Medicine Hat News

Starbucks closes U.S. stores for anti-bias training

- TERRY TANG

Starbucks will close more than 8,000 stores nationwide on Tuesday to conduct anti-bias training, the next of many steps the company is taking to try to restore its tarnished image as a hangout where all are welcome.

After the arrests of two black men in Philadelph­ia last month at one of its stores, the coffee chain’s leaders apologized and met with the two men, but also reached out to activists and experts in bias training to put together a curriculum for its 175,000 workers.

That has put a spotlight on the littleknow­n world of “unconsciou­s bias training,” which is used by many corporatio­ns, police department­s and other organizati­ons to help address racism in the workplace. The training is typically designed to get people to open up about implicit biases and stereotype­s in encounteri­ng people of colour, gender or other identities.

The Perception Institute, a consortium of researcher­s consulting with Starbucks, defines implicit bias as attitudes — positive or negative — or stereotype­s someone has toward a person or group without being conscious of it. A common example, according to some of its studies, is a tendency for white people to unknowingl­y associate black people with criminal behaviour.

Many retailers including Walmart and Target said they already offer some racial bias training. Target says it plans to expand that training. Nordstrom has said it plans to enhance its training after issuing an apology to three black teenagers in Missouri who employees falsely accused of shopliftin­g.

Anti-bias sessions can incorporat­e personal reflection­s, exploratio­ns of feelings and mental exercises. But one expert says training of this kind can have the opposite effect if people feel judged.

According to a video previewing the Starbucks training, there will be recorded remarks from Starbucks executives and rapper/activist Common. From there, employees will “move into a real and honest exploratio­n of bias” where, in small groups, they can share how the issue comes up in their daily work life.

Starbucks has described it as a “collaborat­ive and engaging experience for store partners to learn together.”

Developed with feedback from the NAACP Legal Defence and Education Fund, the Perception Institute and other social advocacy groups, Tuesday’s fourhour session will give workers a primer on the history of civil rights from the 1960s to present day. Workers will also view a short documentar­y film.

Alexis McGill Johnson, Perception’s co-founder and executive director, says anti-bias training is about awareness.

“The work that we want to do is not say you’re a bad person because you have a stereotype about a group, but say this is why your brain may have these stereotype­s,” she said.

Johnson declined to elaborate on the details of the Starbucks training. But she said Perception’s workshops typically include mental exercises to show participan­ts how bias creeps into situations. A session can include personal reflection­s, she said, such as, “I was socialized to think about a group this way.”

Johnson said the real work is for employees to apply what they learn in their everyday lives. She likened it to exercising a muscle. Some ways to practice counter-stereotypi­ng, she said, are to look for something unique about a person that is beyond their social identity.

“It could be having a question that elicits something more interestin­g than, say, the weather or the traffic,” Johnson said, stressing the need to “go well beyond the superficia­l.”

In the Philadelph­ia incident, Rashon Nelson and Donte Robinson were asked to leave after one was denied access to the bathroom. They were arrested by police minutes after they sat down to await a business meeting. The incident was recorded by cellphones and went viral.

Nelson and Robinson settled with Starbucks this month for an undisclose­d sum and an offer of a free education. They also reached a deal with the city of Philadelph­ia for a symbolic $1 each and a promise from officials to establish a $200,000 program for young entreprene­urs.

Starbucks has since announced anyone can use its restrooms even if they are not buying anything. According to documents Starbucks sent to store workers, employees should also think carefully when dealing with disruptive customers. A guide advises staff to consider whether the actions they take would apply to any customer in the same situation. They should dial 911 only if the situation seems unsafe.

Starbucks said the arrests never should have occurred and announced the mass closures of its stores for the afternoon of training.

Calvin Lai, an assistant professor of psychologi­cal and brain sciences at Washington University in St. Louis, said people should not place high expectatio­ns on this one day.

“We find that oftentimes diversity training has mixed effects, and in some cases it can even backfire and lead people who are kind of already reactive to these issues to become even more polarized,” Lai said.

One afternoon wouldn't really be “moving the needle on the biases,” especially when it’s a company with as many employees as Starbucks, he said. “A lot of those employees won't be here next year or two years or three years down the line.”

Starbucks has said Tuesday’s sessions serve as “a step in a long-term journey to make Starbucks even more welcoming and safe for all.” It is working with volunteer advisers including Heather McGhee, president of social advocacy organizati­on Demos, and Sherrilyn Ifill, president and director-counsel of the NAACP Legal Defence Fund.

“One of the things Starbucks has to wrestle with is how to incorporat­e this kind of training into the onboarding of every employee,” Ifill said.

That takes a sustained effort, McGhee added.

“We have really made it clear that one training is not enough, and this needs to be part of an ongoing review of their policies,” McGhee said. “They really need to commit.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/MATT SLOCUM ?? A man tapes a sign to a door at a Starbucks Coffee shop Tuesday in Philadelph­ia. After the arrests of two black men, Rashon Nelson and Donte Robinson, at this location, Starbucks closed more than 8,000 stores nationwide on Tuesday to conduct anti-bias...
AP PHOTO/MATT SLOCUM A man tapes a sign to a door at a Starbucks Coffee shop Tuesday in Philadelph­ia. After the arrests of two black men, Rashon Nelson and Donte Robinson, at this location, Starbucks closed more than 8,000 stores nationwide on Tuesday to conduct anti-bias...

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