Walmart to add 4,000 jobs with four new U.S. fulfillment centers
Send a link to a friend
[June 03, 2022] By
Siddharth Cavale
Bentonville, Ark. (Reuters) - Walmart Inc
announced plans on Thursday to open four new fulfillment centers in the
United States over the next two years, creating 4,000 new jobs that will
expand its delivery network and make workers' jobs easier.
The moves come as companies struggle to find and retain workers in a
tight labor market. The nation's largest retailer also plans to widen to
all global employees an education and training program launched for U.S.
workers in 2016.
The new centers, located in Joliet, Illinois; McCordsville, Indiana;
Lancaster, Texas and Greencastle, Pennsylvania, could provide next-day
and two-day deliveries to 75% of the U.S. population, company executives
said.
Combined with existing distribution centers and orders fulfilled out of
stores, deliveries could reach 95% of the population, the supply chain
executives told media after an annual meeting in Bentonville, Arkansas.
The new jobs are in addition to the 20,000 supply chain positions the
retailer said it would hire last year. The new employees will get hourly
starting wages ranging from $16 to $28, the company said.
Designed by automation company Knapp, the new facilities will cut the
number of steps in processing orders to five from 12, double storage
capacity and process double the number of customer orders a day, Mike
Prince, vice president of supply chain innovation and automation told
the meeting.
Each facility sprawling over more than a million square feet (92,900 sq.
m), will employ at least 1,000 workers.
[to top of second column] |
The logo of a Walmart Superstore is seen in Rosemead, California,
U.S., June 11, 2020. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni/File Photo
The company, which employs 2.3 million workers, said it was piloting a
new program in the summer to offer recent college graduates and students
within 12 months of graduating an opportunity to jumpstart their
careers.
"Our goal is to turn even more jobs into careers by strengthening a
ladder of opportunity for our associates," Chief Executive Doug McMillon
told the annual general meeting on Wednesday.
The company expects more than 1,200 new store, club and supply chain
managers in the United States to participate in the programme, called
College2Career.
Top performers could be offered a newly-created management job of
emerging coach, with starting wages of at least $65,000 a year, it
added.
The role offers a faster step for high-potential candidates to become
store managers, who earned an average wage of about $210,000 in 2021,
the company said.
It has more than 5,000 U.S. stores that generate average annual sales of
$100 million.
The average hourly wage for workers at its U.S. stores, clubs and supply
chain now exceeded $17, up from $16.40, McMillon added.
(Reporting by Siddharth Cavale in Bentonville, Arkansas; Editing by
Clarence Fernandez)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|