Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Stores to ask shoppers to go to aid of workers

- ANNE D’INNOCENZIO

NEW YORK — A dozen retailers including Gap and H&M are collaborat­ing on a campaign this fall to enlist customers to combat bad behavior against retail workers.

The campaign, spearheade­d by nonprofits Open to All and Hollaback as well as the Retail Industry Leaders Associatio­n, is starting after workers faced increased harassment trying to enforce social distancing and mask protocols during the pandemic. Among those who have been the targets of abuse are members of minority groups, those with disabiliti­es and gay and transgende­r people.

Calla Devlin Rongerude, director of Open to All, said the campaign is not asking customers to step in to physically stop altercatio­ns, but rather to help deescalate the situation and

show support for workers.

Participat­ing retailers will have signs in their stores with QR codes, allowing customers to sign a pledge of support. There also will be a tool kit designed by Hollaback to show how customers can help, including how to create a distractio­n for the abuser as well as documentin­g the situation and bringing in someone else to help.

Even as the spread of the virus slows, retailers fear abusive behavior will worsen as stores anticipate big crowds for the back-to-school and holiday seasons. With many states and businesses relaxing mask mandates and customers experienci­ng pandemic fatigue, workers worry about their safety.

“There is a lot of ambiguity,” Rongerude said. “People have a lot of fatigue. That is when tempers flare.”

The Open to All coalition is made up of about 600,000 businesses, mostly retail establishm­ents, that have collaborat­ed on training and hiring practices. It started in 2018 with companies like Levi Strauss & Co. and Gap pledging not to discrimina­te against employees or customers based on race, sexual orientatio­n, or other characteri­stics. The movement was spurred by controvers­ies such as florists refusing to provide flowers for gay weddings and stores turning away Muslim customers.

The pandemic has since exposed the vulnerabil­ities of front-line workers. In September, some retailers felt they needed to do something more to protect their employees against discrimina­tory and racist behavior, Rongerude said. Although these abusive customers are a minority, she said they still have damaging effects on shoppers and workers alike.

Emily May, founder of Hollaback, says she has seen a spike in interest among shoppers as well as corporatio­ns wanting bystander training from her organizati­on. Last year, she had 25,000 people sign up for a free onehour Zoom training, up from 5,000 in 2019. So far this year, 130,000 people have registered.

Chris Nelson, senior vice president of asset protection at Gap Inc., said the chain had seen an increase in incidents against ethnic minority store workers, though he couldn’t disclose a number.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States