Senator hammers Dollar General, Dollar Tree over 'shameful labor practices'

Paco Dennis

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Location
Mid-Missouri
Misa, my partner, has been working part time up the road at a Dollar General for about 3 months now. Everyday she comes back she has been telling me how chaotic the store is. It has half of the retail business. Walmart came first to supply us with low cost merchandise and the mom and pop stores were finished. Now comes the Dollar stores, who have been lurking in the back ground, to devour big retail stores. Why is this happening? We are getting cheaper products in mass. Maybe because of inflation?

"Senator Hammers Dollar General, Dollar Tree Over 'Shameful Labor Practices'

Mary Gundel, a former Dollar General store manager, recently went viral after posting a series of videos on TikTok explaining how the job ran her and her employees into the ground.
It seems Sen. Patty Murray was a fan of Gundel’s work.
The Democrat from Washington state sent a pair of letters Friday to the chief executives of Dollar General and Dollar Tree, the country’s two dollar-store behemoths, pillorying the companies for the working conditions in their stores.
Murray, who chairs the U.S. Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions, asked that the two companies turn over a slew of records related to job titles, wage rates, meal and rest breaks and sanitation and workplace safety inspections.
oth Dollar Tree and Family Dollar stores have seen explosive — and continuing — growth,” Murray wrote the retailers in her letters. “I call on you to explain [your company’s] shameful labor practices and commit to improving conditions for workers moving forward.”

Dollar General couldn’t immediately be reached for comment. A spokesperson for Dollar Tree said the company hadn’t read the letter yet and wasn’t prepared to comment as of this posting. Murray’s office just sent the letters Friday afternoon.

“While Dollar General’s employees struggle to make ends meet, your own compensation as CEO was a staggering 986 times greater than the median employee’s annual earnings.”
- Sen. Patty Murray to Dollar General CEO Todd Vasos
The country’s dollar stores have long been known for lawsuits alleging minimum wage and overtime violations, and more recently citations showing workplace safety violations. As HuffPost chronicled in 2013, the stores tend to operate on tight payrolls, with salaried managers often working 60- or 70-hour weeks and handling non-managerial jobs, like unloading trucks and stocking shelves.
In her letter to Dollar General, Murray accused CEO Todd Vasos of growing rich while his employees struggled.
“While Dollar General’s employees struggle to make ends meet, your own compensation as CEO was a staggering 986 times greater than the median employee’s annual earnings,” she wrote, referencing the company’s financial filings. “A 986:1 ratio of CEO to median employee compensation is nearly three times the average ratio of other major corporations in the United States.”
She also noted recent citations against both Dollar General and Dollar Tree by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration. OSHA said earlier this year that the penalties against Dollar Tree over the past five years have amounted to more than $9.3 million, due to blocked exits, fire hazards and other dangers.
Dollar stores have been growing rapidly in recent years, undercutting local independent stores and helping to transform the retail landscape. Nearly half of all retail locations opened last year were projected to be dollar stores.
Given their expansion, Murray called on the companies to “commit to improving conditions for workers moving forward.”


[VIDEO] I tried to embed it but can't here is the url

https://www.tiktok.com/@alwaysmrsgundel/video/7080579628636671275?is_copy_url=1&is_from_webapp=v1&refer=embed&referer_url=https://www.huffpost.com/entry/senator-hammers-dollar-general-dollar-tree-over-working-conditions_n_626301a0e4b0197ae3f5a14e&referer_video_id=7080579628636671275

"In one of her viral Dollar General videos, Gundel showed off the hard-working employees at her Tampa, Florida, store, as well as some of the challenges they face. She filmed cart after cart of unboxed product stretching through an aisle in the store, saying it was stuck there because the back room couldn’t hold it.
“They can’t fit carts down the aisle,” she said of her customers. “I will not run a location like that.”
Gundel was fired earlier this month.
“I wasn’t afraid of losing my job,” she told The New York Times. “I was not going to be silenced.”


https://www.huffpost.com/entry/sena...working-conditions_n_626301a0e4b0197ae3f5a14e

The fog of inflation and retail :)
 

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This runaway inflation is driving more people to shop for the lowest prices. Our local DG store is seeing a major uptick in people shopping there. They've had a Help Wanted sign on the door, for months, and it seems that whenever I go there, all the employees are new....probably due to the lack of good pay and benefits.

It seems that Retail stores are caught in a spiral where they are having to minimize their employee expenses, or price their items such that fewer people can afford to shop there. Small businesses are at increased risk, in that they cannot buy in quantities large enough to keep prices down.

The government "official" rate of inflation is holding around 8%...but whoever comes up with that number isn't doing any grocery shopping, or buying gas. I browse prices while pushing the cart at the grocery store, while the wife is making her choices. It's my impression that prices are up between 20 to 50% over what they were 2 years ago....on most items. Gas is up at least 40% above where it usually is, this time of year.
 
Way back in the 80s, we had video rental stores. They sprouted up everywhere. While most were legitimate businesses, a fair number were mob owned fronts for "laundering money". That's where illegally obtained money was made into legally made money. Who is to say you didn't rent out the same movie 130 times a night? The reason I mention this is there's one of those new dollar type stores by me out in the boonies. I live in the sticks, this is way out there. Ain't nobody out here!!! And that got me thinking. Do most people use a credit card in a dollar store? Are you going to whip out the plastic for a $3 purchase? With cash, there's no paper trail as with a credit card. So who is to say you didn't sell 100,000 dollar items today? I wonder if some of those dollar stores aren't mere fronts for laundering money? A front for laundering money wouldn't care about the quality of the stuff they supposedly sold, their help, the condition of their stores, etc.
 

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The last time I was in a Dollar General it almost impossible to navigate through the store. Every aisle was jammed with pallets of boxes and made it very hard to find what I was looking for. Some aisles were totally impassable. I thought maybe they had just gotten a huge delivery and didn't have time to stock the shelves yet. I finally just left the store without buying anything. I'll bet if I went back, it would still look the same.
 
My whole neighborhood launders money for the Russian mafia. Jewelry stores everywhere, never any customers, ridiculously overpriced merchandise. There are a few independent stores, but they are actually doing business.
 
Way back in the 80s, we had video rental stores. They sprouted up everywhere. While most were legitimate businesses, a fair number were mob owned fronts for "laundering money". That's where illegally obtained money was made into legally made money. Who is to say you didn't rent out the same movie 130 times a night? The reason I mention this is there's one of those new dollar type stores by me out in the boonies. I live in the sticks, this is way out there. Ain't nobody out here!!! And that got me thinking. Do most people use a credit card in a dollar store? Are you going to whip out the plastic for a $3 purchase? With cash, there's no paper trail as with a credit card. So who is to say you didn't sell 100,000 dollar items today? I wonder if some of those dollar stores aren't mere fronts for laundering money? A front for laundering money wouldn't care about the quality of the stuff they supposedly sold, their help, the condition of their stores, etc.
I'll have to run this theory by Misa so she can consider it. Something doing with "Cash in the drawer" came up yesterday and she thought it was strange.
 


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