Sunday, October 26, 2014

Costco Will Close On Thanksgiving So Employees Can Be With Their Families

By karoli

See? It really isn't that hard to be decent. Support the companies who support their employees.
Costco Will Close On Thanksgiving So Employees Can Be With Their Families
Geez, Walmart. What's your excuse? If Costco can absorb the hit for letting all its employees have Thanksgiving Day off to be with their families, why can't you?

And why can't the other retailers who feed the insanity we call Black Friday? For many years now I've made a point of avoiding all of those nutty sales and only patronizing stores that are decent to their employees. I won't shop Walmart on general principles anyway, but there are many other retailers whose door will not be darkened by the likes of me on the Friday after Thanksgiving or any time during the holiday season, for that matter.

ThinkProgress:
Costco is among the companies that will choose to remain closed on Thanksgiving Day, a spokesperson confirmed to ThinkProgress. None of the nearly 127,000 people who work for the company will have to come in on the holiday.
In explaining why it decided to stay closed, the spokesperson said, “Our employees work especially hard during the holiday season and we simply believe that they deserve the opportunity to spend Thanksgiving with their families. Nothing more complicated than that.”
That makes at least five chain stores that have decided to resist the new trend of beginning Black Friday sales a day early, thus ensuring that a large number of employees will have to come to work.
Dillard’s, Burlington, REI, and American Girl all told ThinkProgress they will remain closed on the holiday, and Dillard’s explained that its decision was part of its “longstanding tradition of honoring of our customers’ and associates’ time with family.”
Other stores have let the holiday shopping craze creep into workers’ Thanksgiving meal time. Macy’s announced this year that it will open at 6 p.m. on the holiday, while Walmart will be open all day, requiring nearly 1 million people to show up to work. The trend really took off last year, with at least 12 major brands deciding to open on Thanksgiving itself and thus require at least some people to be at work during mealtime.

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