Posted on 08/29/2020 11:45:06 AM PDT by robowombat
Walmart boss says work to do on racial injustice and other social issues
by Kim Souza (ksouza@talkbusiness.net) 19 hours ago
Walmart CEO Doug McMillon said there is no such thing as business as usual at the retail giant. Not a day goes by that we are not asking ourselves how we can do more do better, he noted in his opening statement in the companys annual Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) report released Wednesday (Aug. 26).
He said the health crisis that quickly spread around the globe this year has been no exception.
Followed by the senseless and tragic killing of George Floyd, our nation has questioned where we go from here. Collectively, weve agreed: We have work to do, McMillon said.
In light of the added challenges in 2020, McMillon said Walmart has been pushed in ways he never could have imagined.
In every decision weve made, weve worked to prioritize the safety of our associates and customers. Reflecting back, one thing is clear: Were not just a retailer. This team of ours more than 2.2 million strong at the moment is special. Were a lot like a family. And when we hurt, we care for each other. We care for our customers. And we care for our communities, he said in his opening remarks.
McMillon responded to critics who say Walmart is doing business at the expense of its people and the planet. He said Walmart has been using its scale to create positive change and that didnt begin in 2020. He said founder Sam Waltons mission to serve people so they could live better is not a short-term vision, but one that continues to evolve. McMillon is proud of the wage increases Walmart made in recent years and the $1 per day college benefit along with advanced job training, paid family leave and adoption coverage.
But that is no longer enough, McMillon said, noting that there is still much to debate but its time for businesses to take the lead working together with the government on serious issues like workforce opportunity, racial equity climate and sustainability.
Since 2018, Walmart said the company has trained more than 1.8 million employees through its academies, of which 59% of the participants were women. Walmart employees have completed 88,000 college credits through the Live Better U program which the company unveiled in 2018. That is the equivalent of more than 733 bachelors degrees. Walmart has raised its starting minimum pay to $11 an hour, which is still below the $15 paid by Target and Aldi, but the retailer has said its not about where you start but how quickly you can move up. Walmart said wages vary from state to state but $11 is still well above the $7.25 federal minimum wage.
The retailer said the average wage in stores is $14 per hour. When factoring in benefits such as cash bonus, paid time off and health coverage, discounts and 401(k) match the average U.S. employee in stores working full time earns more than $18 per hour. Most department manager roles can earn as much as $24.70 per hour not including bonuses and other benefits.
Those working in distribution and fulfillment centers earn an average of $20 an hour before benefits. Last year, Walmart said it paid nearly $730 million in quarterly cash bonuses to U.S. store employees. Walmart also said store managers earn in excess of $180,000 annually.
U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., has been critical of Walmarts pay structure in its stores saying in June of last year the largest employer in the U.S. should and could do more to pay a living wage to its workforce.
Walmart can strike a blow against corporate greed and a grotesque level of income and wealth inequality that exists in our country, Sanders said in his three-minute remarks at the June 5, 2019, shareholder meeting held in Rogers. Please do the right thing.
DIVERSITY AND INCLUSION Other social issues covered in the 140-page ESG report included efforts to improve racial and gender diversity. Walmart said it sourced $11.7 billion in goods and services last year from 2,900 diverse suppliers. Over the past 8 years, Walmart said it has sourced more $34.4 billion in goods and services from women-owned businesses.
In the era of a need for more Black people in high ranking positions and board of director appointments, Walmart still has work to do. The company said people of color make up 35% of management positions, 24% of officers, 40% of management promotions, 44% of hourly promotions and 45% of the total workforce of 2.2 million. Of the nine executives who report directly to McMillon, four are women and there is one person of color in Suresh Kumar, executive vice president and chief global technology officer, who is a native of India.
Among the next 37 officers, 21 are white men, 10 are women of color, and there is one Black man. Walmarts board is compromised of 11 directors, three of which are women one of whom is Black. Among the eight men on the board, one is Hispanic and the others are white. Walmart said its board members have an average age of 53 years.
NEXT STEPS As we continue to manage a global health crisis and grieve the acts of racial injustice in our country, were pausing to think about where we go from here, McMillon noted in the report.
