Philadelphia, DC, and Baltimore Residents to Walmart: We Want Jobs that Pay a Living Wage
The American Values Agenda for Change at Walmart

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Read the Press Release: Labor, Environmental, and Community Groups Launch American Values Agenda for Change at Walmart

Our Challenge to Walmart for Substantive Change
Walmart has profoundly changed working America. 

From where we shop to where we work, the types of jobs we do and the workplace benefits we earn, from the source of the products we buy to threats to our health and our environment, Walmart has transformed our lives and is increasingly defining our possibilities as workers, consumers and communities. 

No other private, profit-making enterprise in the history of our country has had the economic scope and impact of Walmart. 

It is the largest private employer in the U.S. and is the largest private employer in more states than any other corporation. Its labor market impact has placed steady downward pressure on wages, benefits and conditions. 

It is the largest retailer. It has shifted shopping from the town square and from local and regional stores to mega-centers supplied from around the globe. Small shop owners and regional chains are becoming extinct. In some areas, it has become the only retail option. More than 150 million Americans visit Walmart each week.

It is the largest single outlet for imported goods from entire nations, and the largest retailer for a vast array of the products produced by the U.S. Fortune 500. No vendor or supplier can negotiate with Walmart on an equal footing. 

Its wage rates and benefit levels set the standard across the labor market. Its demands on suppliers to reduce their cost to Walmart has brought repeated cuts in wages, forced domestic companies to move overseas and has driven foreign suppliers from country to country seeking the lowest wages, the least environmental protection and the most compliant governments. 

Its 1.4 million U.S. workers face poverty-level wages for a family of four, inadequate benefits and insufficient work hours to support families or sustain a modest middle class standard of living. Its failure to provide quality, affordable health care to hundreds of thousands of workers has worsened our health care crisis and driven other employers to reduce or eliminate benefits. 

It has completely mismanaged the workplace with 1.6 million women suing the company for systematic sex discrimination, with hundreds of thousands forced to court to obtain overtime pay they worked to earn, with repeated violation of basic workplace standards, and with a policy of massive resistance to the basic human and legal right of workers to organize for a voice in the workplace. 

Its global supply chain threatens our environment with one of the largest carbon footprints of any private commercial entity. In seeking lower wages, and taking advantage of lax environmental regulation, it needlessly imports goods that are manufactured a world away from the ultimate point of sale forcing vast, wasteful consumption of resources shipping goods around the globe that could be supplied locally. Its supply practices have exposed our families to unsafe and potentially deadly products imported from nations without effective product safety regulations. 

It has disregarded its responsibility to our communities. It has engaged in tax avoidance scams that have cost our states, our communities, and our country billions in lost tax revenue, effectively raising our taxes and straining basic community services from schools to roads to police protection. 

Its claims of change ring false. And its claims of providing a better standard of living for working families are hollow. It has made the Walton family the single richest family in the world with accumulated wealth of $158.4 billion. 

Walmart’s operation is not about lower prices, it is about more and more wealth for the Waltons. 

And we have paid a terrible price. Working America has lost jobs and health benefits, suffered reduced pay and opportunity, seen our town and neighborhood stores abandoned, our environment degraded, unsafe products brought into our homes, and experienced widespread violation of basic worker rights. 

Walmart is America’s store. 

Walmart is America’s workplace. 

Walmart is America’s town center. 

Walmart must reflect America’s values. 

Hard work should bring pay and benefits that can support families. 

Workers have rights that even the largest employer must recognize and respect. 

Our nation, our states and our localities have standards that must be obeyed regardless of the size or wealth of the corporation. 

Our environment must be protected and products must be sustainable for our families and our future. 

We challenge Walmart on Labor Day 2009 to an American Values Agenda for Change. 

We challenge Walmart to work with us---labor, civil rights, women’s, minority and faith organizations---to develop a code of conduct for Walmart to protect the rights of workers consistent with legal and human rights standards. 

We challenge Walmart to work with us to develop pay and benefits programs that promote the economic well-being of working families and communities. 

We challenge Walmart to work with us to develop workplace practices that will end discrimination and promote a workplace culture of opportunity. 

We challenge Walmart to work with us to become the kind of neighbor that is welcomed with open arms and rises to the challenges faced by the community, rather than compounding them by failing to shoulder their share of the burden. 

We challenge Walmart to work with us to develop sourcing protocols that will reduce Walmart’s environmental footprint and create local jobs. 

We are eager to work with Walmart to create a better workplace, healthier planet, and more vibrant community. In the coming months, we will take several important steps in this effort: 

1.) We will establish an accountability project to keep Walmart honest. We will commission reports from the country’s leading environmental, economic and labor experts to explore where Walmart is living up to its claims, and where the retail giant could be doing more. It is impossible to change unless you know the truth, and it is sometimes difficult to discern myth from reality when it comes to the retail giant. 

2.) We will continue to support, and grow Walmart Workers for Change, an organization of associates who have realized the power they have to change their company from within when they speak with a united voice. 

3.) We will build local community coalitions to develop and implement a set of minimum community standards for Walmart’s corporate conduct. These coalitions will enforce the core American values of worker rights, quality jobs, workplace fairness, corporate responsibility and a healthy environment by informing consumers, supporting workers and engaging local elected officials. 

4.) We will convene a summit of Walmart associates, industry experts, community activists, former Walmart managers, economists, academics, and consumers to address, develop and advance the American Values Agenda for Change at Walmart. 

Our nation is facing a moment of intense challenges, but also great opportunities. Because Walmart is a presence in so many of our communities, because it employs so many, because it affects the lives of working families across the country and around the world, it is uniquely positioned to be a powerful force for change. 

We challenge Walmart, on Labor Day 2009, to join with us and work to create the vibrant workplace, the healthy planet and the thriving community that we all want and are willing and ready to work for.