The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Starbucks controvers­y could help McDonald’s

- By Leslie Patton Bloomberg News

Despite decades of pushing to create a welcoming coffeehous­e culture in the U.S., Starbucks has left many Americans behind. McDonald’s may be ready to pick up the pieces.

The arrest last week of two black men at a Philadelph­ia Starbucks has put the company at the center of national concerns about racial inequality. Starbucks cafes tend to be located in relatively affluent, disproport­ionately white areas, according to data analyzed by Bloomberg. So its bid to cultivate a “third place” — a location between home and work where customers can relax and have a conservati­on — naturally caters to the customers who live nearby, even as its marketing promotes more racial diversity.

According to Bloomberg’s analysis of informatio­n from AggData and the U.S. Census Bureau, Starbucks neighborho­ods skew less black than the surroundin­g population. Across the U.S., ZIP codes including at least one Starbucks location are 9.9 percent black and 59.1 percent white. That compares with an overall population that’s 12.1 percent black.

“They could absolutely be doing more if this was truly a strong value of theirs,” said Rosalind Chow, an associate professor of organizati­onal behavior and theory at Carnegie Mellon University.

The mantle of creating a true “third place” actually may fall to another, less idealistic chain: McDonald’s. The restaurant is a

popular hangout for a wide range of demographi­cs. And despite having roughly the same number of U.S. locations as Starbucks, its restaurant­s are more representa­tive of America.

ZIP codes including at least one McDonald’s restaurant are 13.2 percent black and 58.7 percent white. McDonald’s also is predominan­tly run by independen­t operators, giving it a more diverse ownership group. Since the early 1970s, the company has had an organized group of black franchisee­s — a coalition once overseen by Herman Petty, the first African-American owner of a McDonald’s.

In the late 1990s, Starbucks teamed up with Magic Johnson Enterprise­s to invest in stores in underserve­d neighborho­ods. The partnershi­p ended in 2010, but after the demonstrat­ions in Ferguson, Missouri, in 2015, the

company recommitte­d to opening cafes in poor urban neighborho­ods, and has opened 10 in cities including Chicago and Trenton, New Jersey, and says it’s planning another in Birmingham, Alabama, this summer.

“Each of these stores is thriving,” Seattle-based Starbucks said in an emailed statement. Additional­ly, the chain has hired 50,000 “opportunit­y youth” — young people who aren’t in school and don’t have a job.

“Businesses have a role and responsibi­lity to tackle societal challenges head on,” the company said.

Starbucks also has attempted to spur a national conversati­on on race — a move that included baristas writing “Race Together” on coffee cups — but the campaign was largely mocked on

social media.

Now, Philadelph­ia has become a flashpoint for the chain. Last week, the manager of a store near the affluent Rittenhous­e Square area summoned the police after two black men sat at a table. They hadn’t ordered anything yet, but that’s not uncommon at a chain where patrons frequently sit and tap away at laptops.

“I’m embarrasse­d, ashamed; I think what occurred was reprehensi­ble at every single level,” Chairman Howard Schultz said on CBS This Morning. “I take it very personally as everybody at our company does and I’m committed to making it right.”

The arrests brought protests and social-media outcry, and Chief Executive Officer Kevin Johnson scrambled to address the fallout. He apologized for the incident and traveled to the city to meet the men who were arrested. Starbucks also plans to temporaril­y close more than 8,000 company-owned locations next month for bias training.

“It will cost millions of dollars but I’ve always viewed this and things like this as not an expense but an investment in our people and our company,” Schultz told CBS, referring to the store closing decision.

The arrests “destroy the community feeling that the company had striven to create,” said Pat Tomaino, director of socially responsibl­e investing at Zevin Asset Management. The investor, who holds about 60,000 Starbucks shares, sent a letter to the company’s executives on Tuesday. He wants a public report on causes, an investigat­ion of other incidents, and a review of policies.

 ?? VICTOR J. BLUE / BLOOMBERG 2016 ?? Across the U.S., ZIP codes including at least one Starbucks location are 9.9 percent black and 59.1 percent white. That compares with an overall population that’s 12.1 percent black.
VICTOR J. BLUE / BLOOMBERG 2016 Across the U.S., ZIP codes including at least one Starbucks location are 9.9 percent black and 59.1 percent white. That compares with an overall population that’s 12.1 percent black.
 ?? JESSICA GRIFFIN / PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER ?? Protester Aurica Hurst, of West Philadelph­ia, pours out coffee in front of a Starbucks on Monday in Philadelph­ia.
JESSICA GRIFFIN / PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER Protester Aurica Hurst, of West Philadelph­ia, pours out coffee in front of a Starbucks on Monday in Philadelph­ia.

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