Wal-Mart
worker group splits in two; both sides vow to continue
wage fight
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[September 17, 2015] By
Nathan Layne and Lisa Baertlein
CHICAGO/LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A Wal-Mart
Stores Inc worker group that has been one of the loudest voices pushing
the retailer to boost wages and improve conditions has splintered over a
disagreement about funding and strategic direction, according to people
on both sides of the split.
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Both wings are claiming the name OUR Walmart and vow to continue
their work, moves that could sow confusion among supporters.
The United Food & Commercial Workers International Union (UFCW),
which for years has provided important funding and resources to the
OUR Walmart worker group, will only financially support the wing
that it believes represents the broader set of workers.
"Recently we had a group split from us," said Barbara Getz, who said
she is head of the health and safety team for the OUR Walmart
grouping that is sticking with UFCW.
She said the union has been "unwavering" in its support.
The other group is relaunching with the OUR Walmart name and new
funding partners, said Dan Schlademan, a former UFCW employee who
said he is co-director of this employee group.
"The organization is moving forward with 20-plus partners and a plan
to continue its work," said Schlademan. Those partners are workers'
rights organizations.
Some large labor unions have backed minimum wage retail and
restaurant workers' efforts to get higher pay and better benefits
from large employers such as Wal-Mart and McDonald's Corp, without
the certainty of adding members from those hard-to-organize
industries.
The UFCW-backed OUR Walmart was instrumental in winning a pay raise
for half a million U.S. Wal-Mart workers earlier this year, but the
prospect of unionizing Wal-Mart's workforce is seen as an elusive
goal. UFCW recently cut funding to OUR Walmart, according to
Schlademan.
Schlademan said his side includes the original board and all of the
worker members.
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They include Cindy Murray, a founding OUR Walmart board member and
Walmart employee from rural Maryland.
"We are the true group ... We're widening our horizons," said
Murray, who added that her side would welcome a partnership with
UFCW.
OUR Walmart has pushed for $15 per hour wages, full-time rather than
part-time schedules and the right to join the worker group without
retaliation.
The UFCW-backed OUR Walmart will unveil a new strategy on Thursday
that will include new grass-roots actions, a social-media push and
an elected advisory council for the campaign, union spokeswoman
Jessica Levin said.
Wal-Mart spokesman Brian Nick said that union pressure did not
influence the company's decisions.
He said while "unions and allies they fund spend time and membership
dues attacking" the company, it had spent $1 billion this year to
raise wages and was working to provide training and other
opportunities to its 1.4 million U.S. employees.
(Reporting by Nathan Layne in Chicago and Lisa Baertlein in Los
Angeles; Editing by Cynthia Osterman and Gopakumar Warrier)
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