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NEW EVIDENCE REVEALS WIDESPREAD
SEX DISCRIMINATION THROUGHOUT WAL-MART STORES
FOR RELEASE 8:30 A.M. (EST) April 28.
WOMEN PRESENT EVIDENCE OF WIDESPREAD
DISCRIMINATION AT WAL-MART; ASK JUDGE TO EXPAND CASE TO BE LARGEST
EVER SEX DISCRIMINATION CASE
Plaintiffs' Motion for Class Certification
Seeks Trial for More Than 1.5 Million Current and Former Wal-Mart
Employees
(April 28, 2003) San Francisco, CA. Today
lawyers for women suing Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. for sex discrimination
filed their motion for class certification in San Francisco's United
States District Court. (Dukes v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. No. C-01-2252
MJJ). The motion asks federal Judge Martin Jenkins to rule that
the case can go to trial on behalf of all women who worked for Wal-Mart
in the United States at any time since December 26, 1998. The proposed
class is believed to exceed 1.5 million women. If the Judge grants
the request, this case would be the largest employment discrimination
case ever brought.
The women charge that Wal-Mart, including
its Sam's Club division, systematically discriminates against its
female hourly and salaried employees across the nation by denying
them promotions and equal pay. The motion lays out the evidence
against Wal-Mart.
The motion is supported by 110 detailed
sworn statements from women who worked in 184 different Wal-Mart
stores in 30 different states, and includes testimony and exhibits
gleaned from more than 100 Wal-Mart managers and executives who
were deposed, Wal-Mart's electronic payroll data and more than 1,
200,000 pages of documents from Wal-Mart's corporate files.
Wal-Mart is the nation's largest company,
and the world's largest retailer. It has over 1 million employees
working in more than 3400 stores throughout the United States. Although
more than two thirds (2/3) of its hourly employees are female, they
hold only one third (1/3) of store management jobs, and less that
15% of store manager positions. In addition, as Wal-Mart's own workforce
data reveals, women in every major job category at Wal-Mart have
been paid less than men with the same seniority, in every year since
1997 even though the female employees on average have higher performance
ratings and less turnover than men. Internal Wal-Mart documents
acknowledge that it is "behind the rest of the world" in the promotion
of women to management ranks.
"Women are treated as second class employees
at Wal-Marts from Florida to Alaska. This is not just an isolated
or local problem. Wal-Mart has known about this for years and has
refused to act," says Brad Seligman, executive director of the Berkeley,
California nonprofit foundation, The Impact Fund, that is coordinating
the lawsuit on behalf of the women.
In charging widespread discrimination,
the women cite testimony and documents revealing that senior Wal-Mart
managers use and endorse the use of demeaning stereotypes of women
in the workplace, such as:
Over objections from a woman executive,
senior management regularly referred to female store employees
as "little Janie Qs" and "girls";
Female managers were required to go to Hooters sports bars as
well as strip clubs for meetings and office outings;
The most senior human resources executive at Wal-Mart approves
of Hooters as a place to have Wal-Mart meetings;
In a photo distributed to Wal-Mart employees in the company newsletter,
Jim Haworth, now Wal-Mart Stores CEO, is shown sitting in a chair
modeled as a leopard skin spike heel.
A Women in Leadership group, disbanded by Wal-Mart in the mid-1990s,
found that "stereotypes limit opportunities offered to women"
at Wal-Mart, such as "men are viewed as replacements, women are
viewed as support" and "aggressive women intimidate men";
"With demeaning attitudes toward women
held by managers at all levels of Wal-Mart, it's little surprise
that we found women were being paid less and had far fewer chances
of getting promoted into management than men," said plaintiffs class
action attorney Joseph M. Sellers of Cohen, Milstein, Hausfeld &
Toll, co-counsel for the women. "Wal-Mart needs to clean up its
act. This behavior is more reminiscent of the 1950s than the 21st
century."
More than 100 current and former Wal-Mart
female employees, from hourly workers to former district managers,
provided sworn declarations in support of the class certification
motion. The women, who worked at Wal-Mart Stores in 30 states, detail
their personal experiences with Wal-Mart's discriminatory practices,
including:
A female assistant manager in Utah was
told by her store manager that retail is "tough" and not "appropriate"
for women;
Another manager in Texas told a female employee that women have
to be "bitches" to survive Wal-Mart management, while a Sam's
Club manager in California told another woman that she should
"doll-up" to get promoted;
Managers have repeatedly told women employees that men "need to
be paid more than women because they have families to support":
A male manager in South Carolina told a female employee that "God
made Adam first, so women would always be second to men";
A female manager in Arizona was told she got paid less than a
less qualified male because she "didn't have the right equipment."
A female personnel manager in Florida was told by her manager
that men were paid more than women because "men are here to make
a career and women aren't. Retail is for housewives who just need
to earn extra money."
Materials about the case can be found www.walmartclass.com,
including the legal brief filed by the women, the sworn statements
from more than 100 women along with a map showing their locations
with links to their sworn statements, charts showing the extent
of the disparities in promotion and pay at Wal-Mart, FAQs, pleadings,
and other documents.
The case was originally filed in June 2001.
The complaint, which is available on the website noted above or
at www.cmht.com, asks the Court to order Wal-Mart to reform its
employment policies and practices and to award to the women lost
wages and punitive damages in an amount to be determined at trial.
In earlier rulings, the Court rejected Wal-Mart's motion to have
the case transferred from San Francisco to Arkansas, and granted
plaintiff's motion to add additional plaintiffs. In ruling on the
plaintiffs' motion, the Court held that the case may include women
employed at Wal-Mart at any time since December 26, 1998.
The motion for class certification is scheduled
to be heard by the Court on July 25, 2003 at which time the Court
may issue a ruling.
Lawyers representing the women who brought
this case and a number of the women themselves are available for
comment. Contact Deborah Schwartz at 301-897-8838/mobile 240-355-8838.
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