It’s smart to hire veterans

The Lempert Report
February 12, 2013

Walmart pledges to hire 100,000 veterans over the next five years.

Pledging to hire 100,000 veterans over the next five years, Walmart does the right thing for returning soldiers and its own vast enterprise. The chain isn’t the first, but its program is the biggest in the nation. First Lady Michelle Obama launched Joining Forces in 2011—and by mid-2012, 2,000 businesses hired or trained more than 125,000 veterans and military spouses as part of the initiative. Last March, Safeway committed to hiring more than 900 military service members in 2012. This followed Safeway’s 2010 launch of a program designed specifically to transition military seeking leadership posts in the chain’s stores, distribution centers and manufacturing plants. The Walmart initiative helps the chain corner the market on young workers who are typically mature for their age, able to make decisions and perform under pressure, and who respect structure and a chain of command. And here’s a reality check – America’s workforce could benefit from the military discipline. Selling floors may become safer places, more secure from shoplifting and other threats due to the vigilance of new workers. And Walmart addresses its ongoing churn problem, which retail staffs experience everywhere. Walmart U.S. CEO Bill Simon’s announcement at the National Retail Federation conference pairs with the chain’s commitment to buy $50 billion more of U.S.-sourced merchandise over the next decade. Still, the jobs aren’t enough. These jobs need career paths. And we urge that the jobs be packaged with the kinds of psychological support and help re-orienting to society, which many veterans will need. Returning soldiers could use the hiring boost, which launches on Memorial Day. Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans had a 10.8% unemployment rate vs. 7.8% nationally, according to the Associated Press. People can’t afford to step aside from jobs in this economy to make way for veterans of recent unpopular wars. The nation didn’t do it in the Vietnam era, and it isn’t happening today.