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Wal-Mart has a cunning plan

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Lady Bracknell | 00:00 UK time, Tuesday, 1 November 2005

There's been a bit of a furore in the press in the States over the contents of an which was issued to Wal-Mart's board of directors. You are probably aware that medical treatment in the US isn't provided for free like it is (or like it's supposed to be) over here. Apparently, one of the perks you get if you work for Wal-Mart is a health benefits package. Unfortunately, however, some of the staff have been getting ill and have actually been using the benefits package, and this is all getting a bit expensive for the company. What's really troubling the directors is that it's the least healthy - and, therefore, the most potentially expensive - members of staff who are most appreciative of the benefits package and who are therefore interested in long-term careers with the company.



The solution? Attract a healthier workforce. How? Well, one of the suggestions is to "design all jobs to include some physical activity". This, they reckon, would "dissuade unhealthy people from coming to work at Wal-Mart".

There are many issues here which concern me, but I'll stick to two.

Firstly, although I'm well aware that a great many disabled people are perfectly fit and healthy and never need to take time off work for reasons relating to their impairments, I'm not one of them. I know that sickness absence is costly to employers and I agree that everything possible should be done to minimise it. But employers need to look at just what proportion of employees' illness is linked to the working practices which are imposed on them. Not just make a unilateral decision to ditch people with health problems.

Secondly, designing all the jobs to include some physical activity isn't just going to dissuade unhealthy people from applying to work at Wal-Mart. It's also going to discriminate against disabled applicants who, for whatever reason, can't go and collect all the vagrant shopping trolleys which lurk in the farthest reaches of the car park.

For an amusing spoof application form for a job at the wonderful Wal-Mart, look no further than the .

• Visit

Comments

  • 1.
  • At 12:00 AM on 03 Nov 2005, Patty Paille wrote:


You want another ouch? Saskatchewan, Canada is the most backward province in Canada. Saskatoon Police, for example, claim that a scooter or power chair must ride on sidewalks - sidewalks that have no cut-outs or way to get on or off of them. Many stores are not accessible, and many churches, if they are accessible for wheelchair users, do not provide access to a bathroom or the hall downstairs where breakfasts, pot-lucks or meetings are held. So are you a 1/2 member? or a non-member of susch a church? Even a bank will use an excuse, "Well we are an old buiding! "We'll come out to you. " Like I want to do my Banking on the street in-40 C. winters of this Privince.

  • 2.
  • At 12:00 AM on 05 Nov 2005, Cole Roland wrote:


This is shocking! At the same time, it's clever. I never would have come up with such a simple and effective scheme to discriminate. It might even be legal. These guys are smart. Evil, but smart.

Visit

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  • 5.
  • At 12:05 AM on 18 Dec 2007, Brendan Moriarty wrote:

This article has further enraged me and disgusted me. Wal-Mart ha sunk to a new low of which is rarely seen even now a days. Have they no morality? I think we (America) should have health care for every citizen even if it be minimal. I hope the legislation (America's legislation) acts in the right way; granting a nationalized health care plan.

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