
Robert Naiman of Urbana
on Jobs with Justice
February 24, 2006
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Hi, I’m Robert Naiman, longtime
Urbana resident, alumnus of the University of Illinois
in math and economics and former member of the Champaign
County Board.
If you live in Champaign County, you probably know that
there is a new Wal-Mart store in Urbana. On January 31,
40 people joined an informational picket sponsored by
the Jobs with Justice Organizing Committee at the "Grand
Opening" of the new store. Our purpose was to protest
the employment practices of the Wal-Mart Corporation.
Wal-Mart is notorious for paying
wages that place its employees below the federal
poverty line; for failing to provide affordable health
insurance to its employees; for violating labor laws on
working hours, child labor, and the right to organize;
and for practicing discrimination, against its female
employees for example, who have sued Wal-Mart in the
largest lawsuit of its kind in history.
Wal-Mart likes to portray itself as
a friend of low-income people because it offers low
prices. But it is not a friend of the low-income people
who work in its stores. On average, large firms in the
United States provide health insurance for two-thirds of
their employees, but Wal-Mart covers less than half its
employees. One in seven Wal-Mart employees has no health
insurance at all, double the national average for large
firms. About 1 in 40 uninsured workers at large firms
nationwide are Wal-Mart employees. In the absence of a
national health insurance system in the United States,
Wal-Mart is unfairly competing with other firms by
shifting its health care costs onto the taxpayer. In
response, Maryland passed legislation requiring
employers like Wal-Mart to spend 8% of payroll on health
care, and other states are expected to follow suit. Here
in East Central Illinois we can also hold Wal-Mart to
account. Let your elected officials know that you don't
think Wal-Mart should be allowed to make super profits
by mistreating its employees.
Jobs with Justice is a national
organization campaigning for workers' rights. A local
chapter is currently being formed. |
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