Business & Tech

Hundreds Of NJ Walmart Workers Laid Off, Jobs Cut In 5 States Nationwide

Workers at a Walmart fulfillment center in New Jersey have to find a new job as the company reduces evening and weekend shifts.

The layoffs are happening at e-commerce fulfillment centers in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, California, Florida, and Texas per a Reuters report. This is where companies manage their inventory and prepare orders to go directly to consumers.
The layoffs are happening at e-commerce fulfillment centers in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, California, Florida, and Texas per a Reuters report. This is where companies manage their inventory and prepare orders to go directly to consumers. (Scott Anderson/Patch)

NEW JERSEY — Walmart is laying off thousands of workers at five facilities across the U.S., including one in New Jersey, and giving them 90 days to find a new job.

The layoffs are happening at e-commerce fulfillment centers in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, California, Florida, and Texas per a Reuters report. These centers are where companies such as Amazon and Walmart manage their inventory and prepare orders to go directly to consumers.

Just over 200 workers at the Pedricktown (Salem County) facility have been let go as the grocery giant reduces evening and weekend shifts, a company spokesperson confirmed to Reuters.

Find out what's happening in Across New Jerseyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

A Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN notice) from the NJ Department of Labor lists 201 positions lost, and an effective date of June 2 for the South Jersey facility.

WARN notices are mandated by U.S. Labor law and require companies with 100 or more employees to give 60 days’ notice before closing a plant or having a mass job action.

Find out what's happening in Across New Jerseyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Walmart has 5,317 retail units across the United States, where employees laid off at the fulfillment centers are eligible for a role, according to Reuters.

Walmart has made moves to streamline its fulfillment centers with new technology, which the company said could also create new tech-focused jobs and get groceries to customers faster. Last June, the Arkansas-based retailer announced it would be building four next-generation fulfillment centers that combines human workers with robotics and machine learning “to set an entirely new precedent for us on the speed of fulfillment.” The Pedricktown location is one of these, the company said.

As Forbes reported, a number of big American companies including Meta, Amazon, Bed Bath & Beyond, Indeed, and Disney have been handing down layoffs in recent weeks as well as Walmart.

Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.