Current:Home > ScamsStarbucks and Workers United agree to resume contract negotiations -Secure Growth Solutions
Starbucks and Workers United agree to resume contract negotiations
View
Date:2025-04-28 02:37:54
Starbucks and the union organizing its workers have agreed to restart contract talks after a standoff that has persisted for two and a half years.
Announced by both the coffee shop chain and Workers United on Tuesday, the breakthrough came during a mediation last week involving intellectual property rights and trademark litigation.
"Starbucks and Workers United have a shared commitment to establishing a positive relationship in the interests of Starbucks partners," the company said in a statement echoed in a separate announcement issued by Workers United.
Making a major concession, Starbucks agreed to provide the roughly 10,000 workers in unionized stores with pay hikes and benefits given non-unionized employees in May 2022, including allowing customers to add a tip to their credit card payments.
Workers have voted to unionize at nearly 400 company-owned Starbucks stores across the country, but none have reached a contract agreement with the Seattle-based chain.
The two sides have been persistently at odds with each other. Starbucks has been ordered to bring back workers fired after leading organizing efforts at their stores, and regional offices of the National Labor Relations Board have issued more than 100 complaints against Starbucks for unfair labor practices. That includes refusing to negotiate and withholding pay raises and other benefits granted other workers from unionized stores.
Starbucks in December signaled it wanted to ratify contracts with its union workers this year, after a seven-month impasse.
Asked by Starbucks what the company could do to show it was serious about returning to the bargaining table, the union offered a laundry list of demands, according to Michelle Eisen, a barista and organizer at the first unionized Starbucks store in Buffalo, New York.
"The major ones are going to be credit card tipping and back pay," said Eisen, who works as a production stage manager in addition to working as a barista since 2010. Workers are now to be given what they would have made had they been given the same raises and credit card tips given to non-union stores in May 2022. "It all has to be calculated," said Eisen. "This is a nightmare of their own making."
"We have not stopped fighting for two and a half years," said Eisen. "For every one barista that got tired and had to step away from this fight, there were 10 more to take their place."
Certain non-union locations that did receive credit card tipping have workers making an additional $2 to $3 an hour beyond their hourly pay, said Eisen. "If you're making around $19 an hour, an additional $3 an hour is pretty substantial."
— The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Kate GibsonKate Gibson is a reporter for CBS MoneyWatch in New York.
veryGood! (9)
Related
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Europe reaches a deal on the world’s first comprehensive AI rules
- Derek Hough reveals his wife, Hayley Erbert, had emergency brain surgery after burst blood vessel
- Boaters plead guilty in riverfront brawl; charge dismissed against riverboat co-captain
- Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
- Maine man dies while checking thickness of lake ice, wardens say
- Two men in Alabama riverfront brawl plead guilty to harassment; assault charges dropped
- Harvard president apologizes for remarks on antisemitism as pressure mounts on Penn’s president
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Slovak president says she’ll challenge new government’s plan to close top prosecutors office
Ranking
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- As UN climate talks near crunch time, activists plan ‘day of action’ to press negotiators
- Here's the average pay raise employees can expect in 2024
- Organized retail crime figure retracted by retail lobbyists
- SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
- November jobs report shows economy added 199,000 jobs; unemployment at 3.7%
- Man dies a day after exchange of gunfire with St. Paul police officer
- Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis Get into the Holiday Spirit in Royal Outing
Recommendation
Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
U.S. labor market is still robust with nearly 200,000 jobs created in November
FDA approves first gene-editing treatment for human illness
Harvard president apologizes for remarks on antisemitism as pressure mounts on Penn’s president
The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
Amazon asks federal judge to dismiss the FTC’s antitrust lawsuit against the company
Man who fired shots outside Temple Israel synagogue in Albany federally charged.
A pregnant woman in Kentucky sues for the right to get an abortion