Equal Employment
Opportunity (EEO)
2005 – Wal-Mart
Stores, Inc.
Equal employment opportunity (EEO) is an important issue for
corporate shareholders, employees and management, especially as the workforce
becomes more diverse. According to the bipartisan Glass Ceiling Commission
report, a positive diversity record makes a positive impact on the bottom line.
Yet, while women and minorities comprise two thirds of our
population and 57% of the United States workforce, the Commission found that
they represent little more than 3% of executive-level positions. Various projections
indicate that women and minorities will constitute 62% of the workforce by
2005.
Workplace discrimination has created a significant burden for
shareholders due to the high cost of litigation and potential loss of
government contracts. Such litigation also damages corporate and industry
images. In the pharmaceutical, petroleum and retail industries, discrimination
lawsuits have resulted in a financial impact on shareholders that adds up to
billions of dollars.
The Glass Ceiling Commission recognized that "public
disclosure of diversity data-specifically data on the most senior positions-is
an effective incentive to develop and maintain innovative, effective programs
to break the glass ceiling barriers." The Commission recommended that both
the public and private sectors work toward increased public disclosure of
diversity data.
"Accurate data on minorities and women can show where progress
is or is not being made in breaking glass ceiling barriers," observed the
Commission.
More than 200 major U.S. corporations disclose EEO-1 reports to
their shareholders. Among these companies are many who have experienced large
racial and gender discrimination lawsuits; for example, Texaco, Shoney, Denny,
Smith Barney and Coca-Cola. Today
virtually every industry can claim some corporations who provide these reports
to their shareholders. As an example,
some institutions in the financial industry that have disclosed comprehensive
EEO-1 data are Bank of America, Bank of New York, Citigroup, Wachovia, Merrill
Lynch and JPMorganChase.
RESOLVED: The shareholders request our company
prepare a report, at reasonable cost and omitting confidential information,
within four months of the annual meeting, including the following:
1. A chart identifying
employees according to their sex and race in each of the nine major
EEOC-defined job categories for the last three years, listing either numbers or
percentages in each category;
2. A summary description of any affirmative action policies and
programs to improve performances, including job categories where women and
minorities are underutilized;
3. A description of any policies and programs oriented specifically
toward increasing the number of managers who are qualified females or
minorities;
4. A general description of how our company publicizes its
affirmative action policies and programs to merchandise suppliers and service
providers.
Sponsors:
Lead: Sisters of Charity of St. Elizabeth, NJ,
Sr. Barbara Aires; American
Baptist Home Mission Society; Catholic Healthcare West; Maryknoll Fathers and
Brothers; Sisters of St. Dominic of Caldwell, NJ; Sisters of St. Joseph,
Philadelphia; Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament; Trillium Asset Management; Walden
Asset Management