The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Griffin woman files complaint against Walmart

- By Michael E. Kanell mkanell@ajc.com

A Griffin woman has filed legal action against Walmart for company managers’ treatment of her, charging them with discrimina­tion against pregnant workers.

In a filing with the Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission in Atlanta, Whitney Tomlinson, 30, a single mother, is asking for an unspecifie­d amount of money from the Arkansas-based retail giant, as well as for orders that would compel different behavior by the company.

“I want Walmart to make real changes so that what happened to me doesn’t happen to anyone else,” she said in a statement. “Walmart could have easily provided a way for me to keep working during my pregnancy, but they wouldn’t.”

Walmart spokesman Randy Hargrove said the company has not been served with the charge and will respond when it is. He said the company policies on pregnant workers have always exceeded requiremen­ts set by state and federal law.

“In this instance, there was not a job available that met Ms. Tomlinson’s requested accommodat­ions, so as a result she took a leave of absence,” he said.

Walmart has about 1.5 million in the United States. As of 2015, it was the largest employer in 20 states, including Georgia.

The company has been challenged recently by the online revolution and a very aggressive Amazon. But it has fought back with its own internet offerings and has annual revenues of about $486 billion.

Tomlinson said she was a packer in a Walmart distributi­on center when she became pregnant. As per pregnancy progressed, she sought medical attention and a doctor recommende­d that she avoid heavy lifting and wrote her a note to give to Walmart.

After she brought them the note, she said she was pressured to take unpaid leave. That leave of absence meant “severe financial hardship during an already vulnerable time,” according to her filing with the EEOC.

Tomlinson has support from three legal organizati­ons that already have filed a class-action suit against Walmart for alleged “pregnancy discrimina­tion.”

The groups are: the National Women’s Law Center, an advocacy group in Washington, D.C., A Better Balance, a New Yorkbased advocacy group focused on family issues, and Mehri & Skalet, a law firm based in Washington, D.C.

After her daughter was born, Tomlinson returned to work at Walmart as a packer.

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