|
WAL-MART LAWSUIT EXPOSES WIDESPREAD WORKER ABUSE
After months of being denied breaks, Debbie Simonson had had enough. She quit her
job at the Brooklyn Park, Minn., Wal-Mart store
because "I was tired of all the stress…of being told I
couldn't go to the bathroom." Even though she didn't
get to take the breaks, Wal-Mart never paid her for
time she worked, she said.
Then, on one of her last days of work, Simonson
forgot to punch the time clock at the end of her
shift. So a supervisor marked the log for 6:59
a.m.--one minute after she started. Instead of
getting paid for 8 hours of work, she was paid for 1
minute.
That did it for her. Simonson and 56,000 other
current and former Wal-Mart employees hope to get the
money they are owed–and a measure of justice--through
a class action lawsuit that began Sept. 25 in Dakota
County, Minn., District Court.
The case involves workers employed at 46 Wal-Mart and
13 Sam Club's stores across Minnesota from September
1998 to January 2004. Attorneys for the workers say
the case will have implications for Wal-Mart employees
across the country.
The Minnesota case is just the latest development in
the lengthening record of Wal-Mart’s refusal to pay
workers for the time they toil on its notoriously
underpaid jobs. Already Wal-Mart workers in other
states, including Oregon and Colorado, have won cases
against the monster anti-worker mega-retailer for
refusal to pay for hours worked.
By agreement of both parties, the case is being heard
without a jury by District Judge Robert King, Jr.
Boxes of evidence--everything from payroll records,
tax records, and company reports to memos and
e-mails--line the courtroom walls. The case has taken
more than 6 years to prepare and involved examining
data from some 9 million shifts, said William Sieben,
lead attorney for the workers.
The research uncovered more than 14.6 million
violations of both Minnesota law and company policy,
costing the workers more than $27 million combined,
the attorneys said. "While these employees are
working as hard as they can, below the poverty line,
Wal-Mart is breaking the law…" attorney Justin Perl of
Maslon Edelman Borman & Brand said in opening
statements.
The class-action suit against Wal-Mart alleges:
- Wal-Mart failed to pay workers when they missed all
or part of their 15-minute rest breaks.
- Wal-Mart failed to pay workers when they missed all
or part of their half-hour lunch breaks.
- Wal-Mart routinely required employees to work "off
the clock" for no pay before and after shifts.
- Wal-Mart managers falsified time sheets to show
that breaks were taken.
- Wal-Mart managers regularly engaged in the
"1-minute punch" practice, depriving workers of pay
for entire shifts, just as Simonson’s supervisor did.
These practices were widespread because store
managers were under constant pressure to cut labor
costs, attorneys said. They cited internal company
memos in which managers were chastised if they sought
overtime pay for employees or did not meet company
directives to lower payroll costs every year.
"The message is delivered," Perl said. "It starts at
the top: 'Take a blowtorch to payroll.'" When workers
complained, they "got in trouble or were threatened,"
he said.
Simonson, a single mother with two children, earned
$7.25 an hour at the Brooklyn Park store. When asked
how many breaks she was denied over her year of
employment, she responded, "Too many to count."
Cashiers were only allowed to use the
bathroom during their rest break, she said. After
being forced work for 4 hours without a break, her
chronic bladder condition--which required
surgery--worsened, she added. Simonson’s attempts to
raise the problem with managers fell on deaf ears, she
testified.
Not just store managers failed to act, Perl said.
During his opening statement, he showed two videos of
top company officials talking to shareholders and
managers about wage and hour violations. "We know we
do some things we probably shouldn't do…" a human
resources vice president can be heard saying on one
tape. And when an internal company audit revealed
tens of thousands of violations at Wal-Mart stores
around the country in just one week, "They buried the
audit," Perl said.
Wal-Mart, the world's largest employer, keeps
voluminous records on all its stores on a computer
larger than the one in the Pentagon. Attorneys hope
to use Wal-Mart's own records against it. Last year
in Philadelphia, 125,000 workers won $78 million in a
suit against Wal-Mart over identical violations. On
Oct. 2, that judge added $62 million. Workers in at
least 10 other states await the outcome of the
Minnesota case. Besides seeking financial relief for
workers, the attorneys want the judge to issue an
injunction barring the company from using the
"1-minute punch" to falsify work re-cords. Despite
publicity about the practice, "we think it's still
going on," Sieben said.
|