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Home Business • Finance

Starbucks workers plan 3-day walkout at 100 stores around the US

by Edinburg Post Report
December 16, 2022
in Business • Finance
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Starbucks workers around the U.S. are planning a three-day strike starting Friday as part of their effort to unionize the coffee chain’s stores.

More than 1,000 baristas at 100 stores are planning to walk out, according to Starbucks Workers United, the labor group organizing the effort. The strike will be the longest in the year-old unionization campaign.

This is the second major strike in a month by Starbucks’ U.S. workers. On Nov. 17, workers at 110 Starbucks stores held a one-day walkout. That effort coincided with Starbucks’ annual Red Cup Day, when the company gives reusable cups to customers who order a holiday drink.

More than 264 of Starbucks’ 9,000 company-run U.S. stores have voted to unionize since late last year.

Starbucks opposes the unionization effort, saying the company functions better when it works directly with employees. But the company said last month that it respects employees’ lawful right to protest.

Tori Tambellini, a former Starbucks shift supervisor and union organizer who was fired in July, said she will be picketing in Pittsburgh this weekend. Tambellini said workers are protesting understaffed stores, poor management and what she calls Starbucks’ “scorched earth method of union busting,” including closing stores that have unionized.

Workers United noted that Starbucks recently closed the first store to unionize in Seattle, the company’s hometown. Starbucks has said the store was closed for safety reasons.

Starbucks employees, including Gizem Adsoy, center, and Rachel Simandl, join other Starbucks employees and supporters in a nationwide strike, at the Starbucks in the 5900 block of N. Ridge Avenue in Chicago on Dec. 16, 2022. (Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune)

The coffee giant also cited safety concerns as the reason for closing a store in the Edgewater neighborhood of Chicago in October, shortly before it was set to begin bargaining. The union has slammed the decision to close the store as “union-busting.”

“We are going on strike to protest illegal store closures, including (but sadly not limited to) the closing of our ‘sister store’ in Edgewater, which won its union vote the same day we did,” Starbucks worker Teddy Hoffman, who works at a different Edgewater store, said in a statement.

In the Chicago area, strikes were planned at four North Side Starbucks and at locations in suburban Cary and Glenview.

Starbucks and the union have begun contract talks in about 50 stores but no agreements have been reached.

The process has been contentious. According to the National Labor Relations Board, Workers United has filed at least 446 unfair labor practice charges against Starbucks since late last year, including that the company fired labor organizers and refused to bargain. The company, meanwhile, has filed 47 charges against the union, among them allegations that it defied bargaining rules when it recorded sessions and posted the recordings online.

So far, the labor disputes haven’t appeared to dent Starbucks’ sales. Starbucks said in November that its revenue rose 3% to a record $8.41 billion in the July-September period.

Chicago Tribune contributed.

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