The Star Malaysia

Starbucks workers pause to discuss racial issues

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NEW YORK: Starbucks, mocked three years ago for suggesting employees discuss racial issues with customers, asked workers to talk about race with each other.

It was part of the coffee chain’s anti-bias training on Tuesday, created after the arrest of two black men in a Philadelph­ia Starbucks six weeks ago.

The chain apologised but also took the dramatic step of closing its stores early for the sessions.

But still to be seen is whether the training, developed with the NAACP Legal Defence and Education Fund and other groups, will prevent another embarrassi­ng incident.

“This is not science, this is human behaviour,” said Starbucks Chairman Howard Schultz.

He called it the first step of many. The training was personal, asking workers to break into small groups to talk about their experience­s with race.

According to training materials provided by the company, they were also asked to pair up with a co-worker and list the ways they “are different from each other”.

A guidebook reminds people to “listen respectful­ly” and tells them to stop any conversati­ons that get derailed.

“I found out things about people that I’ve worked with a lot that I didn’t know,” said Carla Ruffin, a New York regional director at Starbucks, who took the training earlier and was made available to comment on it.

Ruffin, who is black, said everyone in her group said they first experience­d bias in middle school.

“I just thought that was pretty impactful, that people from such diverse background­s, different ages, that it was all in middle school.”

She said the training and discussion was needed: “We’re never as human beings going to be perfect.”

Starbucks declined to specify how much the training cost the company, though Schultz said it was “quite expensive” and called it “an investment in our people and the long-term cultural values of Starbucks”. — AP

 ??  ?? Coffee break: A Starbucks employee locking the door of the coffee shop in Pittsburgh. — AP
Coffee break: A Starbucks employee locking the door of the coffee shop in Pittsburgh. — AP

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