a criminal investigation of Wal-Mart based on the same facts.

I am writing to urge that the National Labor Relations Board investigate this charge expeditiously and thoroughly. We request that the Board begin by seeking the evidence the U.S. Attorney possesses and by using the NLRB’s subpoena power to obtain all relevant information from Wal-Mart, particularly the documents that are in the possession of Wal-Mart according to former Wal-Mart Vice Chairman Thomas Coughlin and which, according to Coughlin, substantiate the alleged scheme.

The Union suspects that Wal-Mart spread bribes in stores whose workers were actively organizing but abruptly abandoned their activity from 2000 through 2005 in any or all of the following 13 states, including Texas, Nevada, Arizona, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Florida, California, South Carolina, Ohio, Iowa, Michigan and Colorado. Your Office is aware of almost all of these campaigns because it investigated and litigated — or settled — Unfair Labor Practices Wal-Mart committed in almost every one of these stores.

Wal-Mart’s violations were widespread and extend to the most senior levels of management. Worse they effectively caused workers to forfeit their democratic rights to collectively bargain a better life for themselves and their families. These violations warrant priority handling and processing by the Board, and should compel the Board to seek an equally effective and company-wide remedy.

Wal-Mart’s actions in bribing workers to thwart the efforts of their fellow workers to exercise their rights under the National Labor Relations Act constitute the most serious violations of the Act. Combined with the hundreds of other Unfair Labor Practices your Office has prosecuted Wal-Mart for, these recently uncovered unlawful acts reveal this company for what it is – a company that knows no limits in its campaign to trample on the fundamental rights of employees. It is the UFCW’s expectation and hope that the Board will deal with Wal-Mart accordingly and without interference.

Sincerely,

Edward P. Wendel
General Counsel

This is big news.  This will lead to a major investigation of Wal-Mart, and though the NLRB in recent years has not done all that I wish they would, they will hopefully come through here with some help from the U.S. Attorney.