Starbucks to Deny Union Workers New Paid Leave Benefits
Starbucks management is reportedly planning to deny new paid leave benefits to unionized workers, another wrinkle in the company’s aggressive and unlawful campaign to stamp out organizing momentum nationwide.
According to an internal memo that More Perfect Union obtained, Starbucks shall announce on Monday that it is ending Covid-19 sick pay benefits that offered employees two five-day rounds of paid leave per quarter if they had any form of contact with the virus.
The memo adds that Starbucks intends to unveil new paid leave benefits that include “faster sick time accrual.” However, the document states specifically that the company will attempt to exclude unionized workers from the new benefits, citing federal labor law requiring management to bargain with unions over any changes to wages, benefits, and working conditions.
Starbucks, that billionaire CEO Howard Schultz leads, insists that federal law bars it from “making or announcing unilateral changes,” even as it unilaterally moves to end Covid-19 benefits for both unionized and nonunion employees.
“The memo suggests that Starbucks has the legal permission to unilaterally strip unionized stores of the current Covid leave benefits, but banned from implementing the new benefits in those stores,” More Perfect Union notes.
Starbucks Workers United, the group leading the organizing campaign that has racked up more than 220 union wins across the U.S. since December, immediately slammed the memo as further evidence that company management “has no regard for the law.”
“We are demanding that Starbucks bargain over their attempts to end Covid pay and benefits,” the group wrote on Twitter. “Interesting how Starbucks claims to not legally be able to give us new benefits in THE SAME letter they unilaterally take away benefits.”
“If Starbucks actually believed they couldn’t give union stores new benefits unilaterally, they wouldn’t be unilaterally stripping us of our benefits now,” Starbucks Workers United continued. “Their goal is to retaliate against and punish union stores.”
Starbucks’ latest anti-union move comes as the company is facing a National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) complaint for illegally denying unionized workers wage and benefit boosts that it provided to nonunion employees. A hearing in the case shall take place on October 25.
The coffee giant’s plan for new sick leave benefits came out just days after the Biden White House facilitated a deal between rail carriers and unions that—at least temporarily—averted a nationwide railroad strike. At the center of the yearslong labor dispute was paid sick leave, which—unlike other wealthy countries—the U.S. government doesn’t guarantee to workers.
Originally published at Commondreams.org.