Judge: Walmart strikes protected under labor act
NEW YORK – A National Labor Relations Board judge ruled Walmart Stores Inc. unlawfully disciplined workers who staged protests in May and June 2013, and ordered the retailer to reinstate 16 former employees and give them back pay.
Judge Geoffrey Carter ruled the employee actions were protected under the National Labor Relations Act and Walmart violated labor laws by “disciplining or discharging several associates because they were absent from work while on strike.”
The judge also ordered Walmart to hold a meeting in 29 stores throughout the country to inform employees of their right to strike, and to promise not to threaten or discipline employees for doing so.
The complaint was filed on behalf of the labor-backed group “Our Walmart,” which called it a huge victory.
The decision, posted on the labor board’s website late Thursday, arrived one day after the nation’s largest private employer announced raises for more than 1.2 million U.S. hourly workers, which is most of them. The Bentonville, Ark., retailer said in October it would invest $2.7 billion in its workforce over two years.
In a statement e-mailed to the Associated Press, Walmart spokesman Kory Lundberg said the company disagreed with the judge’s findings and will pursue all of its options to defend itself. It called its actions “legal and justified.”
“We are focused on providing our hard-working associates more opportunity for success and career growth by raising wages, providing new training, education and expanded benefit options,” Lundberg wrote.