Workers
say Wal-Mart discriminated against thousands of pregnant
women
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[May 16, 2017] By
Daniel Wiessner
(Reuters) - Two former Wal-Mart Stores Inc
employees have filed a lawsuit accusing the retailer of treating
thousands of pregnant workers as “second-class citizens” by rejecting
their requests to limit heavy lifting, climbing on ladders and other
potentially dangerous tasks.
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The proposed class action lawsuit was filed in federal court in
Illinois on Friday by Talisa Borders and Otisha Woolbright, who say
that until 2014, Arkansas-based Wal-Mart had a company-wide policy
that denied pregnant women the same accommodations as workers with
other disabilities.
The class could include at least 20,000 women and possibly up to
50,000 who worked at Wal-Mart while pregnant before the policy
change, according to the lawsuit.
The company in a statement provided by spokesman Randy Hargrove
denied the women's claims and said Wal-Mart's pregnancy policies
"have always fully met or exceeded both state and federal law." The
company said a separate anti-discrimination policy it maintains has
long listed pregnancy as a protected status.
"Walmart is a great place for women to work," the company said.
Borders and Woolbright say that Wal-Mart's old policy violated a
federal law requiring employers to treat pregnancy as a temporary
disability and provide work accommodations to pregnant women. The
U.S. Supreme Court, in a 2015 case involving United Parcel Service,
said employers cannot treat pregnant workers differently from those
with other disabilities or medical conditions.
Wal-Mart, the largest private U.S. employer, changed its policy in
2014 to treat pregnancy as a disability. But lawyers for the
plaintiffs in the lawsuit say the changes did not go far enough, and
they were planning a separate lawsuit involving the new policy.
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Woolbright says her manager at a Florida Wal-Mart told her pregnancy
was “no excuse” for not doing heavy lifting. She says she was fired
from her job in the deli department after injuring herself lifting
trays that weighed up to 50 pounds and inquiring further about the
company’s pregnancy policies.
Borders, who worked at an Illinois Wal-Mart, says she was
reprimanded for asking coworkers to climb ladders and lift heavy
boxes while she was pregnant, and forced to go on unpaid leave. When
she returned, she says, she was paid $2.00 less per hour.
The case is Borders v. Wal-Mart Stores Inc, U.S. District Court for
the Southern District of Illinois, No. 3:17-cv-00506.
(Reporting by Daniel Wiessner in Albany, New York, Editing by Alexia
Garamfalvi, Dan Grebler and Jonathan Oatis)
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