San Antonio Express-News

Starbucks illegally kept wages, benefits from union workers

- By Parker Purifoy

Starbucks Corp. broke federal labor law when it boosted wages and benefits only for workers in non-unionized stores across the U.S. last year, a National Labor Relations Board judge held.

Thursday’s decision from Administra­tive Law Judge Mara-louise Anzalone marks the first nationwide ruling against the coffee giant amid its resistance to a unionizati­on wave that began two years ago. Starbucks violated the National Labor Relations Act in August 2022 by lifting wages to at least $15 an hour and providing benefits such as credit card tipping, increased training, and faster sick time accrual to all stores that weren’t unionized, the judge said.

Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz announced the policy changes six months after workers began organizing with Starbucks Workers United, according to the decision.

“Respondent used its top executive to launch a corporate-wide effort to manipulate its employees’ free choice by conditioni­ng their pay and benefits on their willingnes­s to forgo organizing—a direct attack on the Act’s central goals,” the judge said.

Anzalone ordered Starbucks to compensate thousands of unionized workers for the wages and benefits they were unlawfully denied, in the most expansive ruling against the coffee giant to date.

The 45-page decision is the latest of more than a dozen ALJ rulings to go against Starbucks. But it’s the first one to find the company broke the law on a nationwide scale, instead of on a store-by-store basis.

The Starbucks unionizati­on campaign has resulted in nearly 350 organized cafes in 37 states. NLRB lawyers have lodged almost 100 complaints against the company for its response—at least 75 of those complaints are pending before the agency’s ALJS.

SBWU said in a statement Thursday evening that the decision is a “massive victory for Starbucks workers”.

“It shows that Starbucks’ anti-union campaign started from the top, was coordinate­d, and has deprived thousands of workers who live paycheck-to-paycheck income that could be put toward food, bills, sick benefits and more,” the union said.

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