Statement by Paul Blank, WakeUpWalMart.com’s campaign director on the startling new revelations from Wal-Mart’s gender discrimination lawsuit, Dukes vs. WalMart Stores, as evidenced in a Bloomberg article today.
According to internal documents and depositions, Wal-Mart was warned that it may have a discrimination problem and chose to do nothing about it. Wal-Mart formed a diversity committee in 1996, but, instead of implementing the committee's recommendations, Wal-Mart disbanded the panel. Two years later, Wal-Mart's gender discrimination problem actually got worse.In fact, an internal Wal-Mart document entitled, "Minority/Gender Pay Analysis" dated July 21, 2000 specifically states, "Generally, average salaries for female and minority males are below the overall average pay for most jobs. *Average pay increases for minority males and females are generally below overall average income ratio across most jobs."
This led Jeffrey Reeves, a former vice president for personnel at the company's Sam's Club unit in a January 2003 deposition, when asked about whether or not management wanted to seriously address diversity, to state, "I would say a lot was lip service."
"Today, we are stunned by Wal-Mart's blatant disregard for women and minorities. Wal-Mart's greed caused more than 1.6 million of its female employees to suffer. Wal-Mart needs to stop paying, in its own employee's words, "lip service" to its discrimination problems and tell the American people the truth."Unfortunately, this is not the first time Wal-Mart has ignored or disbanded the findings of an internal investigation. In 2000, for example, an internal Wal-Mart audit found "extensive violations of child labor laws and state regulations requiring time for breaks and meals." In just one week, the audit found 1,371 violations. Wal-Mart chose to stop the audit and as a result children suffered. Just 3 weeks ago, Wal-Mart was fined once again for repeated child labor violations in Connecticut.
"Wal-Mart wants to ignore serious problems at the expense of women, children and our country. The American public is going to hold Wal-Mart accountable for the high cost we all pay for Wal-Mart's $10 billion in profit."
Posted by Brendan - July 15, 2005 12:24 PM - In The News