'We Need Panic Buttons': Some Walmart Employees Begin Wearing Body Cameras Walmart has started a pilot program that they hope will deter situations with aggravated customers from escalating.

By David James

Chris Hondros | Getty Images

CNBC reports that Walmart is outfitting some employees with body cameras at several U.S. locations.

The pilot program, a source told CNBC, is not meant to be a theft deterrent, but as a "worker safety tool."

Stuart Appelbaum, president of the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union, told CNBC: "There's too much harassment that goes on throughout the year, but especially during the holiday season." He explained, "Everyone is stressed out. If they can't find the item they're looking for, they get upset and whom do they blame? They blame the shop worker."

"We need safe staffing and we need panic buttons," Appelbaum added. (Appelbaum's union does not represent Walmart.)

Related: Amazon Pulls Merch Celebrating Alleged UnitedHealthcare CEO Killer Luigi Mangione

Workers have been instructed not to wear the devices in employee break areas and bathrooms and only to "record an event if an interaction with a customer is escalating." Immediately following the recording, employees are told to tell another team member about it, and to log the event in Walmart's "ethics and compliance app."

Related: Sam's Club Exec Would Rather Quit Than Move to Arkansas

David Johnston, vice president of asset protection and retail operations for the National Retail Federation, says he believes that the cameras can be effective, citing the reverse-view functionality that allows the person being recorded to see themselves on the device's video screen. "The moment that you see yourself is probably [when] you're going to change your behavior, and that's what I think the use of a body-worn camera can do," he said.

A former retail employee, who spoke to CNBC on the condition of anonymity, is doubtful. "With these people, when they're in our faces and they're acting like they're going to hit us or they're making threats to meet us in the parking lot, they're not thinking rationally," they explained. "Even with a camera facing them, I don't think they would care in the moment."

All of this begs the question: has it really gotten that bad at Walmart? That's what Dr. Bryan D. Woodard, a Deputy in Texas, asks in a recent TikTok post that shows the cameras in action.

@deputybryanwoodard Believe it or not. WALMART employees are now wearing body cameras. #walmart #walmartfinds #walmartsyncalong #axon #bodycam #police #4upage #foryoupage ♬ original sound - Dr. Bryan D. Woodard

David James

Entrepreneur Staff

Staff writer

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Editor's Pick

Business News

Google, Spotify Down in a Massive Outage Affecting Tens of Thousands. Here's What We Know.

Both Google and Spotify appear to be down for thousands of users.

Business Ideas

70 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2025

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2025.

Growing a Business

Your Customers Are Talking About You — Here's How to Turn Their Feedback Into Profit

Listening to your customer has always been a strategic imperative. With countless options just a click away, consumers are gravitating toward brands that make them feel cherished and involved.

Business News

I Called Klarna's New AI Hotline to Talk to the Company's 'CEO' — Here's What Happened

Klarna's CEO voice-cloned himself and had the clone take customer calls over an AI-powered hotline.

Thought Leaders

6 Steps I Used to Escape Debt and Turn Crisis Into a Competitive Edge

Feeling afraid is natural. But feeling afraid every day? That's not sustainable, especially for entrepreneurs.

Growing a Business

3 Things You Need to Know About Building a Company That Lasts

If you want to build a business that lasts, technological solutions must be inscribed into the very fabric of your company's being. Here's why.