[Vision2020] MORE Data about WalMart VS Gritman

Donovan Arnold donovanjarnold2005 at yahoo.com
Tue Nov 29 02:42:26 PST 2005


BJ Swanson,
      
  you sound more and more just like a big Wal-Mart executive. 
  
  "Many prefer to work  part-time.  I believe the salaries are very fair and Gritman (Wal-Mart)  contributes a great deal back to the community both in the better than living  wage salaries and benefits paid and in charity care. "-BJ Swanson
  
  But Wal Mart workers, always prefer full time work right? So it fair to attack  them for paying part time wages for part time work? Either way, 17 of your 20  job postings are part-time, or 0-19.5 hours a week.  You cannot tell me that 17 out 20 people  looking for work only want to work 0-19.5 hours a week, or could live on that  wage.   
  
  "Gritman has about 400 employees that equates to 282 full time  equivalents."
  
  This means that almost 1/3 of your workforce is making less then the minimum  needed to survive in Moscow,  according to your own words.
  
  "The AVERAGE hourly wage is $20.77 per hour plus benefits."
  
  Yes, but if you exclude doctors, what does that wage go down to, BJ? If you  exclude the truck drivers that work for Wal-Mart, it is only fair that we get  to exclude the doctors that make about $70-$150 an hour from that average of  $20.77. Anyone knows, that 10-20% at the top making $100 an hour can skew  that statistical average.
  
  "I think the majority of Gritman employees will tell you it is a great  place to work."
  
  Why, do you think this BJ?  Simply because you have not had the misfortune  of a nurse that was so stupid as to tell the chair of a board that they do  not like working for you? Honestly, you cannot believe someone is that stupid? Why  do nurses tell me that nursing is a bad labor market on the Palouse  because they cannot find full time work?  
  
  Another Wal-Mart Statement:
  
  "If the nurses were paid 50% less than other hospitals, as you say, we  would likely have no nurses."
  
  Gritman is the only major place for a nurse to work in this area. Of the 2.2 million RNs covered by the Bureau of Labor  Statistics, the mean annual wage was $52,810..... You pay an average of $20 an hour. By simple calculation, the  average nurse works 36 hours a week (3 12 hour shifts), that is $30.34 an hour,  you pay $20.77, that is 50% less than the market rate for a nurse. 
  
  You will find that many nurses move here because of their spouse's work. With  Gritman being one of the few places they can work, they are required to take 20  hours or less positions, or nothing.
  
  "Gritman’s salaries are comparable to other hospitals in this area."
  
  Oh please BJ, how many hospitals do you think we have in Latah? 
  
  "The part-time employees who are not eligible for benefits receive an  additional 15% higher salary than the full time employees who have  benefits."
  
  WRONG, part time employees get a 15% increase because of odd  hours. Further, even if your savvy business spin was true,  a 15% increase in pay does not even come close to covering the costs  of medical bills or the matching benefits that most hospitals offer in retirement  plans. 
       
       
      “Gritman is not  hiring Licensed Practical Nurses and hasn’t for many years.  Gritman  currently has only two LPN’s who are long time employees.”
       
      The general  direction of the country is to eliminate the LPNs. However, I know that Gritman  employs LPNs because I have spoken to several of them, however, Gritman does not  call them LPNs, in other words, they changed the name. 
       
      “I don’t know  about the environmental record of Sun Pacific Energy.”
       
      Well, if you do  not know about the destruction of the environment that your company engages in,  it certainly is justifiable that you continue to fund it.
       
       
      “ since you  accuse Donald H. Livingstone of having “close ties to Sodexho-Marriot” just  because he is a professor in the Marriott School of Business at BYU.  Do  you presume that all those who teach in the J. A. Albertson building at the U-I  have ‘close ties to Albertson’s?’”
       
      Professor  Livingstone is not just a professor at the Marriot School of Business. But even if  there was “no political connection”, do you think a man of moral conscious would  have trouble working in a building with the name of company slapped on the side  that has the worst international human rights record in the world?
  
