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Hundreds of Google employees signed a petition opposing a drag show the company sponsored for Pride. Google has since distanced itself from the event, CNBC reported. Google distanced itself from a Pride Month drag show it had sponsored shortly after some employees started a petition claiming it was offensive to Christian staff, CNBC reported. Google's distancing from the drag performance comes as a number of companies have clashed with customers or employees over LGBTQ+ and Pride Month initiatives. And Starbucks workers said that the company wouldn't let them decorate their stores for Pride, prompting some staff to go on strike.
Persons: Peaches, Bud Light, influencer Dylan Mulvaney Organizations: Google, Pride, CNBC, Morning, Christian, Tuesday Locations: San Francisco
New York CNN —Starbucks will clarify its policy on Pride decorations following criticism and strikes at unionized stores. Earlier this month, Starbucks Workers United, the union representing organized stores, claimed that Starbucks has restricted decorations celebrating Pride Month in locations in multiple states. Starbucks workers attend a rally outside the Starbucks Reserve Roastery in Seattle, Washington, on June 23, 2023. Starbucks workers outside of the Starbucks Reserve Roastery. Matt Mills McKnight/ReutersThere are roughly 9,300 company-operated US Starbucks stores in the United States, so unionized locations are relatively few, at this point.
Persons: ” Sara Trilling, ” Trilling, Matt Mills McKnight, , “ We’re, Michael Rosas, , Starbucks, Rosas, — CNN’s Jordan Valinsky Organizations: New, New York CNN, Starbucks, Starbucks Workers United, Reuters, National Labor Relations Board, CNN, Pride, Twitter, Starbucks Workers, NLRB Locations: New York, Starbucks North America, Seattle , Washington, United States, Buffalo , New York, Buffalo
The new guidance comes as staffers are on strike over Starbucks' treatment of its workers. Neither the post nor a Starbucks spokesperson clarified exactly what the guidelines would say. A spokesperson for Starbucks Workers United said that the chain had not informed the union about the clarified guidelines. Since Friday, union members at about 150 stores representing 3,500 workers have been on strike over the Pride guidelines and Starbucks' approach to bargaining contracts with employees. Since then, about 8,000 workers in 333 Starbucks stores have opted to unionize, though no store has won a contract yet, according to Workers United.
Persons: , Sara Trilling, Brian Cornell Organizations: Starbucks, Service, Bloomberg, Starbucks North, Starbucks Workers, Pride, Workers, Workers United, National Labor Relations, Bloomberg Law, NLRB, Target Locations: Seattle, Buffalo , New York
Starbucks Workers United said on Monday that the strike would go on unless the company agreed to come to the bargaining table. “While we are glad Starbucks is finally reconsidering its position on pride decorations, Starbucks continues to ignore that they are legally required to bargain with union workers — that’s the power of a union,” the union said in a statement. A Starbucks spokesman said only about 12 stores have had to close each day since the strike began. “The union’s violations have ignited and inflamed workplace tension and division and provoked strikes and other business disruptions in Starbucks stores,” the charges said. In response to tensions with the union, Starbucks adopted a stricter dress code and décor policy to prevent workers from filling stores with union paraphernalia.
Persons: , Bud Light, influencer Organizations: Starbucks, Starbucks Workers, National Labor Relations Board, Pride
Protesters in Seattle join a Starbucks Workers United strike over what the union alleges is a change in policy over Pride décor in stores. More than 150 stores pledged to join the strikes around the country, representing nearly 3,500 workers, Workers United said. In the NLRB complaint Monday tied to the union's allegations, Starbucks said the "union and its agents have engaged in a smear campaign that includes deliberate misrepresentations to Starbucks partners." "The union's violations have ignited and inflamed workplace tension and division and provoked strikes and other business disruptions in Starbucks stores," Starbucks said in the filing. "While attacking the union that represents its own workers, Starbucks has now changed its policies in response to worker actions.
