laboursolidarity.org
The strike at Starbucks
United States

The strike at Starbucks

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The Network

The International Trade Union Network of Solidarity and Struggles salutes and publicises the important movement of Starbucks workers in the United States of America.

https://sbworkersunited.org

More than 18 months after national framework contract bargaining began, baristas are on strike to protest the growing list of unresolved unfair labor practices Starbucks has allegedly committed while the company also continues to stonewall progress toward a fair contract. 

A quick summary of how Starbucks is stonewalling progress toward a fair contract:

National framework bargaining began in April 2024. Over the subsequent nine months, baristas and Starbucks executives met for hundreds of hours and notched 33 tentative agreements that will tangibly improve the workplace.

In September 2024, union baristas first presented a set of economic proposals for negotiation to increase wages and benefits.

In December 2024, Starbucks said “no” to all of the baristas’ proposals and, in exchange, put forth an unserious economic package that did not raise wages in the first year of the contract, nor did it address the core issues of hours and staffing. Talks broke down.

Starbucks backtracked on the previously agreed-upon path forward. This prompted Workers United to file a national unfair labor (ULP) practice charge in December 2024 alleging Starbucks’ had failed to bargain in good faith and was undermining the representative status of the union.  This ULP was amended and expanded in April 2025.

In 2025, the company unlawfully implemented new policies without bargaining with the Union, such as components of “Back to Starbucks” and the restrictive new dress code, leading to more ULP charges.

Workers United has filed over 100 new ULPs over the last year.

Recently, Starbucks started saying they’ll go back to the bargaining table “to talk”—but simply going to the bargaining table is pointless without Starbucks’ commitment to offer new proposals that address baristas’ demands on increasing hours and staffing, raising pay, and resolving hundreds of unfair labor practices. 

We’ve been clear and consistent all year. Our three remaining, unaddressed demands are:

We demand better hours to improve staffing in our stores. Understaffing is rampant, leading to longer wait times as customer orders stream in. Yet too many baristas still aren’t getting enough hours to pay the bills or meet the threshold for benefits. Starbucks needs to invest in increasing our hours.

We demand higher take-home pay, so we can pay our bills. Too many baristas struggle to get by, while executives make millions. Starbucks needs to put more money toward our take-home pay.

We demand resolution for hundreds of outstanding unfair labor practice charges for union busting. The coffee giant has committed more labor law violations than any employer in modern history. Starbucks needs to fully resolve legal issues impacting baristas.

[https://sbworkersunited.org/our-strike/]

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