  
  
  Take Care,
       
      Donovan J Arnold
    
  
  
"B. J. Swanson" <bjswan at moscow.com> wrote:              v\:* {behavior:url(#default#VML);} o\:* {behavior:url(#default#VML);} w\:* {behavior:url(#default#VML);} .shape {behavior:url(#default#VML);}                st1\:*{behavior:url(#default#ieooui) }               /* Font Definitions */   @font-face   {font-family:Tahoma;   panose-1:2 11 6 4 3 5 4 4 2 4;}  @font-face   {font-family:"Times \!\000D\000A New\000D\000A Roman";   panose-1:0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0;}  @font-face   {font-family:"Tim\!\000D\000A es New\000D\000A Roman";   panose-1:0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0;}   /* Style Definitions */   p.MsoNormal, li.MsoNormal, div.MsoNormal   {margin:0in;   margin-bottom:.0001pt;   font-size:12.0pt;   font-family:"Times New Roman";}  h1   {mso-margin-top-alt:auto;   margin-right:0in;   mso-margin-bottom-alt:auto;   margin-left:0in;   font-size:24.0pt;   font-family:"Times New Roman";   font-weight:bold;}  h3   {mso-margin-top-alt:auto;   margin-right:0in;   mso-margin-bottom-alt:auto;  
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 -.25in;  
 mso-ansi-font-size:10.0pt;   font-family:Symbol;}  @list l3:level2   {mso-level-number-format:bullet;   mso-level-text:o;   mso-level-tab-stop:1.0in;   mso-level-number-position:left;   text-indent:-.25in;   mso-ansi-font-size:10.0pt;   font-family:"Courier New";   mso-bidi-font-family:"Times New Roman";}  ol   {margin-bottom:0in;}  ul   {margin-bottom:0in;}  -->              Donovan,
     
    You seem to have reached the height of  false information and total confusion.  In another post today you mentioned, “This  all depends on what is considered acceptable data collection
”   So, where are you collecting your data because it is not correct.
     
    Gritman hires a number of part-time and  on-call employees, just like the U-I, WSU, Wal-Mart, etc. Many prefer to work  part-time.  I believe the salaries are very fair and Gritman contributes a  great deal back to the community both in the better than living wage salaries and  benefits paid and in charity care.  Gritman has about 400 employees that  equates to 282 full time equivalents.  The AVERAGE hourly wage is $20.77 per  hour plus benefits.  The part-time employees who are not eligible for benefits  receive an additional 15% higher salary than the full time employees who have  benefits.  Gritman’s salaries are comparable to other hospitals in this  area.  If the nurses were paid 50% less than other hospitals, as you say, we  would likely have no nurses.  Gritman is not hiring Licensed Practical Nurses  and hasn’t for many years.  Gritman currently has only two LPN’s who  are long time employees.  The salaries and benefits Gritman pays are among the  best in the are!
 a.  I
 think the majority of Gritman employees will tell you it  is a great place to work.  You seem to accuse Gritman of being cheap, but it  wasn’t too long ago you were complaining about the high cost of  healthcare and medical insurance.  If you would like to pay more, then Gritman  could pay more too.
     
    I don’t know about the environmental  record of Sun Pacific Energy.  I’m a little suspicious of your judgment  on that since you accuse Donald H. Livingstone of having “close ties to  Sodexho-Marriot” just because he is a professor in the Marriott School of  Business at BYU.  Do you presume that all those who teach in the J. A. Albertson  building at the U-I have “close ties to Albertson’s?”
     
    B. J.   Swanson
     
     
     
            
---------------------------------
    
    From: Donovan Arnold  [mailto:donovanjarnold2005 at yahoo.com] 
  Sent: Monday, November 28, 2005  9:42 AM
  To: bjswan at moscow.com;  vision2020 at moscow.com
  Subject: RE: [Vision2020] Data  about WalMart VS Gritman
    
     
            BJ Swanson, 
    
         
    
        You have no doubt reached the height of your hypocrisy with your latest  email. As Chair of the Gritman Board of Directors you are no doubt aware that  Gritman pays less than $10.50 an hour plus benefits for many of its employees, “The “living wage” in Moscow is around $10.50 an hour  plus benefits.  $10.50 an hour is the level where workers are able to  “maintain.”, as your own words claim.
    
