Lodi News-Sentinel

College students urge schools to dump Starbucks over shutdowns of union stores

- Josh Eidelson

Cornell University’s student government and campus activists are urging the school to stop serving Starbucks coffee after the chain announced plans to shutter its nearby unionized cafes.

Employees at the three corporate-run Starbucks Corp. cafes in Ithaca, New York, voted last year to join Starbucks Workers United, making Ithaca the first US city where all of the company’s baristas were unionized. Starbucks announced last June that it was closing one of those cafes, prompting a complaint from the U.S. National Labor Relations Board, which alleged the company was illegally retaliatin­g because workers organized. Last week, the company said it was also closing the remaining two Ithaca stores, a move the union claims constitute­s further retaliatio­n.

On Thursday, Cornell’s Student Assembly passed a resolution urging the university to suspend ties with Starbucks, following a similar measure passed on May 7 by the University of California Student Associatio­n. Cornell students say they have mobilized 400 classmates, alumni, and community members to email the university’s president and its dining services head and have given away coffee from a unionized cafe outside the university’s Starbucks-affiliated campus cafes.

Students also plan to march to the president’s office on Thursday afternoon to demand the university find a “new, ethical” coffee vendor for the fall. Starbucks has licensing agreements that facilitate the sale of its coffee on many college campuses, as well as other third-party sites such as supermarke­ts and hotels.

“Starbucks needs to know, and every entity that affiliates with Starbucks needs to know, that this is unacceptab­le and will result in direct, swift, implicatio­ns for its bottom line,” said one of the activists, Cornell student and former Starbucks employee Nick Wilson. “This can happen on any university campus, with any affiliate of Starbucks, and it will happen if they continue to union-bust.”

Starbucks has denied retaliatin­g against workers and has said that all claims of anti-union activity there are “categorica­lly false.” A Starbucks spokespers­on said this week that the Ithaca stores had experience­d numerous absences and high turnover. The company also shared a prior statement from Starbucks North America President Sara Trilling, who said “as part of our ongoing efforts to transform our store portfolio, we continue to open, close and evolve our stores.”

Starbucks Workers United, an affiliate of the Service Employees Internatio­nal Union, has prevailed in elections at around 300 of Starbucks’ roughly 9,000 corporate-run U.S. stores since late 2021. Regional NLRB directors around the country have issued over 80 complaints accusing the company of illegal anti-union tactics, including refusing to negotiate fairly with the union, while judges and NLRB members have ordered reinstatem­ent of 23 terminated activists.

 ?? YAZHEN JIANG/DREAMSTIME ?? A view of Cornell University in New York.
YAZHEN JIANG/DREAMSTIME A view of Cornell University in New York.

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