He said Walmart is looking to use the lessons it has learned to help reshape a more equitable and sustainable future. The company is committed to pay equity, retail opportunities, making changes to policies regarding salient human rights issues, furthering its sustainability goals and achievements and appropriate responses and reducing gun violence.
In the coming year, Walmart said it will continue to foster strong relationships with human rights thought leaders and stakeholders to continuously improve the companys practices and disclosures and identify new issues as they emerge.
The company said it will engage employees, suppliers, customers and the communities where it operates in additional dialogue to increase understanding of human rights concepts and relevant initiatives. Walmart said it will also advance the initiatives underway regarding human rights in the areas of culture, diversity and inclusion, responsible sourcing. retail opportunities, market access and recruitment.
While the pandemic may have delayed progress and, in some ways, compromised the worlds capacity for positive action, it has also prompted people everywhere to work in new ways and consider how small but universal changes in behavior can produce large-scale, positive effects. We are all invited to consider how we can bring new unity of purpose, innovation and collective action to global challenges an inflection point, still, said Kathleen McLaughlin, chief sustainability officer at Walmart.
Optical rectumitis. Don’t do walmart anymore either.
We’re missing something here. Blacks like anyone else can shout from the rooftop about the existence of racism and everyone on the street will look up and say ‘this guy’s crazy’. The only way things get addressed is through pressure. This violence is noticed ok? On the other hand this is not 1968. No one is dying in a war overseas. Just a few blacks at home with a long rap sheet. Times have changed. It has to do with wanting something for nothin’.
“Following the tragic and senseless killing of George Floyd . . .”
Maybe Walmart should start the conversation by demanding the government not coddling the drug pushers whose products likely killed Floyd. Maybe there needs to be a conversation about why people feel a need to resort to drugs. And why the black community tolerates pushers in their neighborhoods and families and as fathers to their fatherless children. And why education is so vilified in the black community and whether it is related to an anti-white attitude, violent students and/or poor teaching. And why violence comes so instinctively to blacks whether in their families or against the police. Those are uncomfortable conversations and the answers may not be to anyone’s liking but that is where to start, Mr. Walmart.
I agree- black folks are being very racist towards white folks right now-
what a shame that a fine American company like WalMart (at least Sam Walton tried to make and keep it a good store).... has been taken over by commie agitators
There’s more. 1968 had assassinations + the Norks taking over the USS Pueblo. Counterulture. Perfect confluence of events. Today it’s just the virus. Plenty of boredom out there. The hippies worked as hard as todays out of work millennials.
Who killed G Floyd?
[[Following the tragic and senseless killing of George Floyd . . .]]
Yep- it’s time parents sit down with their kids and point to george floyd and say “Drugs kill- George died of an overdose- and it was all caught on film- go watch that film, and see just what could happen to you IF you do drugs like he did. He even had paramedics right there on the scene and they couldn’t save him because he had so many drugs in his system. Don’t do drugs”
But of course, that’s not what walmart is pushing- they are pushign hte LIE that george was killed by a racist policemen who gleefully murdered him while being filmed by several cameras-
Floyd was going to meet up with the cops t some point. It’s his history. The only thing that would have prevented it would be if the fentanyl had done him in sooner.
George Floyd Killed George Floyd- noone else- Not society, not the pusherman, not his peers- George Floyd was solely responsible for taking a huge deadly amount of Narcotics
Looks like their mgt is over represented in minorities.
The unions just rebranded themselves as D&I advocates. Doesn’t change the fact that both are leftist agitators.
Just shut up. I have to shop somewhere and the pickings are slim now.
Hey, Dougie, lets talk about the Walmarts you’ve shut down in the more diverse,aka high crime, neighborhoods?
If he really believed all that, he’d not take a paycheck. Better yet, step down and give his job to a black guy with prison tats, track marks and who dropped out of school at 14. Easy pickings. Any rioter would fit the bill.
The brain rot of corporate America is disgusting.
I suppose if this virtue signaling clown said the truth,Walmarts would start burning.
Want to get his attention; revoke Walmarts EBT certification.
He sounds like the CEO of my most recent employer, minus the German accent. I think all these CEO types attend the same school, Craino-rectus Invertus.
What? Fifty years and trillions of dollars wasn’t enough? Now it has to be blood, right?
See Tagline.
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