         
    
        Gritman purposely creates licensed staff positions for 19.5 hours or  less a week at less than $20 an hour so it does not have to pay full-time  benefits to its employees.  Gritman pays its nurses almost 50% less, $20  an hour, tha! n the average entry level nurse, $30 an hour. It also uses and  abuses the practice of Licensed Practical Nurses, or LPNs, instead of  Registered Nurses, or RNs, because they can get away with paying them 20-40%  less even though they can do about 85% of the work an RN can. LPNs were  originally created during WWII because of the lack of RNs and Doctors. They  should not be used in place of RNs to save Gritman money.
    
         
    
        As anyone can read for themselves, at http://www.gritman.org/careers/careers.asp  most of the jobs listed are “(0 - 39 hours per 2 week pay  period)”. That is less than 19.5 hours a week. At a MAXIMUM start rate of  $20 an hour, that is less than $10 hour for a full time worker. And at less  than 20 hours a week they are not getting benefits. 
    
         
    
        Gritman also employs certified nurses assistants, cafeteria  workers, phlebotomists, house keepers, gift shop workers, and other medical  assistants and staff that make far less than nurses with the same maximum of  19.5 hours a week. 
    
         
    
        In addition to your hypocrisy about nonlivable wages by  large corporations in this town, you have also neglected to research your own  company, AmericanWest Bank and the practices by the board of Directors. 
    
         
    
        The Board of Directors for AmericanWest Bank is full of minions just  like Wal-Mart. For example Craig D.  Eerkes, President of Sun Pacific Energy, Inc. A company  that has the worst environmental record in the northwest, working with  favorites of Green Peace like Exxon  Mobil.
    
         
    
        And let us also not forget board member Donald H. Livingstone, who has close ties to  Sodexho-Marriot, the company with the worst human rights record in the world.
    
         
    
        BJ, I suggest when you show up to protest the  senseless slaughter of animals for clothing that you not be wearing a fur coat  and alligator purse.
   
  Take Care,
    
         
    
        Donovan J Arnold
    
        
  
  "B. J. Swanson" <bjswan at moscow.com>  wrote:
        Jeff.
    
         
    
        I assume you’re joking when you say  “I suspect  their stats are probably reliable, as the consequences of being wrong would  bring swift retribution.”  I doubt that Wal-Mart has any fear  of retribution as evidenced by the mor! e than 5,000 lawsuits currently pending  against them dealing with a wide variety of unethical practices including  discrimination against women, hiring undocumented aliens and paying them less  than $3/hour, wide-spread inflated scanner settings, forcing associates to work  “off the time clock,” etc.  Obviously a few slanted facts are  not a big deal to them.  The Wal-Mart website also contains profound  statements like “Wal-Mart  does not encourage our associates to apply for public assistance.”  
    
         
    
        Perhaps  researching a little further into the numbers would reveal that the $9.20 an  hour average wage includes truck drivers.  Apparently Wal-Mart has been  unable to monopolize the trucking industry, YET.  If truck drivers are  removed from the average wages the remaining workers, including management,  average around $8.20 an hour and less than one-third qualify or can afford  health insurance.  The “living wage” in Moscow  is around $10.50 an hour plus benefits.  $10.50 an hour is the level where  workers are able to “maintain.”  More than that usually  indicates workers are able to contribute to the community.&! nbsp; Less  than that and the worker needs assistance to survive.  The relative size  of Wal-Mart and its projected impact on Moscow  as the second largest employer paying less than living wage jobs is a big  concern.
    
         
    
        Regarding  buying from Idaho vendors, a  further look will reveal Wal-Mart’s usual predatory practices.  I  personally know a small Northern   Idaho business who was delighted to g! et a contract  from Wal-Mart.  But the contract included not paying for goods for 120  days.  That means four months without payment or interest, while having to  pay workers and inventory costs on much shorter terms.  Then, Wal-Mart  wanted more and more goods until Wal-Mart was buying 90% of the small  businesses goods and still demanding more.  Then, Wal-Mart started  ratcheting down the price, and still on 120 day terms.  The small business  nearly went broke before they realized Wal-Mart was controlling them and  breaking them.  Idaho  is a very honest, trusting culture.  Sometimes to our detriment.
    
         
    
        There  are currently around 70 jobs in Alturas Technology Park paying  an average of $24.00 an hour plus benefits.  You will find these people on  many contributor lists throughout Moscow,  including Latah Trail, Kenworthy, IRP, Prichard,  etc.  Rezoning the land on the eastern boundary of Alturas for Wal-Mart  will severely restrict the ability to expand Alturas Technology Park and  continue to attract bus! inesses that actually contribute to the community  instead of sucking it dry.
    
