Wal-Mart Gets Failing Grade at News Conference

"Wal-Mart is a giant corporation
with a giant responsibility ... to set the standard to build a better
America," says Daniel Welch, president of United Food and Commercial
Workers Local 1444.
Leaders of Milwaukee's education and labor communities
Wednesday (August 10, 2005) urged parents throughout Wisconsin to cross
Wal-Mart off their "back-to-school list" this summer.
"We've been told you get what you pay for,"
said John Goldstein, president of the Milwaukee County Labor Council.
"Wal-Mart's low prices get us exploited children, high taxes, lost
jobs and destroyed communities."
At a news conference outside Milwaukee's Neeskara
School, Goldstein and others said Wal-Mart has failed America by breaking
child labor laws, discriminating against women, relying on taxpayers
to provide health care to many of its employees, and paying poverty-level
wages.
"America's largest employer must reflect America's
values," said Daniel Welch, president of United Food and Commercial
Workers Local 1444.
Milwaukee School Board member Peter Blewett, Milwaukee
Teachers' Education Association President Dennis Oulahan, MTEA Executive
Director Sam Carmen and WEAC Vice President Terry Meyer were among those
attending the news conference and showing support for the Wake Up Wal-Mart
campaign.
In a news release, Oulahan said America's children
deserve better than Wal-Mart.
"There is no excuse why Wal-Mart, a corporation
with $10 billion in profits, fails America and exploits taxpayers, their
workers, our families and worst of all our children," Oulahan said.
Blewett urged people to read the book "The Case
Against Wal-Mart" and asked parents to do their back-to-school
shopping at stores that support union workers, provide good jobs for
young people and invest in communities.
"Wal-Mart, your report card is in, and you failed,"
said Bonnie Brusky, a teacher at Riverside High School. Among other
things, she said, the giant corporation has failed to provide equal
pay for women and failed to provide adequate health care for its employees
- carelessly leaning on the taxpayers to fill the void.
Adam Breihan, a senior at Riverside, referred to a
letter to Wal-Mart CEO Lee Scott, signed by himself, Blewett, Oulahan
and Darcy Haber of Wisconsin Citizen Action.
"Every tax dollar we use to needlessly subsidize
Wal-Mart's poor health care is a tax dollar we could be using to buy
books, repair schools, hire more teachers, and improve the education
of all our children," the letter states.
"Please help us send Wal-Mart back to school
by signing a pledge card and let Lee Scott know we don't see our kids
as a commodity," Breihan said.
Rosalie DeFino, a recent Riverside graduate, said
Wal-Mart violates child labor laws by requiring young employees to work
too many hours and work too late.
"Wal-Mart is setting a dangerous precedent by
using and exploiting children for profit," she said.
In a flier distributed at the news conference, organizers
said:
- Child labor: Wal-Mart agreed to pay $135,540 to settle federal
charges that it broke child labor laws in 2005. Three Wal-Mart stores
in Connecticut were fined just weeks ago for child-labor law violations.
- Gender discrimination: Wal-Mart is facing the largest gender
discrimination lawsuit in history affecting more than 1.6 million
female employees.
- Taxpayer-funded health care: Fewer than half of Wal-Marts
workers are covered by the companys health plan. Wal-Mart costs
American taxpayers up to $2.5 billion per year in public health care
and public assistance programs.
- Poverty-level wages: Wal-Mart pays workers too little to
keep a family of four out of poverty.
Organizers asked citizens to participate in the Wake Up Wal-Mart campaign
by signing a pledge to buy back-to-school supplies at stores other than
Wal-Mart. To sign the pledge online and for more information, go to
www.wakeupwalmart.com.
Posted August 11, 2005