Layoffs have begun to sweep through Target Corp., even as the company's CEO assured Gov. Mark Dayton Monday that the retailer will maintain a robust headquarters in Minneapolis after the cuts.
Some vice presidents were terminated last week, employees told the Star Tribune, in the first of what the company has said will be "several thousand" job cuts.
One employee who declined to be identified said that probably a couple of dozen upper managers were let go Monday and gone by lunch. The employee said broader cuts were expected Tuesday.
"The mood is pretty somber, about what you would expect," the employee said.
Target CEO Brian Cornell met Dayton, whose father and uncles created Target Corp., for about 45 minutes Monday at Target headquarters. Also present were Lt. Gov. Tina Smith and top Target executives Jodee Kozlak, chief of human resources, and Tim Baer, chief legal officer.
"I asked for an assurance that they were committed to Minnesota, to Minneapolis, to keeping their headquarters here, their general operational headquarters," Dayton told reporters after the meeting. "I got strong reassurance that was their intent and the case, and they never considered anything else."
Cornell last week revealed plans to cut "several thousand" employees and said his goal was to create a "much more agile, effective organization."
The company has not said exactly how many people will be cut, nor in which departments, but has said the process could take two years. Target declined to elaborate on Monday.