Workers push back against stores’ earlier holiday openings
Associated Press
MINNEAPOLIS
Count your blessings, then get to work.
That may be Thanksgiving for more retail workers this year, as stores desperate to pull in buyers on the first weekend of the holiday shopping season push their openings earlier and earlier. Unhappy workers who say it ruins their Thanksgiving celebrations are trying to persuade companies to back off, but retailers say they’re stuck: It’s what customers want.
Reporting to work at 11 p.m. Thanksgiving Day ruins what is supposed to be a day spent with family, said Anthony Hardwick, who works part time at a Target store in Omaha corralling carts. His online petition against Target Corp.’s plan to open at midnight on Black Friday had drawn more than 100,000 signatures from retail workers and the public by Wednesday, about two weeks after he launched it.
“The folks that work at Target are going to be working all night overnight on one of the most hectic retail days of the holidays,” Hardwick said. “They need to be well-rested for that, so they have to miss out on Thanksgiving if they’re going to be working overnight.”
Merchants are competing for shoppers on a weekend that can be critical for their annual sales and profits, and a growing number fear opening at 4 a.m. or 5 a.m., as they have in recent years, may be too late in this challenging economy. More than a decade ago, major retailers used to open their doors around 6 a.m. on Black Friday, but over the past five years they started to move that up to as early as 3 a.m.
A handful started limited testing of midnight openings several years ago. But midnight openings have proliferated this year, with Target Corp., Best Buy Co., Kohl’s Corp. and Bon-Ton Stores Inc. all announcing 12 a.m. openings for the first time. Macy’s, which opened eight stores at midnight last year, is opening all of its 800-plus Macy’s stores nationwide at that time this year.
Retailers say they’re responding to consumer demand for an ever- earlier start to the holiday shopping season.
“We have heard from our guests that they want to shop Target following their Thanksgiving celebrations rather than only having the option of getting up in the middle of the night,” said Molly Snyder, a spokeswoman for Minneapolis-based Target.
Wal-Mart Stores Inc., the world’s largest retailer, will be offering discounts on toys, home accessories and clothing starting at 10 p.m. Thanksgiving. The Bentonville, Ark.-based discounter, whose supercenters already operate round-the-clock, opened most of its other stores by midnight on Thanksgiving last year.
Toys “R” Us, which opened Thanksgiving Day for the first time last year, plans to open an hour earlier at 9 p.m. Gap Inc. will open nearly 1,000 stores across its Banana Republic, Old Navy and namesake stores on Thanksgiving in the U.S. That’s about 10 percent more than a year ago, according to Gap spokeswoman Louise Callagy.
Bucking the trend, Sears Holding Corp., which opened its Sears stores on Thanksgiving for the first time last year, is going back to 4 a.m. Friday this year. Its Kmart stores, however, will be open Thanksgiving Day as they have been since 1991, spokesman Tom Aiello said. J.C. Penney Co. is another holdout, sticking with its regular 4 a.m. opening Black Friday.
People in several fields — even retail — traditionally have had to work on Thanksgiving, said Ellen Davis, a spokeswoman for the National Retail Federation. But it seems to be the midnight openings that shifted sentiment toward keeping Thanksgiving Day itself out of the fray.
Some retail workers said they’re just glad to be employed.
Mary Huskey, who has worked at a Walmart in suburban St. Louis for 21 years, said most retail employees know they’re going to have to work on holidays, especially Black Friday.
“Retail is retail. People want to shop, and if they want to shop, we have to be there for them,” Huskey said. “It’s a living, and you know that when you go into it. I’m just thankful that I have a place to work, unlike other people that don’t have a job.”