Persons: baristas, Sara Trilling, Trilling, Bud, — CNBC's Amelia Lucas Organizations: Starbucks Workers United, Pride, Starbucks, National Labor Relations Board, Starbucks Workers, Workers, U.S, North America, Conservative Locations: Seattle, America
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Persons: Dow Jones
[1/5] Starbucks workers attend a protest as part of a collective action over a Pride decor dispute, outside a Starbucks shop in Manhattan in New York City, New York, U.S., June 25, 2023. About a dozen Starbucks workers picketed outside New York's Astor Place location in lower Manhattan on Sunday afternoon near the route of the city's Pride parade, chanting: "New York is a union town! Starbucks spent decades building its reputation as a progressive company that supports LGBTQ+ workers and customers. Maggie McKeon, who was headed into the Starbucks at Astor Place, turned around after learning about the strike. Sam Cornetta, a barista at the Farmingville, New York, Starbucks, who joined coworkers on strike at Astor Place on Sunday, said the company was alienating LGBTQ+ workers.
Persons: David Dee Delgado, Lynne Fox, we've, Jackie Zhou, Maggie McKeon, McKeon, baristas, Arthur Pratt, Pratt, Sam Cornetta, They've, Hilary Russ, Caroline Valetkevitch, Vanessa O'Connell, Lananh Nguyen, Diane Craft Organizations: REUTERS, Starbucks Corp, Workers, Starbucks, Seattle, Workers United, Reuters, U.S, Supreme, Pride, Seattle Gay, Human Rights, HRC, National Labor Relations Board, Thomson Locations: Manhattan, New York City , New York, U.S, Astor, York, New York City, San Francisco, Chicago, Portland , Oregon, , New York, Ashland , NY, New York
June 23 (Reuters) - More than 3,000 workers at over 150 Starbucks (SBUX.O) stores in the United States will go on strike next week, the union representing the coffee chain's baristas said on Friday, following claims that the company had banned Pride Month decorations at its cafes. The strikes were also aimed at protesting against employees' treatment at Starbucks and pushing for a fair labor contract covering better pay and benefits, the Starbucks Workers United union added. The call for a strike comes days after the union said Starbucks had taken down some Pride Month decorations and flags at several stores, a matter that was also discussed by some workers on social media. Starbucks Workers United said on Friday the company's Seattle Roastery - located just nine blocks from Starbucks' first ever store at the Pike Place Market - was kicking off the nationwide strike, dubbed "Strike with Pride". Pride Month celebrations, with Pride Parades set to take place on Sunday in several major cities including New York, San Francisco, Seattle and Chicago.
Persons: baristas, Busch, Bud, Deborah Sophia, Shinjini Ganguli, Anil D'Silva Organizations: Starbucks, Starbucks Workers United, ., Pride, U.S, Target, Anheuser, Starbucks Workers, Seattle, Thomson Locations: United States, Pike, New York, San Francisco, Seattle, Chicago, Bengaluru
Thousands of workers at organized Starbucks stores across the nation will stage strikes over the next week, their union said on Friday, a move that comes after workers in some states said management prohibited them from putting up decorations for Pride Month, accusations that the company has said are false. Starbucks Workers United said employees at more than 150 stores would strike over the company’s labor practices and its “hypocritical treatment of LGBTQIA+ workers.”The union represents about 8,000 of the company’s workers in more than 300 stores. “Starbucks is scared of the power that their queer partners hold, and they should be,” Moe Mills, who works at a Starbucks location in Richmond Heights, Mo., said in a statement provided by the union. The union said that it was striking over the changes to Pride decoration policies, which it argued must be negotiated, as well as the company’s broader response to the organizing campaign, including widespread retaliation against union supporters. The union said in its statement that workers were “demanding that Starbucks negotiate a fair contract with union stores and stop their illegal union-busting campaign.”
Persons: ” Moe Mills, Organizations: Pride, Starbucks Workers United, Starbucks Locations: Richmond Heights, Mo
Some organized Starbucks stores will strike across the U.S. starting Friday in Seattle after the coffee giant and the union representing baristas publicly clashed over claims that the company was not allowing Pride month decor in cafes. The union, Starbucks Workers United, said more than 150 stores representing nearly 3,500 workers have pledged to join the strikes, which will take place over the next week. Pride month in June," the company said last week, adding that it unwaveringly supports the LGBTQ+ community. Workers United has alleged instances in at least 22 states when workers have not been able to decorate, pointing to social media accounts where workers have documented their claims. The Starbucks workers are also striking over claims that Starbucks is dragging its feet on negotiating contracts.
