Washington, D. C. should tell Wal-Mart goodbye and good
riddance if it won't agree to pay its workers at least $12.50 an hour.
Want to see pure
altruism in action? Go to Washington, D.C. — not to the federal government’s
marble buildings, but to the real city, where ordinary folks live.
There you’ll find a
business organization that wants nothing more than to serve the people, help
improve lives, and be a generous neighbor. That selfless organization is Wal-Mart.
With six big-box
stores planned for our nation’s capital, the corporation’s regional manager
wants people to know that Wal-Mart’s
intentions truly are philanthropic. We wish only “to bring more jobs, shopping options, and fresh
food choices,” Wal-Mart regional manager Alex Barron recently declared in an
ultimatum published in The Washington Post.
Alas, this Mother
Teresa of global retail is now wailing that its generosity has been spurned by
an impudent city council that says it’s not interested in corporate pretensions
of “charity,” but in tangible fairness. Council members have had the audacity
to pass a “Large Retailer Accountability Act” that would require Wal-Mart to
pay fair wages to its D.C. employees.
The stipulated wage
floor is $12.50 an hour, or about $25,000 a year in gross pay. That’s no
princely sum for life this very expensive city.
In response, Wal-Mart
threw off its altruism mask, revealing the low-wage, miserly scowl for which it
is globally infamous. The nice regional manager turned nasty, sputtering that
the giant retailer couldn’t afford such extravagance because it would
“challenge the fiscal health of our planned D.C. stores.” Barron threatened to
abandon the city if the fair-wage law is not repealed.
“Afford?” Wal-Mart is
the most profitable corporation in America, bagging $17 billion in profits last
year. Yet, it routinely pays its workers so poorly that they have to take food
stamps and other support from us taxpayers. Hey, D.C. — tell ‘em goodbye…and
good riddance.
OtherWords columnist Jim Hightower is a radio
commentator, writer, and public speaker. He's also editor of the populist
newsletter, The Hightower Lowdown. OtherWords.org