         
    
        B. J. Swanson 
    
         
    
         
    
            
---------------------------------
    
        From:  vision2020-bounces at moscow.com [mailto:vision2020-bounces at moscow.com] On Behalf Of Jeff Harkins
  Sent: Saturday, November 26, 2005  6:11 PM
  To: vision2020 at moscow.com
  Subject: [Vision2020] Data about WalMart  Impact in Idaho  and Idaho Wages
    
    
         
    
    Here is an excerpt from the WalMart website.  I  suspect their stats are probably reliable, as the consequences of being wrong  would bring swift retribution.
  
  Of particular note is the average wage of $ 9.20 and the fact that WalMart  employs 6,774 people in the state.  At a wage rate of $9.20 and an assumed  work year of 2080 hours the average annual wage is $19,136.  
  
  Here is a link to the data for wages for all occupational groups in North Idaho.  The stats are as of May,  2005.  The stats are quite robust and should provide you with hours of fun  as you compare your current wage with the state average.  Here is the link  to the data: http://lmi.idaho.gov/admin/uploadedPublications/3753_north_idaho.pdf  .  If you want info about education jobs, you will need to go to Appendix  C of the report.  If you have trouble finding that link, please advise and  I will provide it.
  You can download the data.
  
  Other points of interest include spending almost $185 million with Idaho  suppliers - supporting 15,934 supplier jobs.
  
  
  Idaho Community  Impact
  
  
          Real  Estate         Wal-Mart's presence in Idaho  includes: 
    
    Stores,  Clubs, Distribution Centers and other facilities (as of October2005)        Supercenters: 14
  Discount Stores: 3
  Neighborhood markets: 0
  SAM'S CLUBS: 1
  Distribution Centers: 0
  Average store size (national average)   
  Supercenter: 186,077 sq. ft. with  approx. 116,000 items  
  Discount Store: 98,079 sq. ft. with  approx. 62,500 items  
  Neighborhood Market: 42,286 sq.  ft. with approx. 38,845 items  ! 
  SAM'S CLUB: 127,776 sq. ft. with  approx. 6,000 items  
    
     
  
  
          People
  
  
          Employment  Facts       
   In Idaho,       the total number of Wal-Mart associates is 6,774 (as of October 2005).    
   The average wage for regular full-time hourly       associates in Idaho       is $9.20 per hour (Wal-Mart Discount Stores, Supercenters and Neighborhood       Markets). Additionally, associates are eligible for performance-based       bonuses.    
   In recent years,       Wal-Mart has contributed four percent of an associate's eligible pay to       their combined Profit Sharing and 401(k) Plan.   
         
    
    Suppliers       
   In 2004, Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. spent $184,548,727       for merchandise and services with 335 suppliers in the state of Idaho.       As a result of Wal-Mart's relationship with these suppliers, Wal-Mart       supports 15,934 supplier jobs in the state of Idaho.          
   Supplier       figures provided by Dun & Bradstreet   
             
    
    Taxes  and Fees    ! 
       
   Wal-Mart collected on       behalf of the state of Idaho       more than $68.3 million in sales taxes in 2004    
   Wal-Mart paid more       than $9.8 million in state and local taxes in the state of Idaho       in 2004.   
         
    
    Community  Involvement       
   In       2004, Wal-Mart Stores and SAM'S CLUB gave $753,242 to local causes and       organizations in the communities they serve in the state of Idaho.        In addition, many charities and organizations received in-kind donations       and additional funds raised through stores and CLUBS in the amount of       $219,492, for a grand total of $972,734 contributed through Wal-Mart's presence       across the state.    
   Examples of some of       the efforts in Idaho       that our company made in 2004 to reach out to the community include:        
      Safe Neighborhood        Heroes Grants: $39,250     
      Literacy Grants:        $30,250     
      Community        Scholarships: $33,000     
      Teacher of the Year        Grants: $27,000    
   
   Idaho's 2004 Teacher of the Year is Conrad       Garner from Bonners        Ferry        High School       in Bonners Ferry.   
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