Wal-Mart Plans to Hire Any Veteran Who Wants a Job
By
JAMES
DAO
Wal-Mart, the nation’s largest retailer,
will announce Tuesday a plan to hire every veteran who wants a job, provided
that the veterans have left the military in the previous year and did not
receive a dishonorable discharge.
The announcement, to be made in a
speech in New York by William S. Simon, the president and chief executive of
Wal-Mart U.S., represents among the largest hiring commitments for veterans in
history.
Company officials said they believe
the program, which will officially begin on Memorial Day — May 27 this year —
will lead to the hiring of more than 100,000 people in the next five years, the
length of the commitment.
“Let’s be clear: Hiring a veteran
can be one of the best decisions any of us can make,” Mr. Simon will say in his
keynote speech to the National Retail Federation, according to prepared text.
“These are leaders with discipline, training and a passion for service.”
In a statement, the first lady,
Michelle Obama, who has led a campaign by the White House to encourage
businesses to hire veterans, called the Wal-Mart plan “historic,” adding that
she planned to urge other corporations to follow suit.
“We all believe that no one who
serves our country should have to fight for a job once
they return home,” Mrs. Obama said in the statement. “Wal-Mart is setting a
groundbreaking example for the private sector to follow.”
The unemployment rate for veterans
of the recent wars has remained stubbornly above that for nonveterans, though
it has been falling steadily, dropping to just below 10 percent for all of
2012. That was down from 12.1 percent the year before. The year-end
unemployment rate for nonveterans was 7.9 percent in 2012.
Reducing the veteran unemployment
rate was among the few veterans’ issues discussed by the presidential
candidates last year. It has also been central to the work of Mrs. Obama’s
campaign to assist veterans and military families, Joining Forces.
Last August, her office said that private companies working with Joining Forces
had hired or trained 125,000 veterans or their spouses in a single year,
surpassing the group’s goal of 100,000 a full year early.
Wal-Mart’s foundation has
consistently been among the most generous contributors to veterans’ charities,
committing to donate $20 million to veterans’ causes by 2015. “I take this one
personally,” Mr. Simon, a Navy veteran, says in his prepared text.
But the company has also been
aggressive about hiring veterans because it views them as good employees, said
Nelson Lichtenstein, a labor
historian at the University of California,
Santa Barbara, and the author of the book “The Retail Revolution: How Wal-Mart
Created a Brave New World of Business.”
About 100,000 of the company’s 1.4
million employees in the United States are veterans, company officials said.
“They like military people because
they have a sense of hierarchy and a commitment to the organization they are
in,” said Professor Lichtenstein, who has been a critic of Wal-Mart’s
management practices. “And that’s important to Wal-Mart.” In recent years,
Wal-Mart has been the target of lawsuits by women, accusing the company of
discrimination in salaries and promotions.
Gary Profit, a retired Army
brigadier general who is senior director of military programs at Wal-Mart, said
the company might not be able to guarantee that every veteran who wants a
full-time job will be able to get one. But he said that because of the size of
Wal-Mart’s retail operation and supply chain, it is almost certain that the
company could find a job — even a
part-time one — close to any veteran who wanted one.
“If you’re a veteran and you want a
job in the retail industry, you have a place at Wal-Mart,” he said.
This article has been revised to
reflect the following correction:
Correction: January 14, 2013
An earlier version of this article
misstated the position of William S. Simon. He is the president and chief
executive of Wal-Mart U.S. He does not fill that role for Wal-Mart Stores
Inc.
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