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'Hands are tied': Starbucks benefits and wages take center stage in union fight

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New benefits for non-union Starbucks (SBUX) employees is upping the stakes between the coffee giant and union organizers who recently visited the White House, with potential legal implications.

When interim CEO Howard Schultz recently rolled out a $1 billion investment in employees that included perks such as wage increases and new store equipment, he made it clear that the benefits would only be available to employees at nonunion stores.

"We must reintroduce joy in the customer and emotional connection back into the partner experience," Schultz said Starbucks’ Q2 2022 earnings call. "We do not have the same freedom to make these improvements at locations that have a union or where union organizing is underway."

(Source: Starbucks)
(Source: Starbucks)

Starbucks Workers United, the union representing the baristas nationwide, alleged that Schultz's comments would have an immediate "chilling effect" on organizing campaigns and impending votes nationwide.

Starbucks workers have been organizing at stores at a rapid speed: More than 250 of nearly 9,000 company-operated locations have taken steps toward unionization in recent months, according to a tracker by the Law360, and a flurry of union election filings are added daily. (The tracker estimates that 43 stores have voted against unionization while 10 votes voted against unionization)

The timing is notable: Once workers vote to unionize and the tally becomes certified, the employer would technically have to freeze the current levels of benefits and wages in what is called the "status quo period."

"I couldn't give a $3 pay raise without bargaining it with the union first — that would be unlawful to do that because the union now is... the exclusive bargaining agent for all of those bargaining unit members," Joseph McConnell, an attorney specializing in labor and employment law as a partner at the Morgan, Brown & Joy, told Yahoo Finance. "The employer's hands are tied on anything having to do with wages, hours, and working conditions for those bargaining unit members."

NEW YORK, NY - APRIL 02:  (EXCLUSIVE COVERAGE)  Former chairman and CEO of Starbucks, and United States 2020 presidential candidate Howard Schultz visits Fox & Friends at Fox News Channel Studios on April 2, 2019 in New York City.  (Photo by Steven Ferdman/Getty Images)
Former chairman and CEO of Starbucks, and United States 2020 presidential candidate Howard Schultz visits Fox & Friends at Fox News Channel Studios on April 2, 2019 in New York City. (Photo by Steven Ferdman/Getty Images) · Steven Ferdman via Getty Images

At the same time, the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) prohibits employers from promising benefits to employees on the condition that they reject a union.

Marion Crain, a law professor at Washington University, told Yahoo Finance that Starbucks seems to be making the "good side" of their argument about benefits, "not the side that the workers need to hear from the union, which is [the company] can take them away unilaterally, just like you can give them unilaterally if you don't have a union."