Walmart Workers Detained By Police During Protest At Retailer's D.C. Office

Walmart Workers Detained During Protest Over Labor Practices
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CHICAGO, IL - AUGUST 15: The Walmart logo is displayed on a shopping cart at a Walmart store on August 15, 2013 in Chicago, Illinois. Walmart, the world's largest retailer, reported a surprise decline in second-quarter same-store sales today. The retailer also cut its revenue and profit forecasts for the fiscal year. (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)

WASHINGTON -- Ten current and former Walmart workers and two organizers were ticketed by police outside the retailer's Washington, D.C., office on Thursday during a protest over working conditions.

OUR Walmart, an affiliate of the United Food and Commercial Workers union, said most of the workers had taken part in recent high-profile strikes and later lost their jobs. A D.C. police spokeswoman said the protesters were cited for "blocking passage" after refusing to disperse from the sidewalk during the demonstration.

Cindy Murray, an employee at the retailer's store in Laurel, Md., told HuffPost that she and her companions had refused to leave in order to send a message. Murray said they were protesting what OUR Walmart claims were 20 firings and dozens of disciplinary actions that occurred in the wake of the worker strikes that started on Black Friday last year.

"We stood our ground. We felt Walmart needs to know how we truly feel about what we're doing," said Murray, 57, of Hyattsville, Md. "Our demands were that they take back what they did to our 60 workers, and we're giving them until Labor Day to do that."

Kory Lundberg, a Walmart spokesman, disputed that the workers in question had been retaliated against. He said they were fired because they had violated the company's attendance policy, not because they had gone on strike or took part in protests.

"No associate has ever been retaliated against at Walmart for raising concerns, nor would they be," Lundberg said. "Many of these associates didn't show up for days."

Walmart workers participated in scattered strikes during last year's Thanksgiving shopping season, calling for higher pay, better access to health care coverage and more reliable work hours.

Although only a tiny fraction of the company's 1.3 million U.S. workers took part, the demonstrations drew national attention to working conditions at the largest private-sector employer in the world. The one-day walkouts later led to prolonged strikes by some Walmart employees and helped galvanize strikes by fast-food workers in cities around the country.

OUR Walmart, which spearheaded the strikes, has filed what are known as unfair labor practice charges against Walmart on behalf of workers who lost their jobs. On Thursday morning, the current and former employees who were later detained visited the D.C. headquarters of the National Labor Relations Board, the federal agency that enforces labor law and investigates such charges. According to Murray, the workers presented an NLRB official with a petition in support of their cause that included 180,000 signatures.

Murray said OUR Walmart plans to escalate its public protests if the disciplinary actions against strikers aren't reversed.

"We want every worker that they fired due to our strike to be reinstated," she said.

Murray, a 13-year Walmart veteran, said she earns $12.40 per hour. The $100 ticket she received Thursday is almost exactly equal to a day's wages.

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Before You Go

9 Scary Facts About Part-Time Workers
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Just 24 percent of part-time workers have access to employer-sponsored health care, according to a July report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. (credit:AP)
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Just half of those who graduated from college between 2006 and 2011 were working in full-time jobs as of May 2012, according to a survey from Rutgers University. In addition, 40 percent of recent college graduates said they were underemployed in an April Reuters poll. (credit:AP)
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As of January 2013, there were about 8.6 million involuntary part-time workers -- or employees working part-time because they had to, not because they wanted to. This figure is nearly double what it was in January 2006. (credit:AP)
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The surge in part-time work during the Great Recession and the recovery is increasing the gap between high- and low-wage workers, according to a March speech from Federal Reserve Governor Sarah Bloom Raskin. Indeed, the richest 20 percent of working families took home 48 percent of the nation's income in 2011, according to the Working Poor Families Project. The bottom 20 percent of working families took home just 5 percent. (credit:Getty Images)
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Millions of part-time workers are at the highest risk of having their hours cut under the President's Affordable Care Act as businesses look for ways to skirt the law and avoid offering workers coverage. But despite numerous threats to cut worker hours, most businesses haven't actually cut them in anticipation of the law. (credit:Getty Images)
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In the first six months of 2013, employers added more than four times as many part-time jobs as full-time jobs, according to a July Wall Street Journal report. (credit:AP)