NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- Shoppers lining up at Walmart for
deals on Black Friday may have to contend with more than the throngs of other
bargain hunters.
A group of Walmart workers is planning to protest at
stores on one of the busiest days of the holiday season asking for higher wages
and fair schedules.
This will be the third year of Black Friday
demonstrations in a row. Protests are planned at 1,600 Walmart locations -- the
most ever -- according to organizers from the union-backed group OUR Walmart.
Since plans are still in the works, the group could not
say how many workers would actually show up. Protesters gathered at about 1,200
stores last year, according to the group, but Walmart says that number is
inflated.
It's not only Walmart workers who will participate.
Teachers and other community members are also expected to join.
Workers want to be paid at least $15 an hour, they want
to be given more hours and to be given more consistent schedules. They're also
accusing the retailer of retaliating against workers who have protested against
the company before.
"There's nothing further from the truth," said
Walmart spokeswoman Brooke Buchanan.
But the National Labor Relations Board, which protects
the rights of workers who organize for better wages, also alleges that Walmart
unlawfully threatened or disciplined employees at more than a dozen stores for
legally protected strikes and protests. Nineteen workers were fired for
protesting and about 40 others were threatened or disciplined, according to the
NLRB.
Walmart has said it acted within its rights under the
law. The latest hearing in that case was in June and no decision has been made
yet.
Walmart worker protests tend to gain momentum around
Black Friday, but protests occur throughout the year.
On Thursday, workers staged a sit-in at a store near Los
Angeles. Twenty-six protesters were arrested for civil disobedience after
moving to a second store, the union group OUR Walmart said.
Demonstrators sat in store aisles holding signs asking
Walmart to "stop the illegal threats."
One month ago, 42 workers and other demonstrators were
arrested in New York and D.C. for protesting for higher wages. Some were
arrested outside the upscale Park Avenue home of Alice Walton, the billionaire daughter
of Walmart's founder.
Source: WICU12
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