Persons: baristas, May Jensen, Lynne Fox, Parker Davis, Davis, Bud, Mari Cosgrove, Cosgrove, — CNBC's Amelia Lucas Organizations: Starbucks, Highland, Parade, U.S, Starbucks Workers, Workers United, Partner Resources, CNBC, Target, Workers Locations: Hollywood, Los Angeles, Seattle, U.S, America, San Antonio , Texas, Oklahoma
New York CNN —Workers at about 150 unionized Starbucks stores in the United States are going on strike Friday over the coffee chain’s policy for Pride decorations in stores. Starbucks (SBUX) Workers United, the union representing organized stores, has claimed that Starbucks (SBUX) has restricted decorations celebrating Pride month in some locations, demonstrating a “hypocritical treatment of LGBTQIA+ workers.” Starbucks (SBUX) has forcefully denied this claim. Starbucks said it is not aware of any company-owned stores that have banned Pride decorations. Starbucks Workers United says this is an example of Starbucks bowing to pressure, as Target did when moving or removing Pride merchandise from some stores. But, even if some individual managers have removed their Pride decorations, Starbucks corporate has not changed any merchandising or other policies.
Persons: , “ We’re Organizations: New, New York CNN — Workers, Workers, Starbucks, Starbucks Workers, US, Twitter, Pride Locations: New York, United States, Oklahoma , Arkansas, Missouri
June 23 (Reuters) - More than 150 Starbucks (SBUX.O) stores and 3,500 workers will be on strike next week across the United States, the union representing the coffee chain's baristas said on Friday, after it claimed the company had banned Pride month decorations at its cafes. loadingStarbucks Workers United union said earlier this month the company took down Pride Month decorations and flags at several stores, while some workers took to social media to report the same. It said last week there had been "no change to any policy on this matter" and that it was still encouraging store managers to celebrate Pride month. U.S. companies have faced growing criticism over Pride Month celebrations. Starbucks Workers United said on Friday in a tweet the company's Seattle Roastery - located just nine blocks from Starbucks' first ever store at the Pike Place Market - was leading the nationwide strike.
Persons: baristas, Deborah Sophia, Shinjini Organizations: Workers United, Starbucks, Target, Starbucks Workers, Seattle, ., Thomson Locations: United States, U.S, Pike, Bengaluru
Check out the companies making headlines in premarket trading. Virgin Galactic — Shares tumbled 12.4% in premarket trading after the space tourism company said it raised $300 million through a common stock offer. Virgin Galactic said it wants to raise another $400 million as the company looks to expand and improve its spacecraft fleet. Under Armour — Shares shed nearly 3% in premarket trading following a downgrade by Wells Fargo to equal weight from overweight. Wayfair — Shares of the home furnishings retailer rose more than 1% after MoffettNathanson upgraded Wayfair to market perform from underperform.
Persons: CarMax, Virgin Galactic, Armour, Wells Fargo, MoffettNathanson, Wayfair, , Jesse Pound, Michelle Fox Organizations: Senate Health, Education, Labor, Starbucks, StreetAccount ., Galactic, Virgin, Baltimore Sun, Footwear, Bed, Deutsche Bank, Accenture Locations: Dirksen, North America, Baltimore
The union for Starbucks staff says that workers at more than 150 stores will strike in the coming week. Starbucks Workers United said Friday morning that more than 3,500 workers would be on strike over the course of the next week because of the company's "hypocritical treatment of LGBTQIA+ workers." The union said that strikers would be "demanding that Starbucks negotiate a fair contract with union stores and stop their illegal union-busting campaign, which has significantly impacted Starbucks' LGBTQIA+ workforce." Starbucks did not immediately respond to Insider's request for comment, made outside of regular working hours, on what would happen to the striking stores. As of June 22, 329 Starbucks stores in the US have won union elections, according to Perfect Union.
