Walmart workers want better wages, affordable benefits
If she could figure out how to live in her car, Janet Sparks would.
The 52-year-old makes $11.60 an hour as a
front-of-the-store manager at a Louisiana Walmart and says she struggles
to pay for basic necessities, let alone her $600-a-month rent.
"I'm
giving it all I got, I like what I do, and yet I'm struggling so bad.
This is not what it was when I started," says Sparks, who began working
for America's No. 1 employer and discount store seven years ago.
Sparks
belongs to a loosely knit association of Walmart employees called the
Organization United for Respect at Walmart — OUR Walmart, for short.
They are prodding the giant retailer to provide better wages, affordable
benefits and reasonably reliable schedules for store employees
nationwide. Their campaign comes not only at a time when many low-wage
workers in the U.S.
are struggling to make ends meet, but also as Walmart is rededicating
itself to attracting price-conscious consumers like them — by holding
down its expenses and guaranteeing the lowest prices.
OUR
Walmart is not a labor union and lacks the right to bargain with the
company on workers' behalf. The group receives some financial and technical support
from the nation's largest retail workers union — the United Food and
Commercial Workers (UFCW), which has tried to organize Walmart workers
in the past.
OUR Walmart claims about 5,000 members who pay monthly dues of $5 each.
Members
learn how to stand up for themselves with store managers and about
their legal protections as workers. They try to recruit fellow
associates at their stores, and local groups hold meetings to discuss
specific grievances. About three dozen members traveled to Walmart's
annual shareholders meeting last week in Bentonville, Ark., to pass out
fliers about their cause.
In the two years
since OUR Walmart's creation, Walmart has twice raised the number of
hours that part-time employees need to qualify for health benefits. Wage
caps begun about six years ago block raises for some longtime employees
in the same jobs.
And some workers say the company's work-scheduling system limits their
hours below what they need to qualify for benefits and produces such
widely varying schedules that it's difficult to take a second job to
make ends meet.
A "Declaration of Respect" that about 100 OUR Walmart members presented to the company last June calls on Walmart to offer affordable health care, create more dependable schedules and pay at least $13 an hour, among other things.
Walmart
says the national average hourly wage for its full-time workers is
$12.40 but declined to say what it is for part-time workers. The federal minimum wage has been $7.25 since 2009.
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