Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Starbucks roastery workers OK union

Employees at second Seattle outlet follow lead of two dozen stores nationally

- HEIDI GROOVER

Workers at a second Starbucks location in Seattle have joined the nationwide wave of unionizati­on at the coffee giant — this time at one of the company’s flagship roastery locations.

Employees at the Starbucks Reserve Roastery, at Pike Street and Melrose Avenue in the Capitol Hill neighborho­od, voted 38-27 to unionize with Workers United, an affiliate of the Service Employees Internatio­nal Union. About 100 workers were eligible to vote, and three ballots were challenged. The National Labor Relations Board announced the vote count Thursday.

The vote shows “we’re really just hitting the gas with this movement,” said barista Liz Duran.

Starbucks said in a statement Thursday, “We will respect the process and will bargain in good faith. … We hope that the union does the same.”

The action follows a unanimous vote to unionize at another Capitol Hill location last month, the first in the latest unionizati­on in the company’s hometown. A handful of other Seattle locations have also announced union campaigns, and workers at two locations walked off the job last week.

Nationwide, workers at company-owned Starbucks locations have filed for union elections or announced they plan to unionize. About two dozen stores have voted to unionize, and two have voted no. Workers at some licensed Starbucks locations in airports and grocery stores are already unionized.

Starbucks has more than 8,000 company-owned stores.

But the Starbucks Reserve Roasteries are a less common and more specialize­d company offering.

Starbucks has just six of them around the globe, calling them “theatrical, experiment­al shrines to coffee passion.”

The sprawling Capitol Hill location opened in 2014 — complete with a “Coffee Experience Bar” and pizzeria — as Starbucks sought to double its annual revenue and attract customers throughout the day. It has since become an often- crowded tourist draw.

Employees say working at the Roastery comes with increased expectatio­ns and responsibi­lities, but without the pay to match.

The employees work in a “completely full-service environmen­t,” said barista Brennen Collins. “We’re busing tables. We’re crafting a story. … We’re generally making as much as the core Starbucks, while also having all these increased expectatio­ns — all on top of working inside of a pandemic.”

In a February letter to then- CEO Kevin Johnson, workers at the roastery wrote that they wanted a “safer, fairer, more inclusive, more transparen­t and more welcoming” workplace.

“Especially through this pandemic, we have encountere­d intense and unique struggles in our workplace,” wrote the workers, whom the company refers to as partners. “Through it all, we have been flexible and resilient to the ever-changing nature of the pandemic. However, our concerns and our safety have not been at the forefront of decision making that directly affects our partners.”

Starbucks said in a statement that workers at roasteries do not take on more responsibi­lities than workers in other locations. “To suggest one partner takes on more responsibi­lity isn’t true to who we are as partners,” spokespers­on Sarah Albanesi said. “Jobs and roles are different but all partners carry the same pride and expectatio­ns for their individual roles.”

 ?? (AP/Seattle Times/Ellen M. Banner) ?? Emily Sirisue jumps Thursday to show her support with other Seattle Starbucks baristas after the vote comes in to unionize the Starbucks roastery on Capitol Hill, Thursday in Seattle.
(AP/Seattle Times/Ellen M. Banner) Emily Sirisue jumps Thursday to show her support with other Seattle Starbucks baristas after the vote comes in to unionize the Starbucks roastery on Capitol Hill, Thursday in Seattle.

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