Persons: , Bud Light, influencer Dylan Mulvaney, Moe Mills, Lynne Fox, May Jensen, Jensen, barista Mari Cosgrove, Cosgrove Organizations: Starbucks, Strikers, Service, Starbucks Workers, Pride, Workers United, CNBC, US, Perfect Union Locations: Richmond Heights , Missouri, Seattle
For companies like Target and Disney, it is unclear if boycotts will hit sales. The company said it has not changed any policy on decorations and is encouraging stores to celebrate Pride Month. Despite the mounting headlines and sustained criticism of Bud Light, corporate boycotts are "overstated," and those offended by campaigns tied to Pride Month are in the "minority," Ellis said. Bud Light appears to be an outlierIn April, the brewer ran a March Madness promotion with trans influencer Dylan Mulvaney, who shared a customized Bud Light can on Instagram. Justin Sullivan | Getty ImagesIt isn't just Bud Light — brands across the board are facing calls to boycott their goods or services.
Persons: Gene Kim, Bud Light, Anson Frericks, Starbucks baristas, Sarah Kate Ellis, Ellis, Dylan Mulvaney, Brendan Whitworth, — Alissa Heinerscheid, Daniel Blake —, Bump Williams, Busch, Frericks, Bud, Marcel Marcondes, Marcondes, Justin Sullivan, Jack Daniel's, Lawrence Glickman, Glickman, baristas, hasn't, Disney isn't, Ron DeSantis, Lindsey Roeschke, Brayden King, King, David Cliff, Nurphoto Organizations: Anheuser, Busch, Target, Disney, Starbucks, Pride Month, Target's, Pride, GLAAD, Mulvaney, CNBC, Gay, Chamber, Commerce, Cannes Lions International, Creativity, Brands, Kohl's, Nike, Adidas, Ford, Associated Press, American Studies, Cornell University, Consumer, Walt Disney Co, Florida Gov, Brand Intelligence, Morning, Northwestern University, Getty Locations: U.S, America, San Francisco , California, Oklahoma, Florida
Union members told Insider they are not too concerned about Biden's age or electability. "I never heard someone who is Catholic say the pope is too old," one union member said. Biden's path to reelection depends in part on touting those achievements and turning out union members in November 2024. "There are a lot of politicians in this country who can't say the word 'union,'" Biden said Saturday afternoon, supporters in colorful union merchandise cheering behind him. At Saturday's rally, however, union members insisted it is not a concern — and that the discourse around it is an indictment of the times.
Persons: Joe Biden, , Jaysin Saxton, Saxton, we've, Biden, Pennsylvania, Donald Trump, John Fetterman, Mary Samaroo, Samaroo, Trump, Nora Dumenigo, Dumenigo, Renee Dozier, Mike Brown, he's, Brown Organizations: Saturday . Union, Service, Starbucks, National Labor Relations, AFL, University of Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania's Democratic Party, Senate, of Health, Human Services, Service Employees International Union, SEIU, Republican, Miami International Airport, International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Locations: Philadelphia, Augusta , Georgia, Pennsylvania, Scranton, Queens, Afghanistan, Cuba, Boston
A union representing hundreds of Starbucks stores said this week that workers in 21 states were told by their managers not to decorate for Pride Month, the annual L.G.B.T.Q. celebration, a claim that the company said represented “outlier” decisions by local leaders that did not reflect corporate policy. In Manhattan, no Pride decorations could be seen at several Starbucks stores in Chelsea and Greenwich Village, including the one just a block from the Stonewall Inn, a landmark of gay culture and history. One partner, as Starbucks refers to employees, was told by a manager that hanging a rainbow flag might make customers uncomfortable. Others said they were told that if they hung a Pride flag the store could be asked to show equal representation for others, including the Proud Boys, the far-right hate group.
Organizations: Pride Month, Greenwich, Stonewall, Pride Locations: New York City, Manhattan, Chelsea, Wisconsin , Ohio, Virginia
Some Starbucks employees said they were asked to remove Pride flags and decor. #pridemonth #rainbowcapitalism #shameonstarbucks #starbucks #starbuckssucks #prideflag #pridedecor #starbucksbarista #starbucksstore #targetlgbtq #starbuckslgbtq ♬ Makeba - Jain @sbworkersunited STARBUCKS IS BANNING PRIDE FLAGS ACROSS THE US. Starbucks employees said they got mixed messages about Pride decorSome store employees told Insider they were given various rationales for changes in Pride decor at their stores. A Starbucks store manager in the Midwest said her district manager told her, "We are not allowed to have any decorations that are not Starbucks brand, period. "This year, they told us we can't decorate," Alisha Humphrey, a Starbucks partner in Oklahoma City and Starbucks Workers United organizer, told Insider.
