Wet Seal, a clothing retailer, is now at the center of anger
for making redundant its employees in a manner that was unnecessary and brutal.
The store just announced closing at least 60 stores within a week, giving
hundreds of part-time employees just a day’s notice, while managers got a few
additional days of beforehand notice. Unused vacation and sick days have gone
unpaid.
Wet Seal also became mired in a racial-discrimination
lawsuit that accused the retailer of firing black employees in favor of hiring
white workers. An investigation by the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission found evidence that Wet Seal corporate managers openly stated that
to be profitable the stores had to retain workers with "the Armani
look" -- meaning thin, blond and blue-eyed. Wet Seal agreed to pay $7.5
million to settle the lawsuit.
“If you were among those treated so shabbily by Wet Seal you
have to realize all you were to them was part of a spreadsheet...” said Liz Ryan, CEO and founder of Human
Workplace, a coaching and consulting firm in Boulder, Colorado.
Adding salt to the injury, while the company announced it
was in not financial state to pay severance pay, it did go ahead and authorize the
interim chief financial officer a $95,000 raise on the same day the closures
were announced.
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