From the AP:
"After ‘botch,’ Walmart moves to keep disabled greeters"
Walmart endured more than a
week’s worth of bad publicity before announcing publicly that it was making
“every effort” to find a role for disabled workers who had been threatened with
job loss as the retailer gets rid of greeters at 1,000 stores. Amid a fierce
backlash, Greg Foran, president and CEO of Walmart’s U.S. stores, said in a
memo to store managers Thursday night that “we are taking some specific steps
to support” greeters with disabilities. The chain noted that several greeters
were offered new jobs at their respective stores and accepted. Advocates for
the disabled said Walmart is making the right move. “By rethinking their
action, Walmart is now opening the door to actually help individuals realize
their full employment potential,” said Cheryl Bates-Harris, senior disability
advocacy specialist at the National Disability Rights Network. Walmart told
greeters around the country last week that their positions were being
eliminated in late April in favor of an expanded “customer host” role that
involves not only welcoming customers, but also helping with returns, checking
receipts to help prevent shoplifting and keeping the front of the store clean.
The position requires hosts to be able to lift heavy weights, climb ladders and
do other tasks. People with disabilities who have traditionally filled the
greeter job at many stores accused Walmart of acting heartlessly. Outraged
customers and others started online petitions, formed Facebook support groups,
and called and emailed Walmart corporate offices in Bentonville, Arkansas, to
register their displeasure. “This was a major-league botch,” said Craig
Johnson, president of Customer Growth Partners, a retail consultancy, adding
that Walmart should have foreseen the public’s reaction. “Someone finally woke
up,” Johnson said. “Hopefully they’re now woke and they’ll fix this thing the
right way. ... The good news is it’s reversible.” This combination of images
shows Walmart greeters, clockwise from top left, John Combs in Vancouver,
Wash., Ashley Powell in Galena, Ill., Mitchell Hartzell in Hazel Green, Ala.,
and Adam Catlin in Selinsgrove, Pa. Combs, Powell, Hartzell and Catlin are
among disabled Walmart greeters threatened with job loss as Walmart transforms
the greeter position into one that’s more physically demanding. After more than
a week of backlash, Greg Foran, president and CEO of Walmart's U.S. stores,
said in a memo to store managers Thursday, Feb. 28, 2019, that "we are
taking some specific steps to support" greeters with disabilities. Foran acknowledged the change from greeter to
host, and its impact on disabled workers, had “created some conversation.” He
wrote that Walmart was committed to doing right by these employees, noting that
greeters with disabilities would be given longer than the customary 60 days to find
other jobs in the company. “Let me be clear: If any associate in this unique
situation wants to continue working at Walmart, we should make every effort to
make that happen,” said his memo, which Walmart released publicly. Walmart has
already started making job offers to the greeters. At least three longtime
greeters — Adam Catlin in Selinsgrove, Pennsylvania, Jay Melton in Marion,
North Carolina, and Mitchell Hartzell in Hazel Green, Florida, all of whom have
cerebral palsy — have accepted jobs in self-checkout. Catlin’s mother, Holly
Catlin, helped call public attention to her son’s plight with an impassioned
Facebook post and has since advocated for greeters around the country. After
emailing Walmart CEO Doug McMillon every day, Catlin got a call from the
corporate office on Thursday, and on Friday morning she and her son met with
store management in Selinsgrove. “I decided I was going to be the squeaky wheel
and squeak every day,” Catlin said, adding she’s encouraged by Walmart’s recent
moves. “I believe the path forward is going to be good for these people. I
think they’re really going to make an effort and try to keep these people.” In
North Carolina, Melton is “happier than a pig in a mud puddle,” said his
father, Jim Melton. Foran, who heads Walmart’s U.S. stores, wrote that greeters
with disabilities “face a unique situation ... and each case requires a
thoughtful solution.” He said that Walmart’s goal is to offer “appropriate
accommodations that will enable these associates to continue in other roles
with their store.”
^ While this is a good first-step
for Wal-Mart it is by no means finished until every disabled employee has a job
within Wal-Mart after April (that wants one.) Talking about doing something is
good, but now we need to see Wal-Mart’s actions. Hopefully they won’t make a
second mistake (the first being this dumb policy change) and kick-out
hard-working, honest employees simply because they are disabled. ^
https://apnews.com/5cc684089cbd43948a7ffae4b092decf
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