Thursday, August 01, 2013

Wal-Mart takes on college junior over D.C. living-wage bill


Wal-Mart is pitting its Senior Director of Communications Steve Restivo and its multi-million dollar PR team against Georgetown University junor and student op-ed columnist Erin Riordan in a media counter-attack. It’s part of Wal-Mart’s effort to get Washington, D.C.’s living-wage bill derailed.
In March, Walmart aggressively opposed the bill under the coalition label of Don’t Block Progress, which has Wal-Mart as its only self-identified public member.
Most Wal-Mart employees with children live below the poverty line, and qualify for food stamps, thus dumping Wal-Mart workers onto the taxpayers to supplement their Wal-Mart wages.
The average Wal-Mart take-home pay is less than $250 a week. In Massachussetts alone, Wal-Mart employees, by being under the $15,000 a year poverty level for a single person, cost the taxpayers $14.6 million annually. 

Nationwide, the average Wal-Mart employee costs taxpayers $3,000 a year in public assistance, which comes out to about $900,000 a year per supercenter and $4 billion annually in national cost to taxpayers for Wal-Mart workers.

70% leave Wal-Mart within a year so the high turnover makes organizing a union almost impossible. 
Increasing minimum wage would affect the employees, and Wal-Mart, dramatically.
Wal-Mart is the leading employer of people of color in the United States. More than 125,000 African-Americans and more than 74,000 Latinos work at Wal-Mart and Sam’s Club stores nationwide.

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