The Oklahoman

Starbucks halts its stock buybacks as Schultz pivots

Chain looks to invest in ‘people and our stores’ as staffers vote to unionize

- Matt Ott

SILVER SPRING, Md. – Starbucks founder and new interim CEO Howard Schultz announced Monday that the coffee chain was suspending its share repurchase program to “invest more profit into our people and our stores.”

The pivot in strategy comes just three weeks after Starbucks announced that Schultz, who bought the company in 1987 and led it for more than three decades, would be taking over the company’s top role until it found a permanent CEO. Since that announceme­nt, analysts and experts have speculated that Schultz was being brought back to help the company fight a rising worker rights campaign that has seen six of its stores voting to unionize since December, with at least 140 more in 27 states filing petitions for union elections.

Two weeks ago, baristas and other employees at a Seattle Starbucks voted to unionize, the first such vote in the city where Starbucks originated. Starbucks has 9,000 company-owned stores in the U.S.

Schultz’s blog post on Monday was filled with references to “partners” – what the company calls its employees. “My first work is to spend lots of time with partners,” Schultz wrote. “To lift up voices.”

In his previous time with the company, the 68-year-old Schultz successful­ly fought attempts to unionize Starbucks’ U.S. stores and roasting plants. Starbucks had to reinstate fired workers or pay to settle labor law violations numerous times under Schultz’s leadership in the early 2000s.

Last year, the National Labor Relations Board found that Starbucks unlawfully retaliated against two Philadelph­ia baristas who were attempting to unionize. The NLRB said Starbucks monitored the employees’ social media, unlawfully spied on their conversati­ons and ultimately fired them. It ordered Starbucks to stop interferin­g with workers’ right to organize and offer reinstatem­ent to the two workers.

More recently, on March 15, the NLRB issued a complaint against Starbucks alleging that district and store managers in Phoenix spied on and threatened workers who supported unionizing. The complaint says Starbucks suspended one union supporter and fired another.

In a November letter to employees, posted just before the first unionizati­on votes at three stores in Buffalo, New York, Schultz said he tried to create the kind of company that his blue-collar father never had the chance to work for.

He recalled the trauma of his family having no income after his father suffered a workplace injury, and said that’s why Starbucks has benefits like health care, free college tuition, parental leave and stock grants for employees.

“No partner has ever needed to have a representa­tive seek to obtain things we all have as partners at Starbucks. And I am saddened and concerned to hear anyone thinks that is needed now,” Schultz wrote. Schultz was holding a town hall with employees on Monday.

Late last year, Starbucks announced that it was committing to a $20 billion share repurchase and dividend program to return profits to investors. It’s not clear how much of that figure would have gone to share repurchase­s.

Starbucks’ shares were down 4% in afternoon trading Monday and are down more than 20% since the beginning of the year. Starbucks announced on March 16 that Schultz was stepping in to replace retiring CEO Kevin Johnson.

 ?? TED S. WARREN/AP FILE ?? Analysts have speculated that former Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz was being brought back to help the company fight a rising worker rights campaign that has seen six of its stores voting to unionize since December, with at least 140 more in 27 states filing petitions for union elections.
TED S. WARREN/AP FILE Analysts have speculated that former Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz was being brought back to help the company fight a rising worker rights campaign that has seen six of its stores voting to unionize since December, with at least 140 more in 27 states filing petitions for union elections.

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