Persons: , they've, Damon Schnur, Alisha Humphrey, they'd, Elaine Thompson, We're, Gloria Dawson Organizations: Starbucks, Service, Twitter, US Pride, STARBUCKS, PRIDE, Starbucks Workers United, Midwest, Oklahoma Locations: Pride, Ohio, Wisconsin, Oklahoma City
Starbucks Workers United said Tuesday that dozens of the coffee chain's U.S. stores aren't allowing employees to decorate for Pride month. A Starbucks spokesperson told CNBC that the company's security and safety manual provides broad guidance for stores around decorations. Some Massachusetts workers were told that there weren't enough labor hours to schedule partners to decorate, the union said. And managers told employees in Maryland that some people didn't feel represented by the "umbrella of pride," according to the labor group. Oklahoma Starbucks workers were also prohibited from hanging Pride flags in store windows.
Persons: hasn't, Baristas Organizations: Starbucks, Highland, Parade, Starbucks Workers, CNBC, U.S, Republican, Anheuser, Busch InBev, Kohl's, Workers, Pride, Target, Washington Post Locations: Hollywood, Los Angeles , California, United States, Massachusetts, Maryland, Oklahoma
Workers at a Buffalo Starbucks store have filed a petition to decertify their union. The store, located in downtown Buffalo, New York, would remove Workers United as its representative in negotiations with Starbucks, Bloomberg Law reported. It was among the first Starbucks stores in the country where employees voted to have union representation. A spokesperson for Workers United told TV station WGRZ that Starbucks had launched an "illegal union-busting campaign" at the store. According to Workers United, about 300 Starbucks stores around the US have voted to unionize.
Judges and the National Labor Relations Board have found the company violated federal labor law in several other cases. The Memphis store is one of nearly 300 Starbucks cafes in the United States to unionize since late 2021. More than 540 complaints have been filed with the labor board accusing Starbucks of illegal labor practices such as firing union supporters, spying on workers and closing stores during labor campaigns. Starbucks has argued that the Memphis workers were fired for violating company safety policies and has said it respects the unionization process. Starbucks and Starbucks Workers United, the union waging the nationwide campaign, did not respond to requests for comment on Wednesday.
New York CNN —During his first earnings call as the new Starbucks CEO, Laxman Narasimhan praised the company for its financial performance. In the quarter ending on April 2, sales at company-operated Starbucks stores open at least 13 months jumped 11% globally, including a 12% increase in North America. Before officially becoming CEO in March, Narasimhan spent about six months shadowing former interim CEO Howard Schultz in an incoming CEO capacity. Since December 2021, about 300 Starbucks stores have voted to unionize and been certified by the NLRB. It’s a relatively small number compared to the roughly 9,300 company-operated Starbucks stores in the United States.
Starbucks is rolling out a new mission and plans for team meetings centered on connection. The new initiatives focus on connection and Starbucks' role in bringing people together, the company said. These so-called connection sessions are nothing more than a thinly-veiled attempt by the company to continue its unprecedented union-busting campaign." The representative from Starbucks disputed the characterization of how Starbucks is working with the union. "Starbucks is in the business of human connection ... and the world needs us more than ever," Narasimhan wrote.
YouTube TV contractors are in the early stages of making a push towards unionization. The YouTube TV contractors' efforts follow that of their colleagues in YouTube Music. In response, Cognizant held two "captive meetings" with the YouTube TV team in the past two weeks to dissuade them from organizing, contractors say. Contractors working for Cognizant say they've been told they should not take these new signs down. In the past year, more than 300 Starbucks locations organized under the Starbucks Workers Union.
Starbucks union organizers are stepping up pressure on individual members of the company's board. Leaders at Nike, Lego, and Land O' Lakes were targeted using billboards, a movie trailer, a brass band, and even a butter sculpture. The push comes a week after shareholders voted in favor of an investigation into Starbucks' labor practices. Meanwhile, in Los Angeles and online, a Lego Movie-styled trailer premiered with the aim of enlisting Lego President Jorgen Vig Knudstorp to join the side of Starbucks workers. And now, those tensions are spilling over to other companies as the union targets Starbucks' board of directors.
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