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I see that Mr. Birrenback is getting the right idea,
as this whole stadium situation is the wealthy
exercising their favorite american capitalistic past
time of screwing the "have-nots".

It should be added to Mr. B's post that it's the same
story all over town and it's across the entire
spectrum. Same $h** Different A$$****! As we blue
collar guys say....

When anybody complains about it, then the complainers
are painted by the media of that vile sin of
practicing class warfare. 

Class warriors, like myself, don't care if somebody
has a dollar more in their pocket than the next guy.
But that's the way that the media paints me, and
warriors like me. The truth really comes down to not
how much money somebody has, it's how they got the
money in the first place. 

Recently, I read where the Walton family saw their
worth increase by $10 billion. Personally, I don't
care if they have $10 billion or $.10! It's how they
got that way that is so despicable. 


Here's an example of how they did it: 


Need a job? 

Wal-Mart has one for ya! 

Here's the Wal-Mart guide to employee relations: 

What do a cue ball and a "illegal" have in common? The
harder you hit them, the more English you get out of
them. 

Onwards to the Truth: 




The New York Times In America
January 18, 2004
Workers Assail Night Lock-Ins by Wal-Mart
By STEVEN GREENHOUSE

Looking back to that night, Michael Rodriguez still
has trouble
believing the situation he faced when he was stocking
shelves on the
overnight shift at the Sam's Club in Corpus Christi,
Tex.

It was 3 a.m., Mr. Rodriguez recalled, some heavy
machinery had just
smashed into his ankle, and he had no idea how he
would get to the
hospital.

The Sam's Club, a Wal-Mart subsidiary, had locked its
overnight
workers in, as it always did, to keep robbers out and,
as some
managers say, to prevent employee theft. As usual,
there was no
manager with a key to let Mr. Rodriguez out. The fire
exit, he said,
was hardly an option - management had drummed into the
overnight
workers that if they ever used that exit for anything
but a fire, they
would lose their jobs.

"My ankle was crushed," Mr. Rodriguez said, explaining
he had been
struck by an electronic cart driven by an employee
moving stacks of
merchandise. "I was yelling and running around like a
hurt dog that
had been hit by a car. Another worker made some phone
calls to reach a
manager, and it took an hour for someone to get there
and unlock the
door."

The reason for Mr. Rodriguez's delayed trip to the
hospital was a
little-known Wal-Mart policy: the lock-in. For more
than 15 years,
Wal-Mart Stores Inc., the world's largest retailer,
has locked in
overnight employees at some of its Wal-Mart and Sam's
Club stores. It
is a policy that many employees say has created
disconcerting
situations, such as when a worker in Indiana suffered
a heart attack,
when hurricanes hit in Florida and when workers' wives
have gone into
labor.

"You could be bleeding to death, and they'll have you
locked in," Mr.
Rodriguez said. "Being locked in an emergency like
that, that's not
right."

Mona Williams, Wal-Mart's vice president for
communications, said the
company used lock-ins to protect stores and employees
in high-crime
areas. She said Wal-Mart locked in workers - the
company calls them
associates - at 10 percent of its stores, a percentage
that has
declined as Wal-Mart has opened more 24-hour stores.

Ms. Williams said Wal-Mart, with 1.2 million employees
in its 3,500
stores nationwide, had recently altered its policy to
ensure that
every overnight shift at every store has a night
manager with a key to
let workers out in emergencies.

"Wal-Mart secures these stores just as any other
business does that
has employees working overnight," Ms. Williams said.
"Doors are locked
to protect associates and the store from intruders.
Fire doors are
always accessible for safety, and there will always be
at least one
manager in the store with a set of keys to unlock the
doors."

Ms. Williams said individual store managers, rather
than headquarters,
decided whether to lock workers in, depending on the
crime rate in
their area.

Retailing experts and Wal-Mart's competitors said the
company's
lock-in policy was highly unusual. Officials at Kmart,
Sears, Toys "R"
Us, Home Depot and Costco, said they did not lock in
workers.

Even some retail industry experts questioned the
policy. "It's clearly
cause for concern," said Burt Flickinger, who runs a
retail consulting
concern. "Locking in workers, that's more of a
19th-century practice
than a 20th-century one."

Several Wal-Mart employees said that as recently as a
few months ago
they had been locked in on some nights without a
manager who had a
key. Robert Schuster said that until last October,
when he left his
job at a Sam's Club in Colorado Springs, workers were
locked in every
night, and on Friday and Saturday nights there was no
one there with a
key. One night, he recalled, a worker had been
throwing up violently,
and no one had a store key to let him out.

"They told us it's a big fine for the company if we go
out the fire
door and there's no fire," Mr. Schuster said. "They
gave us a big
lecture that if we go out that door, you better make
sure it's an
emergency like the place going up on fire."

Augustine Herrera, who worked at the Colorado Springs
store for nine
years, disputed the company's assertion that it locked
workers in
stores in only high-crime areas, largely to protect
employees.

"The store is in a perfectly safe area," Mr. Herrera
said.

Several employees said Wal-Mart began making sure that
there was
someone with a key seven nights a week at the Colorado
Springs store
and other stores starting Jan. 1, shortly after The
New York Times
began making inquiries about employees' being locked
in.

The main reason that Wal-Mart and Sam's stores lock in
workers,
several former store managers said, was not to protect
employees but
to stop "shrinkage" - theft by employees and
outsiders.

Tom Lewis, who managed four Sam's Clubs in Texas and
Tennessee, said:
"It's to prevent shrinkage. Wal-Mart is like any other
company.
They're concerned about the bottom line, and the
bottom line is
affected by shrinkage in the store."

