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How workers say they brought Starbucks to the negotiating table

For a long time, it seemed like Starbucks and its employees would never make any progress on a contract.

It’s been more than two years since the Elmwood Avenue store formed a union, and there’s still no contract. But that changed in February, when the coffee giant agreed to negotiate a “basic framework” for bargaining with its more than 400 union-backed stores.







Starbucks Workers United members protest in Delaware and Chippewa

Starbucks employees protest outside the Starbucks on Delaware Avenue and Chippewa Street in Buffalo in 2023. The protests and boycotts have negatively impacted the brand and its stock price.


Libby March, file photo


How did the workers get here? They took the legal route, filing so many labor complaints that they resulted in more than 100 findings of violations by the National Labor Relations Board.

But they’ve also done it by involving as many facets of the community as possible, including faith leaders, college students, local politicians and social justice groups — and by continuing to regularly organize stores across the country.

These external forces have put pressure on socially conscious investors and new CEO Laxman Narasimhan, who has suggested that the protests and boycotts are negatively impacting the brand and its stock price.

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Even multiple victories at the NLRB have not moved the needle as much as community pressure, because the legal process is moving too slowly, workers said.

“Everything comes after the fact or too late for the workers who have been harmed by these companies, or the repercussions for the companies are a slap on the wrist,” Michelle Eisen — a Starbucks worker who organized the Elmwood Avenue store and is credited with kicking off the nationwide Starbucks unionization wave — said at a recent panel on labor organizing.

These community partnerships have helped Workers United run three union candidates for Starbucks board seats, pressure universities to get rid of Starbucks on campus, organize global boycotts and exert legislative pressure on laws affecting the companies — all moves that have left Starbucks concerned about its bottom line, workers said.







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Autumn Rosenthal, 9, applauds during a news conference outside Buffalo General Medical Center in Buffalo on August 18, 2022. The local union supported Starbucks workers in their efforts to win a contract.


Libby March, Buffalo News


“We didn’t act alone. This was really a multi-layered, multi-faceted attack,” Eisen said. “The reality is that we’re all working together for a common goal, and in this case, it was getting to the negotiating table in a meaningful way.”

Going more than two years without a signed contract at a Starbucks location is a very long time compared to other labor disputes. Dragging out the situation is a well-known corporate tactic, especially in industries with high turnover, where new workers must constantly be convinced to join the unions’ cause. The longer an employer can go without a contract, the more workers may begin to wonder whether the fight is really worth it.


A new Starbucks is coming to Elmwood Village

Starbucks is moving forward with plans to open a new Elmwood store less than a mile from its original location at 933 Elmwood Ave. at 531-541 Elmwood Ave. in a former KeyBank branch on the corner of West Utica.

Workers mobilized customers and community members to show their support, highlighting their fight for wage increases, better working conditions, better hours, and other issues, and eventually called for a boycott. Starbucks Workers United joined forces with other groups, including other unions, to provide support and expertise.

“A lot of labor unions, including SEIU, have helped us in a number of ways, including financially, because Starbucks is a company that literally makes over a million dollars an hour in the United States alone. They have an infinite amount of resources,” Eisen said.

They also aligned with the Strategic Organizing Center, a coalition of the Service Employees International Union, the Communications Workers of America and the United Farmworkers of America, which has worked on campaigns such as the “Fight for $15” to win a $15 minimum wage for fast food workers.

The SOC had proposed running three union candidates for the Starbucks board. The candidates withdrew before a vote could even be held, with Starbucks agreeing to work toward a contract agreement.

Workers also rallied with college and university students. Within 24 hours of launching their school campaign, employees at 21 university Starbucks locations called for a union vote.


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The Starbucks Workers United union called Judge Robert A. Ringler’s 59-page ruling a “monumental victory.”

“We worked with universities and student organizations that wanted to kick them off their campuses,” Eisen said. “Students held protests, handed out leaflets, picketed, and went to the university and said, ‘We don’t want you serving a product on this campus that mistreats its workers.’”

Workers United also lobbied legislatively, working to change a law affecting gift cards that could have cost Starbucks millions of dollars a year in Washington state, where Starbucks is headquartered.

A law once required that unspent gift card money be used for community programs, but Starbucks and other companies lobbied and won to have the unspent funds returned to the store that issued the gift card. Workers enlisted the help of community groups and politicians to lobby for the law to be reinstated.

The measure was defeated in committee. If passed, it would have cost Starbucks more than $200 million in revenue.

“What was the tipping point? We’re not going to know and they’re never going to tell us,” Eisen said. “But we can look back and say, ‘OK, we hit them here, here, here and here.’”

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Such collaborative approaches are essential to successful union organizing, said Kathleen Mulligan, director of union leadership programs at the Worker Institute.

“When unions and community organizations are not on the same page, it’s a gift to the corporate agenda,” she said.

Grace Bogdanove, vice president of the Western New York nursing home division for 1199SEIU, United Healthcare Workers East, agrees.

“In the Buffalo area, the population density is not as high as New York,” she said. “That’s why we’re starting to build relationships with community organizations and partners, which I think is a great thing.”

It’s an approach that unions have taken beyond the Starbucks campaign.


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During a recent visit to Buffalo, labor activist and author Bill Fletcher Jr. spoke about notable contract campaigns.

The 1199SEIU United Healthcare Workers East union and employer RCA Healthcare Management/Absolut Care reached a tentative two-year agreement earlier this month that prevented a strike by more than 300 workers at four nursing homes in western New York.

“When I meet with a group of members and their union representative, they don’t trust me right off the bat. I have to show them that I’m going to be there for them every day, that I’m going to fight for them and that I’m going to be honest about what I can do,” Bogdanove said. “And I take that same approach to building relationships with the community.”

Organizations begin to engage each other in climate change when they see how the issues also affect their own members, she said. For example, when workers can see how climate change issues can affect their jobs, and environmental activists can see how employers’ practices affect the climate.

Engaging faith leaders is also crucial, Bogdanove said, as it was in his fight for Medicaid reform, working with Buffalo NAACP President the Rev. Mark Blue.

Blue has done everything from writing op-eds on the topic to hosting community forums to discuss the inequities that affected people of color due to Medicaid shortfalls.

“The governor’s office responded to this more than a health care union,” Bogdanove said.

In the fight to increase Medicaid funding, SEIU1199 has even partnered with employers.

“Because this was a funding battle, right? You have to recognize that Medicaid dollars in your state don’t cover the real cost of care and recognize that that’s a barrier at the bargaining table to getting the wages and benefits that our members need to live healthy lives and have long-term careers in health care,” she said.