This month, workers who have been with Walmart for at least
five years received a one-time bump in their paychecks. A couple hundred
extra dollars is usually welcome, but this time, it actually symbolizes
a loss: No longer will those workers receive premium pay for their
Sunday shifts, as the idea of compensating people for toiling on what
some consider a day of rest fades from American business.
Walmart discontinued Sunday
premium pay, which had been $1 extra per hour, for new hires back in
2011. Those who had continued to receive it will receive a lump sum
equal to half the amount of Sunday pay they received last year,
according to a company release in January outlining a handful of adjustments
that Walmart explained were a way of "simplifying its pay structure" —
and reducing the overall cost of increasing base wages to $10 an hour
across the board.
That hasn't worked out so well for more
experienced employees like eight-year Walmart veteran Nancy Reynolds, a
69-year-old cashier in Merritt Island, Fla., who works Thursday through
Monday. Her base pay was already slightly above $10 an hour, so she
didn't get much of a raise, and the loss of a few extra Sunday dollars a
week will hurt. "The younger people, the ones who haven’t been there
that long, they got it, and I'm glad for them," Reynolds says. "But they
did it at the expense of me and everybody who’s been there a long
time."
In cutting Sunday pay, Walmart is actually behind most of
the retail industry, which made that change as legal requirements to pay
more on Sundays were stricken from state laws across the country.
So-called "blue laws" once prohibited Sunday commerce altogether
in 34 states in the 1960s. They were often weakened through compromise,
with higher pay mandated in exchange for shopping being legalized. Even
with no mandate, premium pay was often what the labor market demanded.
"To
get people to work, when they’d never worked before, they started to
pay Sunday pay," says Craig Rowley, a retail compensation consultant
with Korn Ferry, who has done work for Walmart.
That changed over
time as women entered the workforce, pushing more shopping from
weekdays to the weekend. The labor market also loosened up, meaning
workers couldn't pick and choose which days they wanted to work; Sunday
shifts are now expected rather than optional. And meanwhile, the
importance of Sunday as a universal day of rest started to recede from
the American psyche.
"When I was growing up, Sundays were kind of
family day, church day," Rowley says. "As we’ve gotten to be a more
secular society, staying at home on Sunday is not necessarily expected.
'We’re all going to be here all day Sunday' is not as strong a cultural
norm."
Rhode Island and Massachusetts are now two of the last
states to require retailers to pay time and a half on Sundays, and the
retail industry is pushing hard to get the requirement rolled back in Massachusetts. "Sundays in retail have become unaffordable in our state," wrote William Rennie, vice president of the Retailers Association of Massachusetts, in a Boston Globe op-ed.
Sunday
premium pay hasn't disappeared as quickly from other sectors, such as
manufacturing and transportation, which have held on to a more
traditional five or six-day work schedule. Most federal employees are still entitled to time and a half on Sundays. But more and more of their neighbors in the private sector won't be so lucky. Washington Post
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