Subject: A Shot Fired At The Starbucks Union: LRI INK

April 06, 2023

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A Shot Fired At The Starbuck's Union

by Kimberly Ricci

This month, there might be more union-related Starbucks developments than there are items on the coffeehouse giant’s drink menu. 

 

Not only did outgoing CEO Howard Schultz testify in front of the Senate, but both the union and the company are throwing increasingly venomous darts. As well, the ongoing bargaining table battle – without one single union contract to show for it, out of slightly under 300 unionized cafes – seems to be reaping buyer’s remorse. Let’s start there.

 

Workers remain frustrated with the customarily slow pace of collective bargaining. This drama led some union members to want to oust Workers United:

 

 

Stay tuned for a ruling, in other words. This petition could end the same way as a case involving a Nichol Hills, Oklahoma cafe, which saw its petition dismissed in November 2022, less than a year after certification. 

 

Still, the message is clear: Starbucks workers are making noises about a union that isn’t representing their interests. There will likely be more of this to come.

Squabbles between the union and company continue to be plentiful, including arguments over in-person versus virtual negotiations and some high-profile firings:


  • Chicago, Illinois: An eighth Starbucks location unionized in the Windy City with workers demanding training on handling drug overdoses in the location’s bathrooms. These workers also began fundraising for a union leader who was fired for tweeting their desire to “assassinate” Schultz after his Senate grilling.

  • Buffalo, New York: Starbucks stands by their firing of activist Alexis Rizzo for attendance issues, which she denies were as severe as claimed. The union calls the firing “retaliation at its worst.”

  • Exclusive perks a no-go: The NLRB came for a Starbucks tactic that we told you about last year: exclusively granting credit-card tipping to non-unionized stores. Starbucks maintained that unionized stores must bargain for perks, but the board declared that Starbucks violated the NLRA and must compensate the union workers accordingly.

            

Sen. Sanders finally got Howard Schultz on the hotseat, and it was as contentious as expected. Fiery video footage shows Sanders holding Schultz out as an example of whether “large corporations can break the law with impunity.” Schultz, who has made no secret of his anti-union stance, “unequivocally” denied violating labor laws. He stressed that no union would do what Starbucks does to provide college tuition for workers.

 

It suffices to say that there was no meeting of the minds.

 

Workers “welcomed” incoming CEO Laxman Narasimhan by going on strike at 100 cafes, their biggest walkout since last fall’s “Red Cup Rebellion.” Meanwhile, Narasimhan penned a letter expressing that the company “must care for” workers. He also pledged to work a monthly barista shift alongside frontline employees.

Links

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Union Bailout

 

NLRB's Opposition To ‘Captive Audience’ Meetings Violates Employer Free Speech, Suit Claims

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NLRB's General Counsel Offers More Guidance On Non-Disparagement Decision

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DOL’s Latest Worker Organizing Task Force Report Shows Continued Progress

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United Auto Workers union membership rose 3% in 2022 to 383,000

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Amazon Case At Labor Board Could Topple Multiple Precedents

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Chipotle Faces Shareholder Push Over Labor Rights

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Corruption

 

Female Union Leader Allegedly Threatened Her Husband's Accuser

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Organizing

 

Chicago REI Workers File For Union Election In Latest Retail Organizing Effort

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Center for Union Facts Launches Site Exposing Workers United's 'Alter Ego'

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Scoop: Top Democratic PR Firm Moving To Unionize

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Starbucks, Amazon Labor Union Wins Helped By Undercover 'Salts'

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Starbucks Union Draws Fire For Its Business Affiliations, Signaling Escalation Hostilities

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Starbucks Union Pressures Board Members WIth Billboards, Posters – and A Butter Sculpture

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Siding With Starbucks, House Republicans Probe Labor Agency

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House GOP Subpoenas Labor Authorities In Starbucks Union Dispute

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Healthcare

 

UW Health Nurses Confront Shortage, Campaign For Union Recognition

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Members Of Congress To Introduce Safe Staffing Bill To Address Hospital Crisis

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Judge: Centura Hospital Illegally Held Pay From Nurses

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Chicago’s Northwestern Hospital Staff Say Low Wages Contribute To Staffing Problem

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Planned Parenthood Affiliate Fires Two Union Leaders, Disciplines Entire Bargaining Team

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HCA Workers At 30 Hospitals Picket For Safer Staffing And Care Conditions

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Nurses, Federal Lawmakers Push For Staffing Ratio Legislation

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Nurses Protest California Hospital's Plan To Cut Labor, Delivery Services

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UK Health Strikes: Unions Call Of Monday's Planned Strike Action

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UAW

 

United Auto Workers Union Membership Rose 3% In 2022 To 383000

Link

 

Message From UAW President Shawn Fain

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Newly Elected UAW President Shawn Fain’s Speech To 2023 Special Bargaining Convention 

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New UAW Leader Tells Automakers: 'Our Membership Is Fed Up' 

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UAW President Sets Stage, Referring To The Big 3 Automakers As ‘The Enemy’

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Historic UAW Election Picks Reform Leader Who Vows More Aggressive Approach To Auto Negotiations

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Reformers Won Over UAW Members, But Their Priorities Face Obstacles

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Gov. Whitmer Touts Repeal Of Right To Work At UAW Bargaining Convention

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UAW Monitor Conflict Of Interest Exposed

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Will Lehman Files Official Protest With Department Of Labor Over Illegitimate UAW Elections

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Court: 2018 Musk Tweet Unlawfully Threatened UAW Efforts

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Tesla and Musk Lose Ruling on Factory Union Issues

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Teamsters

 

Striking Sysco Teamsters Extend Picket Lines To Nearly 1000 Workers Nationwide

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California Drivers And Warehouse Workers Join Strikes Against Sysco In Indiana And Kentucky

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Teamsters Reject Proposed Operation Changes At Yellow

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Yellow Accuses Teamsters Leadership Of Negotiating In 'Bad Faith'

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Teamsters Give UPS Negotiators A Hard ‘No’’ To Cost-Neutral Bargaining

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Education

 

University Of Alaska Grad Students Organize A Union

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Minimum Rising

 

Disney World Workers Approve New Contract Delivering An $18 Minimum Wage In 2023

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Advocates Rally For Local Control Of Minimum Wage In Pennsylvania

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About Labor Relations INK

Labor Relations INK is published weekly and is edited by Labor Relations Institute, Inc. Feel free to pass this newsletter on to anyone you think might enjoy it. New subscribers can sign up by visiting here.


If you use content from this newsletter please attribute it to Labor Relations Institute and include our website: http://www.LRIonline.com 


Contributing editors for this issue: Phillip Wilson, Greg Kittinger, Michael VanDervort, and Kimberly Ricci 


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About Labor Relations Institute

LRI exists to help our clients thrive and become extraordinary workplaces. We improve the lives of working people by strengthening relationships with their leaders and each other. For over 41 years LRI has led the labor and employee relations industry, driven by our core values and our proven process, the LRI Way.

 

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