WALMART forced all of its customers to evacuate after an unpleasant odor was detected.
A Pennsylvania Walmart was forced to evacuate the retailer when several customers said they were feeling nauseous.
Police said they believed the odor was coming from animal repellent that had been returned by a customer on Sunday, WFMZ reported.
According to the agency, employees at the store, located in Lower Nazareth Township northwest of Allentown, began ushering customers out immediately.
“We were dispatched in search of an unknown irritant that was placed in the store, causing medical issues for several people,” Hecktown Fire Company Chief Keith Brooks said in a statement to WFMZ.
It was reported that nine people were transported to a local hospital.
Brooks later confirmed that all those affected were in stable and ok condition.
A customer later told the outlet that he was inside the store when the announcement was made.
“They said all the staff went to the back of the store and then everyone panicked and made us come out the front.“, said the buyer.
“There were a lot of people outside coughing, a lot of people were put on hospital beds or stretchers.
The US Sun has reached out to Walmart for comment.
The odor is the latest in several incidents plaguing the megastore.
In addition to the unpleasant odor, many customers claimed that Walmart was overcharging.
A customer recently revealed that he was overcharged by $84 when the payment machines accidentally registered 4 cashiers instead of 1.
Lena Buckley Robertson of Missouri revealed that the incident occurred when she was using a human cashier at Walmart on Facebook publish.
“Check your receipt at Walmart,” Robertson warned.
“We had four additional cases of Monster drinks on our receipt,” she added before claiming that not even the cashier noticed the charge.
“It was $84 in expenses that we didn’t buy. I thought it was high when the total came in.”
They secured a refund from megachain, but “it took a few days.”
Other customers have raised concerns with Walmart’s new electronic price tags.
Walmart executives touted the new system as a way to quickly update prices without a human spending two days adjusting prices.
However, many buyers fear that the new system will allow item prices to change without notice.
“This will drive people away from Walmart,” said one Facebook user in response to a publish about new technology.
Others agreed, with many highlighting their concerns about the possibility of stores manipulating prices at the last minute.
“How do I budget when the price may change after I add the item to my cart but before I checkout?” a concerned shopper asked.
However, Greg Cathey, Walmart’s senior vice president of transformation and innovation, said the concerns were unfounded.
“There’s no way it’s going to be that one minute it’s going to be that price and the next minute it’s not going to be that price,” Cathey said during a shareholder meeting at the company’s headquarters.
In a statement, the megastore reported that the new labels were extensively tested throughout 2023.
“We have been testing innovative technologies that improve the way we drive price changes in stores – making us faster and improving the customer experience,” Walmart said in the statement. release.
“This represents a significant change in how I and other store associates manage pricing, inventory, order fulfillment and customer interactions.”
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