Las Vegas Review-Journal

Low-cost access to college new perk for workers

Walmart offers benefit to lure, keep employees

- By Anne D’innocenzio The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Walmart is offering its employees a new perk: affordable access to a college degree.

America’s largest private employer, which has helped its workers get their high school or equivalenc­y degrees, hopes the new benefit will help it recruit and keep higher quality entry-level employees in a tight U.S. labor market.

The company is working with Denver-based startup Guild Education to give workers the chance to obtain a bachelor’s degree in business or supply-chain management. It will cost a dollar a day at one of three nonprofit universiti­es with online programs that have had success working with adult learners: the University of Florida, Brandman University and Bellevue University. The company plans to expand to more types of degrees.

It also will offer college-prep classes for workers who need extra help. Walmart is subsidizin­g the cost of tuition, books and fees.

Both full-time and part-time workers who have been with the company at least 90 days will be eligible, Walmart said. About 68,000 of Walmart’s 1.4 million U.S. employees are expected to enroll in the first five years, based on interest from its workers, said Julie Murphy, executive vice president of people at Bentonvill­e, Arkansas-based Walmart. Walmart declined to disclose the cost of the program.

The move underscore­s how retailers and restaurant chains are under pressure to improve the skills of their workers as shoppers move online. Store chains including Walmart have raised wages as low unemployme­nt gives trained retail workers more options.

Walmart has said the tax overhaul helped it give workers one-time bonuses and expand parental leave benefits. Critics say Walmart should share even more of its profits with employees. But a shareholde­r proposal presented Wednesday, calling on the company to invest as much money in the stock plan for employees as it does on share buybacks, was rejected.

Also defeated were proposals that would require Walmart to publish a report on racial and ethnic pay gaps and to create an independen­t chair.

The partnershi­p with Guild Education goes beyond Walmart’s program covering the cost of workers and eligible family members for earning a high school diploma or GED equivalent. The company also grooms managers at its Walmart Training Academy and has a career program for entry-level workers.

Guild Education, founded in

2015, works with other national chains such as Chipotle Mexican Grill, Taco Bell and Lowe’s on their employee education programs. But Rachel Carlson, CEO and co-founder of Guild Education, said its partnershi­p with Walmart is unique in several ways, including its low upfront costs.

Walmart’s move puts it more in league with Starbucks, which three years ago began offering four years of tuition for an online college degree from Arizona State University.

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