Walmart
Corporation
702
Southwest
Bentonville,
AR 72716
1-800-925-6278
3/26/19
President of Walmart, Doug McMillon
Walmart Super Market
Dear Doug McMillon,
Through out the world
there is a huge problem with hunger and the lack of food but in the United states
that doesn’t seem to be the case, it is actually the opposite. We in fact have
so much food that we are throwing it out by the tons. The amount of food that
is being thrown away would have been enough to feed 190 million adults everyday
in 2012. The United States has a population of over 320,000,000 people total.
That would have been a lot of people that could have been fed that needed it.
Mr. McMillon, you are the president of a very successful chain of super
markets. There is a total of 5,358 Walmart stores spread across the Unites
States with about 120,000 items sold inside each store. Now say only half of
that 120,000 is food, making 60,000 of the products in your store’s edible
items for the buyer to purchase and eat. Whether it be fresh fruits and veggies,
processed food, food that is made at the store, etc. how much of that food is
being thrown away and wasted? I am not talking about food that a buyer threw
away themselves after they took it home, didn’t eat it in time and it went bad
but, but what Walmart throws away every day. I understand that there is a
reason for expiration dates and sell by dates. They can save your company from
being sued if a consumer where to eat one of your products after the past
expiration date. But, I also understand there has been some reports and videos
of trash can after trash can being filled with food that your company is
throwing away. Obviously, Walmart is not the only store that is wasting food
and your company is not the only one to blame but Walmart is one of the biggest
stores in the United States. That is why it is called a super market. I want to
purpose a solution to this issue we face as a country. With perishable items
that were not sold by the “sell-by” date but aren’t expired yet, they are taken
to shelters and donated to them instead of being thrown away. Or, put in a certain
section of the store that explains that theses items have not gone bad but have
passed the “sell-by” date. Of course, I understand that all of this is easier
said than done. I do not know the rule and regulations that follow expiration
dates and sell-by dates, but I also understand that some foods (not dairy
normally) are fine past the expiration date and they can still be eaten. Giving
the food that Walmart is throwing out because it doesn’t look pretty any more
or haven’t been purchased in time to the people that want it and need it will
help reduce the amount of waste the United States sees each year. 130 pounds per
person is being thrown away and just ends up sitting in landfills. I don’t even
weight 130 pounds. That’s like throwing away an entire person. Please consider
these small changes that will hopefully prevent perfectly good food to just sit
on a landfill.
Sincerely,
Payson Coverley
Payson Coverley
I think this presents good evidence that backs up your argument alothough i dont think stores are allowed to sell food that is past its sell by date however i think that stores can put it on sale before it expires or donate it before it expires.
ReplyDeleteYou make a lot of valid points and I hope that more of the Walmart chains change their sell by date policies. To limit the waste of produce and perishable items.
ReplyDelete