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More than 2,000 Starbucks partners have walked off the job since last week, a union representing the baristas said.
Here’s why Starbucks employees are pushing against the company’s dress code changes, that took effect on May 12, and what the new dress code entails.
Social media and Starbucks alike gave a reality check to baristas striking over the coffee chain's new dress code.
Starbucks baristas went on strike nationwide to protest a new company dress code that requires workers to wear specific clothing under their green aprons. The coffee giant said the new uniform—a solid ...
Baristas are now expected to wear solid black shirts and khaki, black, or blue denim bottoms. Some Starbucks workers are ...
Starbucks employees with Starbucks Workers United are striking in a protest against new barista dress code. Here's what to know and why ...
More than 1,200 Starbucks employees with Starbucks Workers United have gone on strike to protest a dress code policy that went into effect this week ...
“The reality is the company is just not offering anything that would really provide economic justice to its workers, that will keep up with the cost of living in Los Angeles,” said Cassie Pritchard, ...
Baristas at hundreds of Starbucks in California and elsewhere in the U.S. plan to strike in the days before ... said Cassie Pritchard, 35, a barista who represents workers at a Starbucks near ...
Michelle Eisen, a 15-year Starbucks veteran, is a barista for the coffee chain at ... the workers at that store announced that they were on strike and walked out. Most of the attendees followed ...
Hundreds of workers also went on strike in June 2023 to protest after ... a viable economic proposal," Fatemeh Alhadjaboodi, a Starbucks barista from Texas and bargaining delegate, said in a ...