image description

Walmart Implementing COVID-19 Restrictions

Print Story | Email Story
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Walmart is instituting strict limits on access to its more than 4,700 stores across the nation. 
 
As of Saturday, April 4, the number of customers allowed in store will be limited to five per every 1,000 square feet, or about 20 percent of each store's capacity.
 
Associates will direct customers to a marked queue at a single-entry door  and they will be admitted one-by-one and counted. Associates and signage will remind customers of the importance of social distancing while they're waiting to enter a store – especially before it opens in the morning.
 
"While many of our customers have been following the advice of the medical community regarding social distancing and safety, we have been concerned to still see some behaviors in our stores that put undue risk on our people," Dacona Smith, executive vice president and chief operating officer of Walmart U.S., wrote on the corporate site on Friday.
 
"We want to encourage customers to bring the fewest number of people per family necessary to shop, allow for space with other customers while shopping, and practice social distancing while waiting in lines. We're also seeing states and municipalities set varying policies regarding crowd control – which has created some confusion regarding shopping."
 
Walmart says it's taken measures to safeguard associates' health including expanding paid leave, reducing hours to accommadate overnight cleaning and stocking, installing sneeze guards, starting temperature checks, and providing masks and gloves.
 
"In this taxing and uncertain time, our associates have gone above and beyond to help Americans get the food, medicine and supplies they need," Smith wrote. 
 
Groceries and pharmacies, along with other food and medical services, have been deemed essential businesses in states that have ordered stay at home or shutdown advisories. However, stores have also been roping off what is considered "non-essential" items such as clothing to reduce the amount of time customers linger inside. 
 
Stores in Massachusetts have gradually implemented standards including social distancing benchmarks at registers and closed self-serve stations. 
 
At Walmart, customers will now be allowed to enter on a "one out, one in" once the store reaches the new capacity limits. A number of stores will also begin directing customers in a one-way movement using floor markers to prevent them from coming in close contact to each other.
 
Signage will remind customers to maintain social distancing and once they check out, they will be directed to exit through a different door than they entered.
 
"We always want people to feel welcome at Walmart, and we know that in ordinary times a store is a gathering place for members of a community to connect and socialize," said Smith. "We look forward to the time when that is again the case; however, we now want to prioritize health and safety by encouraging customers to do their shopping at a distance from others, then head home."

Tags: COVID-19,   Walmart,   


More Coronavirus Updates

Keep up to date on the latest COVID-19 news:


If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Clarksburg Holds Information Session CPA Warrant Article

CLARKSBURG, Mass. — An informational meeting on the Community Preservation Act will be held on Wednesday, May 1, at 6 p.m. at the Clarksburg Elementary School.
 
Voters at the annual town meeting on May 29 will be asked to approve adoption of the state law which will allow the town to collect a 3 percent surcharge on property taxes for use for affordable housing, open space and recreation, and historic preservation. A percentage of the funds collected by the town are matched by the state.
 
The Historical Commission requested the question be placed on the town meeting warrant. Passage at town meeting would put the CPA on the Nov. 5 general election ballot. 
 
The slide presentation by commissioners will cover what the act is and what adopting it would mean to residents and the community. This will be followed by Q&A.
 
View Full Story

More North Adams Stories