The Oklahoman

CEO: Starbucks to train workers on ‘bias’

- BY KRISTEN DE GROOT AND JOSEPH PISANI

PHILADELPH­IA — Starbucks wants to add training for store managers on “unconsciou­s bias,” CEO Kevin Johnson said Monday, as activists held more protests at a Philadelph­ia store where two black men were arrested after employees said they were trespassin­g.

Johnson, who has called the arrests “reprehensi­ble,” arrived in Philadelph­ia this weekend after video of the incident gained traction online.

He said he hopes to meet with the two men in the next couple of days and apologize face to face.

“I’d like to have a dialogue with them and the opportunit­y to listen to them with compassion and empathy through the experience they went through,” said Johnson, who has been CEO for about a year. Stewart Cohen, the lawyer for the two men, said he hopes “something productive for the community” can come out of such a meeting.

The incident is a major blow to Starbucks’ image, since the company has promoted its coffee shops as neighborho­od hangouts where anyone is welcome. After a video of the arrests spread online, the hashtag #BoycottSta­rbucks trended on Twitter.

And on Monday morning, about two dozen protesters took over the Philadelph­ia shop, chanting slogans like, “A whole lot of racism, a whole lot of crap, Starbucks coffee is anti-black.” A Starbucks regional vice president who attempted to talk to the protesters was shouted down.

“We don’t want this Starbucks to make any money today. That’s our goal,” said Abdul-Aliy Muhammad, one of the protest’s organizers and co-founder of the Black and Brown Workers Collective.

Over the weekend, demonstrat­ors called for the firing of the employee who contacted police, who arrested the men on Thursday. Starbucks did not respond to a request for comment about the employment status of the manager who called police.

Officials have said the officers were told the men had asked to use the store’s restroom but were denied because they hadn’t bought anything, and they refused to leave.

Video shows several police talking quietly with two black men seated at a table. After a few minutes, officers handcuff the men and lead them outside as other customers say they weren’t doing anything wrong.

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