Howard Schultz is sending coronavirus stimulus to Seattle workers ahead of federal response

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Howard Schultz, the former CEO of Starbucks (SBUX), is helping get much-needed cash into the hands of restaurant workers who've lost their jobs in his hometown of Seattle and King County, Washington, and he's doing it fast.

"Government assistance, unfortunately, is going to be weeks away, and we recognize that this is a group of people that really needs our help,” Schultz told Yahoo Finance. “They are in dire, dire need — facing home insecurity, food instability. And, so, we designed a very innovative program to crack the code on getting cash in people's hands."

Director of the U.S. National Economic Council Larry Kudlow told reporters on Monday that federal stimulus checks of up to $1,200 (plus additional $500 per child) would be sent “this week, perhaps early next,” though when exactly taxpayers will receive their checks depends on what banking information the Internal Revenue Service has on file for them and other factors.

On Monday, the Schultz Family Foundation launched The Plate Fund, delivering one-time cash payments of $500 to impacted restaurant staff within 48-hours. On the first day, The Plate Fund received 1,700 applications with $850,000 in cash payments already on the way to needy workers.

Undocumented workers not eligible for federal stimulus will receive grants

The Seattle area, one of the hardest-hit regions of the COVID-19 crisis in the U.S., has seen its nearly 5,000 restaurants close, meaning around 100,000 workers haven't had a paycheck in three weeks, he said. Schultz added that undocumented workers — who are not eligible for a federal stimulus check— would also be available for the $500 emergency relief grants.

"[Clearly] this is a global catastrophic event, absolutely, in which no business, no organization, no person is going to be immune, no one is safe. But there also is going to be on a parallel basis an extraordinary amount of economic carnage in small businesses, and restaurants specific, they are going to suffer dramatically."

Starbucks Chairman and CEO Howard Schultz speaks at the Annual Meeting of Shareholders in Seattle, Washington on March 22, 2017.  / AFP PHOTO / Jason Redmond        (Photo credit should read JASON REDMOND/AFP via Getty Images)
Howard Schultz speaks at the Annual Meeting of Shareholders in Seattle, Washington on March 22, 2017. (JASON REDMOND/AFP via Getty Images)

In a matter of two weeks, 10 million people filed for unemployment insurance in the U.S. as the labor market deteriorates because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Many expect the initial claims number to be higher due to a backlog of applications.

"I spoke to the mayor and the governor in the last couple of days, and I was told something that, I guess I'm not surprised by, that is, the system for unemployment has crashed in the state of Washington. And that's not going to be an anomaly around the country," he added.

Schultz acknowledged that the government is trying to do all they can. Still, it also has to be a "combined effort of shared humanity of business, of nonprofits, and the government coming together —without any blame and [with] shared humanity — to do everything we can to kind of walk in the shoes of people, who unfortunately at this point in time, to no fault of their own, these are hard-working people, who are facing such a desperate situation."