Wet Seal In Hot Water For Racist Hiring (and Firing) Practices

In completely shitty news from the world of retail and white-washing disguised as “brand management,” it seems that Wet Seal, a popular retail company that sells “fast fashion at affordable prices” to tween and teen girls, has a top-down racial discrimination policy in place. The New York Times reports that three of the retail company’s former managers have filed a race discrimination lawsuit against their former employer, seeking back pay as well as general and punitive damages. They are also hoping the case will become a class-action suit that will represent more than 250 current and former black managers at Wet Seal.

Most people experience discrimination without having any hard evidence to present in a court of law (which I’ll get back to in a second) but the thing about this case is that there is, actually, hard evidence to present to a court of law. A major piece of the lawsuit is the inclusion of an email sent to lower-level managers in March 2009 by the company’s then senior vice president for store operations, Barbara Bachman, after she inspected several stores. “African American dominate — huge issue,” she wrote.

The day after the offending email was sent, plaintiff Nicole Cogdell was terminated. Kai Hawkins, another plaintiff who worked at a different mall (in a different state) was told to either hire more white employees or risk losing her job. Both Cogdell and Hawkins also witnessed other explicit incidents of racism within the corporation: Cogdell heard Bachman say she wanted someone with “blond hair and blue eyes” to work at the store, and Hawkins reported many black employees lost their jobs with no explanation, despite their positive performances at work.

Wet Seal, which is based in California, has issued a statement denying “any and all allegations of race discrimination” while claiming they’re “an equal opportunity employer with a diverse work force and customer base.” They’ve promised to “vigorously defend this matter,” however I suspect they’re going to have a little bit of trouble seeing as there is tangible evidence against them.

I’m not the only one thinking (well, let’s be real, hoping) the company’s defense won’t hold up in court. The plaintiffs’ lead lawyer, Brad Seligman, seems confident that his clients have a strong case. Seligman is no stranger to corporate class-action cases for discrimination in the work place: he was the lead lawyer in the class-action gender discrimination suit against Wal-Mart, which was filed on behalf of more than 1.5 million women. Riese wrote about the case and the outcome extensively (spoiler: Wal-Mart won, justice lost) and the whole thing was really upsetting and infuriating. So what gives Seligman “high-hopes” for this case?

Basically, unlike the Wal-Mart case, Wet Seal’s discrimination is “an explicit corporate policy…This is old-school, straight-up discrimination,” Seligman said. While it’s unbelievably horrible that this is still happening, the fact that the discrimination occurring was so blatant and so sanctioned by the company may actually help the plaintiffs in court.

Lead lawyer Brad Seligman with a group of women who filed the Wal-Mart gender discrimination suit and ultimately lost. Via Associated Press

This is not the first time a situation like this has come along. The Times recalled the 2003 federal lawsuit against Abercrombie & Fitch for similar race biases in hiring. But what is really troubling when examining these lawsuits is thinking about all the times things like this happen in the world and we do not hear about people going to court. Racism is real, just like sexism is real, but as Rachel wrote when analyzing the Supreme Court decision over the Wal-Mart class-action case, “there isn’t strong interest from the judicial branch [in our country] in confirming that women, and other groups, face institutionalized oppression…”

Hopefully in the case against Wet Seal, there will be enough evidence to make a strong case in court and win justice for the employees who lost their jobs thanks to a company’s misguided and bigoted branding strategy. But what about the people who do not have tangible evidence for the oppressions they face? What about the workers whose bosses don’t send explicit emails but rather make lewd comments or pass over them for promotions? What about the workplaces that just happen to pay their male staff more than they pay their female staff for the exact same job, and no one is the wiser because it’s not polite to ask your co-workers what they’re making? What about all these small, insidious, seemingly “not a big deal” injustices that happen every single day? A 2000-2002 study by The Poverty Action Lab on racial discrimination in the hiring process found that “resumes with white-sounding names received 50 percent more callbacks than those with black names.” Researchers determined that “a white name  name yielded as many more callbacks as an additional eight years of experience.”

