Starbucks Workers Vote to Strike on Red Cup Day
Starbucks Workers United secured 92% strike authorization to demand better pay, hours, and resolve unfair labor practice charges if contract talks fail by Nov. 13.
- On Nov. 13, Starbucks unionized workers will strike unless a contract is finalized, with 92% of voters approving the authorization, Starbucks Workers United said.
- After six months of no new proposals, stalled negotiations have driven the dispute, with Workers United saying Starbucks refused to address staffing, pay and hundreds of unfair labor practice charges.
- The strike would begin in at least 25 U.S. cities and could grow, with Workers United representing roughly 12,000 baristas while Starbucks cites 9,500 employees across 550 coffeehouses.
- The union warns the strike could disrupt Red Cup Day, but Starbucks says most company-owned stores and 7,000 licensed locations would stay open during the event.
- Facing over 1,000 labor charges and recent closures, Workers United warns an open-ended strike could surpass prior winter walkouts amid a $1 billion restructuring plan.
108 Articles
108 Articles
Starbucks workers to bosses: ‘No contract, no coffee!’
Cleveland Members and supporters of Starbucks Workers United (SBWU) held a “practice picket” outside the University Circle coffee shop in Cleveland on Nov. 1. SBWU has been holding practice pickets across the country since September and began a strike authorization vote on Oct. 24. On Nov. 5 the union announced . . . Continue reading Starbucks workers to bosses: ‘No contract, no coffee!’ at Workers.org
Starbucks workers are planning their ‘biggest strike’ ever
You may have to get your coffee somewhere else for a while, as a major union representing Starbucks’ employees has announced its members are prepared to walk off the job if they do not reach a new contract. The union represents only a fraction of Starbucks stores in the U.S., but the labor movement has been described as the company’s biggest yet — and it could have a significant impact on Starbucks as the holiday season approaches.Why are Starbu…
Slog AM: The Red Cup Rebellion, FAA Cuts Flights, Mamdani’s All Woman Transition Team
The Stranger's morning news roundup. by Micah Yip They’re calling it “the Red Cup Rebellion”: The Starbucks employee union voted to strike on November 13, aka Red Cup Day, when stores hand out reusable, free (with purchase) red cups to kick off the holiday season. The union said that after years of bargaining, Starbucks still hasn’t budged on their demands for better pay, more hours and resolutions of more than 700 unresolved unfair labor practi…
Starbucks' union workers plan strike next week unless deal reached
The strike would begin on Nov. 13, which is the day Starbucks plans to distribute free, reusable red cups.
'Red Cup Rebellion': Starbucks workers plan nationwide strike on Red Cup Day
Starbucks union members have voted to strike next week unless the company finalizes a labor contract. The walkout is scheduled for Nov. 13, Starbucks’ “Red Cup Day” — known as one of Starbucks’ busiest days of the year. Starbucks Workers United stated that employees in at least 25 cities, including Seattle, plan to go on strike. “There’s a lot of layoffs that just happened at Starbucks, and we’re not happy,” one Starbucks barista said. Ninety-tw…
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