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‘A speed that nobody had ever seen’: The rapid rise of unionized Starbucks stores

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Two Buffalo-area Starbucks stores successfully voted to unionize on December 9, 2021, kicking off a flurry of elections at other Starbucks locations nationwide over the past six months.

“This campaign was not like other campaigns — this was moving at a speed that nobody had ever seen before,” Michelle Eisen, a Starbucks barista in Buffalo who has coached baristas from Kentucky to Hawaii, told Yahoo Finance. “Once I was told that, I think that gave me a little bit of like, ‘Oh, okay, I guess we have to be prepared for what this is going to become.'"

So far, 280 Starbucks locations across 35 states have followed Buffalo filing their petition with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) while backed by a subsidiary of the Workers United labor union. The NLRB reported that union election petitions were up 57% between Oct. 1 and March 31 compared to the previous year.

“The pandemic really heightened that awareness for a lot of workers, particularly a lot of workers who were in the non-union setting and realized that with a union, at least they would be able to have that collective voice to speak together in the interest of the employees, working conditions,” Risa L. Lieberwitz, professor of labor and employment Law at Cornell University, told Yahoo Finance in a phone interview.

As of June 7, 129 locations have voted to unionize while 21 stores have voted against it while 11 votes are as yet undetermined. (Yahoo Finance's vote status tally is based on NLRB case records and varies slightly from NLRB press releases.)

The pace of votes is increasing: According to the NLRB on May 31, there were an additional 119 elections ordered or in progress and 56 ballot counts slated for this week and next week alone.

There were 86 certified Starbucks union votes as of June 7, according to the NLRB data, meaning that the 79 unions formed can now negotiate with the coffee giant.

'We are fighting Howard Schultz's ego'

Pro-union workers are fighting for issues including more sway in certain company decisions, more affordable benefits, seniority pay, and recognition for workers' right to organize.

"We are fighting Howard Schultz's ego," Eisen said, referring to the three-time Starbucks CEO who returned to the company in early April on an interim basis. "That's what I've come to realize... he really stands by the company that he built, and he thinks it really is the best thing since sliced bread. And it's really hard for someone to come to you and tell you that your life's work is maybe not as good as you think it is."

Eised added that "the goal of this campaign is to grow together with the company, to work together with the company, with the people who know this company better than anybody."