These things add up to be a Very Big Deal, but as of this moment, we cannot always take legal action to make things right. In fact, we rarely can. In this economy, we’re more likely than ever to put up with perceived injustice at work in order to make ends meet, and cases like this could go a long way towards making sure having to make that choice isn’t the rule, but the exception.

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Vanessa

Vanessa is a writer, a teacher, and the community editor at Autostraddle. Very hot, very fun, very weird. Find her on twitter and instagram.

Vanessa has written 404 articles for us.

21 Comments

  1. Ugh. I haven’t shopped there since I was 11… but even preteen Kristen would have known this was fuuuucked.

  2. I don’t know how to feel about the fact that my auto-reaction to this newsstory was a flashback to a That’s So Raven epi where they try to catch racist hiring practices in action. Absolutely appalling to think that between then (circa 2004?) and now people are still just as ignorant

  3. I’m glad you mentioned the study about “white-sounding names”. I know that research has shown that women do a LOT better in the hiring process when resumes are handled with names blanked out, and I’ve suspected that people with black-sounding names would similarly benefit…but I’m still kind of shocked at the degree. It’s especially powerful because it cuts right past all the excuses for differential hiring.

    So clearly, name-deleted resumes should be the standard practice at any company that wants to be responsible. In fact, companies should be pressed to make this a policy, and companies that do have this policy should advertise it, until we all learn to look askance at any company that *doesn’t* advertise the policy. It should become like “we do not test on animals”.

    It won’t solve everything, but such a simple move could have such real effect… this really needs to happen.

    • i love this idea. i REALLY like the idea of holding companies responsible for their actions–if we’re going to pretend corporations are people, this is the route we should be taking…holding them accountable for their humanity (or lack thereof).

      also also also: i also must confess, i am not the one who included the study in the article–one of the lovely senior editors added it to my finished draft. so thank you, rachel/laura/laneia/riese, for furthering the discussion with that inclusion!

  4. wow. as somebody who has never heard of ‘wet seal’, this headline was all kinds of confusing. #boiledsemiaquaticmarinemammal

  5. “In this economy, we’re more likely than ever to put up with perceived injustice at work in order to make ends meet”

    I hate this because it’s so true. I know so many beaten down people who are putting up with such miserable corporate treatment because “good luck finding a job elsewhere”. =(

  6. I hate being the one who always opens with ‘as someone who works in fashion’ (design) but, besides the insanity (and frequency) of this still happening today (not just at WS! ‘Branding’ to a certain demographic to the exclusion of others is a major issue many places have.) There’s also the sheer backwardness of not seeing ‘African American dominate’ stores as a huge growth market opportunity, not ‘issue.’
    By firing competent managers and alienating their minority customers, as well as being an all around shitty company in other regards, I doubt they will survive to 2014. This is not a brand that has been doing well and to blame it on the black employees and customers is the kind of idiotic groupthink that people in PR and brand tend to come up with far too often.

    On a positive note, it this goes well and gets media attention, hopefully fewer companies will do this kinds of of racist ‘branding.’

    Best of luck to these employees and hopefully more will show up to support them. Here’s hoping they get WS for all it’s worth, and excellent new jobs… maybe JCP or Macy’s is hiring.

    • great point about exclusionary “branding” happening to a degree at many many many stores–sometimes i think it’s easiest to say “fuck this” to any place where we can obviously see racism/sexism/homophobia, but the sad truth is many companies have marketing plans just like wet seal’s but they’re not obvious about it and thus the consumers don’t “see” it, so we keep supporting them. and please, don’t hate “being the one” who shares a perspective from working inside the fashion world–i personally have zero experience in retail so it’s actually really informative to hear from someone who knows this world from the inside out. i can only report what i see/hear–you can tell me/us what you know, so thank you for that!

  7. I almost applied for a job at Wet Seal last summer and now I’m very glad I didn’t; I don’t want to be part of a company with these kinds of policies. I hope they get destroyed in court.

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