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Wal-Mart will pay $40 million to workers
Wal-Mart Stores Inc., the world's largest retailer, has agreed to pay $40 million to as many as 87,500 current and former employees in Massachusetts, the largest wage-and-hour class-action settlement in the state's history.
The class-action lawsuit, filed in 2001, accused the retailer of denying workers rest and meal breaks, refusing to pay overtime, and manipulating time cards to lower employees' pay. Under terms of the agreement, which was filed in Middlesex Superior Court yesterday by the employees' attorneys, any person who worked for Wal-Mart between August 1995 and the settlement date will receive a payment of between $400 and $2,500, depending on the number of years worked, with the average worker receiving a check for $734.
"The magnitude is large - it's bigger than most settlements paid in wage-and-hour cases,'' said Justin M. Swartz of New York-based law firm Outten & Golden LLP, who has handled similar cases, including a pending case against Wal-Mart. "But you would expect it to be bigger since Wal-Mart is the biggest retailer.''