Another reason for lock-ins, he said, was to increase
efficiency -
workers could not sneak outside to smoke a cigarette,
get high or make
a quick trip home.

Mr. Rodriguez acknowledged that the seemingly obvious
thing to have
done after breaking his ankle was to leave by the fire
door, but he
and two dozen other Wal-Mart and Sam's Club workers
said they had
repeatedly been warned never to do that unless there
was a fire.
Leaving for any other reason, they said, could
jeopardize the jobs of
the offending employee and the night supervisor.

Regarding Mr. Rodriguez, Ms. Williams said, "He was
clearly capable of
walking out a fire door anytime during the night."

She added: "We tell associates that common sense has
to prevail. Fire
doors are for emergencies, and by all means use them
if you have
emergencies. We have no way of knowing what any
individual manager
said to an associate."

None of the Wal-Mart workers interviewed said they
knew anyone who had
been fired for violating the fire-exit policy in an
emergency, but
several said they knew workers who had received
official reprimands,
the first step toward firing. Several said managers
had told them of
firing workers for such an offense.

"They let us know they'd fire people for going out the
fire door,
unless there was a fire." said Farris Cobb, who was a
night supervisor
at several Sam's Clubs in Florida. "They instilled in
us they had done
it before and they would do it again."

Mr. Cobb and several other workers interviewed about
lock-ins were
plaintiffs in lawsuits accusing Wal-Mart of forcing
them to work off
the clock, for example working several hours without
pay after their
shifts ended. Wal-Mart says it tells managers never to
let employees
work off the clock.

Janet Anderson, who was a night supervisor at a Sam's
Club in Colorado
from 1996 to 2002, said that many of her employees
were also airmen
stationed at a nearby Air Force base. Their commanders
sometimes
called the store to order them to report to duty
immediately, but she
said they often had to wait until a manager arrived
around 6 a.m. She
said one airman received a reprimand from management
for leaving by
the fire door to report for duty.

Ms. Anderson also told of a worker who had broken his
foot one night
while using a cardboard box baler and had to wait four
hours for
someone to open the door. She said the store's
managers had lied to
her and the overnight crew, telling them the fire
doors could not be
physically opened by the workers and that the doors
would open
automatically when the fire alarm was triggered.

Only after several years as night supervisor did she
learn that she
could open the fire door from inside, she said, but
she was told she
faced dismissal if she opened it when there was no
fire. One night,
she said, she cut her finger badly with a box cutter
but dared not go
out the fire exit - waiting until morning to get 13
stitches at a
hospital.

The federal government and almost all states do not
bar locking in
workers so long as they have access to an emergency
exit. But several
longtime Wal-Mart workers recalled that in the late
1980's and early
1990's, the fire doors of some Wal-Marts were chained
shut.

Wal-Mart officials said they cracked down on that
practice after an
overnight stocker at a store in Savannah, Ga.,
collapsed and died in
1988. Paramedics could not get into the store soon
enough because the
employees inside could not open the fire door or front
door, and there
was no manager with a key.

"We certainly do not do that now," Ms. Williams said.
"It's not been
that way for a long time."

Explaining the policy, she said, "Only about 10
percent of our stores
do not allow associates to come and go at will, and
these are
generally in higher crime areas where the associates'
safety is
considered an issue."

Mr. Lewis, the former store manager, said he had been
willing to get
out of bed at any hour to drive back to his store to
unlock the door
in an emergency. But he said many Sam's Club managers
were not as
responsive. "Sometimes you couldn't get hold of a
manager," he said.
"The tendency of managers was to sleep through the
nights. They let
the answering machine pick up."

Mr. Cobb, the overnight supervisor in Florida, said he
remembered once
when a stocker was deathly sick, throwing up
repeatedly. He said he
called the store manager at home and told him, " `You
need to come let
this person out.' He said: `Find one of the
mattresses. Have him lay
down on the floor.'

"I went into certain situations like that, and I
called store
managers, and they pretty much told me that they
wouldn't come in to
unlock the door. So I would call another manager, and
a lot of times
they would tell you that they were on their way, when
they weren't."

Mr. Cobb said the Wal-Mart rule that generally
prohibits employees
from working more than 40 hours a week to avoid paying
overtime played
out in strange ways for night-shift employees. Mr.
Cobb said that on
many workers' fifth work day of the week, they would
approach the
40-hour mark and then clock out, usually around 1 a.m.
They would then
have to sit around, napping, playing cards or watching
television,
until a manager arrived at 6 a.m.

Roy Ellsworth Jr., who was a cashier at a Wal-Mart in
Pueblo, Colo.,
said he was normally scheduled to work until the store
closed at 10
p.m., but most nights management locked the front
door, at closing
time, and did not let workers leave until everyone had
straightened up
the store.

"They would keep us there for however long they
wanted," Mr. Ellsworth
said. "It was often for half an hour, and it could be
two hours or
longer during Christmas season."

One night, shortly after closing time, Mr. Ellsworth
had an asthma
attack. "My inhaler hardly helped," he said. "I
couldn't breathe. I
felt I was going to pass out. I got fuzzy vision. I
told the assistant
manager I really needed to go to the hospital. He
pretty much got in
my face and told me not to leave or I'd get fired. I
was having
trouble standing. When I finally told him I was going
to call a
lawyer, he finally let me out."

One top Wal-Mart official said: "If those things
happened five or six
years ago, we're a very large company with more that
3,000 stores, and
individual instances like that could happen. That's
certainly not
something Wal-Mart would condone."


Russ (The Truth) Hanson. 
St. Paul's Truth on Wal-Mart. 
 


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